He was captured by the enemy and soon learnt that his entire family had been ruthlessly murdered by the rebels. He had now lost two wives and eight children in total and wanted to live no longer. He begged for death from his captors but they refused to kill him on account of his bravery at the magazine. On escaping to the British lines he volunteered for every dangerous mission he could in order to vent his anger and seek revenge. He was present at the
Battle of Badli-ki-Serai on 8 June 1857, and three attacks of sunstroke left him weak and ill, but he survived. He was then appointed
Provost Marshal at
Meerut, where one of his duties was to superintend the execution of 150 rebels. He devised their punishment of being strapped to the muzzle of a cannon and blown apart. Buckley was promoted to Lieutenant on 18 October 1858. He became ill again and the Medical Board at Fort William, Calcutta, granted him two years leave. He departed for Britain on 21 May 1858 and arrived home on 6 July. John Buckley was invested with his Victoria Cross by
Queen Victoria on 2 August 1858 during a parade of the garrison on
Southsea Common, Portsmouth. He returned to Stalybridge in September 1858, but soon left again for India. Buckley retired as a Major on 1 October 1861, returned to England and lived for many years with his final wife, Sara, at 213 East India Dock Road,
Poplar until his death on 14 July 1876, aged 63. Living in relative "poverty and obscurity" at the time of his death, he was buried in an unmarked grave at the nearby
Tower Hamlets Cemetery. ==The medal==