John Shelton (British Army officer)

John Shelton
Born1790/91
Died (aged 54)
Dublin
Buried
AllegianceUnited Kingdom
Service/branchBritish Army
Years of service1805–45
RankColonel
(Major General in the British Indian army)
Unit9th (East Norfolk) Regiment of Foot
44th (East Essex) Regiment of Foot
WarsPeninsular War
Walcheren Campaign
War of 1812
First Anglo-Burmese War
First Anglo-Afghan War

Colonel John Shelton (1790/91 – 13 May 1845) was an officer of the British Army who commanded the 44th (East Essex) Regiment of Foot during the First Anglo-Afghan War and was second-in-command to Major General Sir William Elphinstone. He was one of only a small number of British soldiers to survive the disastrous 1842 retreat from Kabul, in which a British army column of 4,500 men and 12,000 civilians was massacred by Afghan tribesmen as it attempted to march to Jalalabad. He was widely disliked as a tyrannical and ineffective commander whose failures led to the annihilation of his regiment and whose accidental death was cheered by his men, but he also had a deserved reputation for great physical bravery.


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