John Wright Guise


General Sir John Wright Guise, 3rd Baronet was a British Army general.

Life

Guise was born at Elmore, Gloucestershire, the second son of John Guise of Highnam Court, who was created a baronet in 1783, and died in 1794; his mother was the daughter and heiress of Thomas Wright. He was appointed ensign in the 70th Regiment of Foot on 4 November 1794, and was transferred the year after to the 3rd Foot Guards, later the Scots Guards, in which he became lieutenant and captain in 1798, captain and lieutenant-colonel in 1805, and regimental first major in 1814.
Guise served with his regiment in the Ferrol Expedition, Vigo, and Cadiz in 1800, in Egypt in 1801, in Hanover in 1805–06, and accompanied it to Portugal in 1809. He was present at the Battle of Bussaco, and commanded the light companies of the guards, with some companies of the 95th Rifles attached, at the Battle of Fuentes de Oñoro. He commanded the first battalion 3rd Guards in the Peninsular War of 1812–14, including the Battle of Salamanca, the capture of Madrid, the Siege of Burgos and subsequent retreat, the Battle of Vittoria, the Battle of the Bidassoa, the Battle of the Nive, and the passage of the Adour. At the investment of and repulse of the sortie from Bayonne, he succeeded to the command of the second brigade of Guards when Maj-Gen Edward Stopford was wounded.
Guise became a major-general in 1819, was appointed CB in 1831, became a lieutenant-general and KCB in 1841, colonel 85th light infantry in 1847, general 1851, and was made GCB 1863. He succeeded to the baronetcy on the death of his brother Berkeley, the second baronet, in 1834. In 1863 he was granted heraldic supporters to descend to heirs male of the body on succession to the baronetcy.
At the time of his death, Guise was senior general in the Army List. It took place at Elmore Court on 1 April 1865, at the age of 87.

Family

Guise married in 1815 Charlotte Diana, daughter of John Vernon of Clontarf Castle, Dublin. Their children included William Vernon Guise, the fourth baronet, and Lt Gen John Christopher Guise, who was awarded a Victoria Cross during the Indian Mutiny in 1857.
Of the several estates he inherited from his brother in 1834, he sold Rendcombe, Eighnam and Brockworth, retaining Highnam, Elmore and Rodley.