Waterloo
William Watt, 2nd or R.N. Brit. Reg. Drag.
With original steel clip and silver bar suspension
William Watt was born c.1785, at Inveresk, Midlothian, and enlisted at Edinburgh 1805, aged 16. By trade a blacksmith he served as a regimental farrier and was in Captain Cheyney’s Troop at the battle of Waterloo. He was discharged on 23 October 1821, in consequence of ‘being unfit for further service, being subject to chronic rheumatism which incapacitates him from performing his duty as a farrier.’ Sold with comprehensive research including copied pay lists and discharge papers.
Naval General Service, 2 clasps, Stately 22 March 1808, 25 July Boat Service 1809, Pte. Royal Marines, unique name on the roll, for the destruction of the Danish 74-gun Prinds Christian Frederick in March 1808, and in the boats of the Princess Caroline on 25 July 1809, in a brutal engagement with four Russian gun-boats and an armed brig in the gulf of Finland where one of the Russian gun-boats fought to the last with every one of it's 44 crew killed or wounded 




