214 " The Wiltshire Regiment for Wiltshire.” 
in 1812. The second battalion was engaged with the troops under the 
Duke of Wellington at the several affairs which took place with the French 
Army in the Pyrenees on the 9th, 10th, and 11th November, and the 
9th, 10th, and 11th December, 1813, and served at the blockade of 
Bayonne, in 1814. 
The first battalion, Sixty-Second Regiment, was im the engagements 
which took place on the heights above Genoa, the 16th April, 1814, which 
terminated in the capture of that fortress. In September of that year 
it was also employed at the taking of Castine, in the United States, and 
remained to defend the same until restored to the Americans at the peace. 
4th. In the earlier actions in which the Sixty-Second Regiment was engaged I am 
unable to state the names of the officers, or the numbers of non-commissioned 
officers or privates, who were killed or wounded by the enemy, or the dates 
of the action. At the Battle of Still Water, which took place on the 19th 
of September, 1777, Lt.-Col. Anstruther and Major Harnage were wounded, 
and the following officers killed: Lieuts. Reynal Harvey, and Stewart, 
Ensigns Taylor, Philips, and Young, and Adjutant Fitzgerald. On the 
8th of October following, Lt.-Col. Anstruthers and Major Harnage were 
again wounded, as also Captains Shrimpton and Bunbury, Ensigns Blake 
aud Harvey ; Ensigns D’Autrock and Nailor were taken prisoners. The 
regiment on the above-mentioned day lost ninety-seven sergeants, drummers 
and rank and file, 
At the defence of Scylla Castle on the 4th and 17th of February, 1808, 
two rank and file killed and two rank and file wounded. 
At Palinuro on the Ist of November, 1811, Captain Oldham was wounded 
and Lieut. Kay killed, also two rank and file killed, one drummer, three 
rank and file wounded. 
Ensign Spier was lost in the gun-boats in Scylla in 1812. 
On the 10th of December, 1813, the second battalion, Sixty-Second Regi- 
ment, had three rank and file killed and one rank and file wounded at the 
Passage of the Nive. 
The first battalion, Sixty-Second Regiment, had three rank and file killed, 
and three rank and file wounded at the action which took place on the 
heights above Genoa, on the 16th of April, 1814. 
5th. Brevet Lieut.-Col. Richard Roberts received the Sardinian Order of St. 
Maurice and Lazar for his services in Italy at the head of the Quarter- 
Master-General’s Department to the British_and Sicilian forces, in 1814, 
and gazetted for the same, 30th June, 1817. 
Captain William Hartley received an Egyptian medal when lieutenant 
in the Twenty-Third Fusiliers, for his services in Egypt in 1801. 
Surgeon Christopher R. Alderson received a Waterloo medal when 
assistant-surgeon in the First Dragoons, for his services at Waterloo, on 
the 18th of June, 1815. 
6th. I find that in every encounter which the Sixty-Second Regiment, or any 
portion of it, has had with the enemy, the conduct of all the non-com- 
misioned officers and privates has been mentioned as exemplary, so that it 
becomes unnecessary to particularize any individual. 
7th. The second battalion, Sixty-Second Regiment, was, by a memorandum 
a 
