Angel Private Angel is a Spanish boy who acts as Sharpe's guide on his dangerous mission in ''
Sharpe's Honour''. His consuming hatred for the French leads him to join the South Essex Light Company and fight until the French are finally driven out of Spain.
Batten Private Batten is a soldier in the South Essex Regiment, later renamed The Prince of Wales Own Volunteers. He is in the Light Company commanded by Sharpe. Batten first appeared in ''
Sharpe's Gold, where he is caught by a provost for stealing a chicken. He is described as a useless soldier known for his grumbling and whining, and complains about Sharpe in Sharpe's Sword''.
Berkeley Colonel Berkeley is the commanding officer of the South Essex in ''
Sharpe's Sword'', during the early stages of the attack on Villafranca. Berkeley is friendly towards Sharpe, a reasonable and amiable man if occasionally overly officious. He grants parole to Philippe Leroux, who poses as a French captain. Sharpe, suspicious, attempts to convince Berkeley to revoke Leroux's parole and hold him in custody until Munro can investigate his identity. Berkeley is almost convinced by Sharpe pointing out the uniform supposedly belonging to a dead colonel fits Leroux better than the one he wears, but is fooled when Leroux, with Jack Spears acting as his advocate, claiming he could not afford a uniform that fit. Approaching Villafranca, French cannon fire causes a distraction as Leroux is being escorted away by Ensign McDonald. Leroux kills McDonald and escapes to the fort. Furious at Leroux's violation of his parole, Berkeley vows to take the fortress that night and see Leroux dead by morning. After spending the rest of the day at the British-allied town, Berkeley leads a night assault on the French fort. Simmerson, however, who trades with the French, warns them they are coming. Berkeley, leading from the front, is killed almost immediately with Sharpe at his side. The character of Berkeley was created for the television adaptation, taking the place of Brian Windham from the novel. He survives slightly longer than Windham, who is killed during Leroux's escape.
John Berry Lieutenant John Berry only appeared in ''
Sharpe's Eagle'' both in the novels and television series. In the novel, he is described as "overweight, with fleshy lips" and "petulant", whereas in the TV series he is reasonably fit and, although "not exactly top-drawer" (probably meaning that he's not an upper-echelon aristocrat but actually upper-middle class or even possibly a bastard son) far more worldly than his friend Gibbons, a far better gambler and far less scrupulous in getting what he wants. In the novel, Sharpe deliberately kills him the night before the Battle of Talavera in retaliation for his and Gibbons' rape of
Josefina LaCosta, while in the television series he ambushes Sharpe the night before the battle in an attempt to murder him but while taunting Sharpe is himself killed by Harper; in both cases, he is presumed to have been killed by the French. In the television series, he is portrayed by
Daniel Craig.
Jack Bullen Ensign Jack Bullen first appeared in ''
Sharpe's Escape'', where he is transferred to the Light Company from Lawford's 9th Company as a replacement for Ensign Iliffe. Bullen's father is a judge and his brothers are barristers, but Bullen does not shine at school, so he is allowed to join the army. He is described as a tough, cheerful youngster. He proves himself to be a reliable officer. In ''
Sharpe's Fury'' he translates for Sharpe in a parley with the French. Unfortunately, Bullen is made a prisoner by the French, violating the flag of truce and angering Sharpe. It is assumed that Bullen survives the war as a French prisoner or is part of a
prisoner exchange.
Philip Carline Captain Philip Carline first appeared in ''
Sharpe's Regiment''. He hides the fact he is one of the officers at the recruitment camp of the South Essex, a secret and brutal training camp in Foulness, run by the second battalion's commanding officer Lieutenant-Colonel Girdwood and the regiment's disgraced founder Sir Henry Simmerson.
Clayton Private Clayton is a soldier in the South Essex Regiment, later to be known as The Prince of Wales Own Volunteers. A former footman at a country estate, he is part of the light company commanded by Sharpe, often assisting with company bookwork. Clayton first appeared in ''
Sharpe's Company'' when Sharpe's riflemen were attach to the Light Company of the South Essex. He would have fought with Sharpe in the Battle at Talavera in ''
Sharpe's Eagle. He also participates in the destruction of Almeida but is not mentioned in Sharpe's Gold and also partakes in Sharpe's Escape during the Battle of Bussaco. Clayton is involved in the sieges of Ciudad Rodrigo and Badajoz and goes on to fight in the Battle of Salamanca in Sharpe's Sword''. In the novels, he is killed at the Battle of Waterloo alongside Rifleman Hagman.
Jack Collett Major Jack Collett is described as a small man with a clipped mustache, cropped grey hair, with bowed horseman's legs, and leathery skin, but lacking his colonel's shrewdness. As a friend of the South Essex's new commanding officer, Brian Windham, he takes the vacant majority that otherwise would have gone to senior captain, Thomas Leroy. He agrees with Major Forrest's decision to leave Sharpe in temporary command of the Light Company after the arrival of Rymer, leaving Windham the job of demoting Sharpe to lieutenant. Collett is often seen at Windham's side, organising parades for him. He loses a watch and a silver shaving mirror when Hakeswill robs the baggage train. He led half the battalion - later increased to six companies by reinforcements - in protecting engineers making a failed attempt to blow the dam near Badajoz. He is killed early on during the assault on Badjoz, his neck severed by roundshot (
Sharpe's Company). In the television adaptation of ''
Sharpe's Company'', there is no significant difference to Collett's character. Like Windham, he is friendly towards Sharpe but unsure how to treat an officer who rose from the ranks. He shakes hands with Sharpe when he is temporary assigned away from the battalion. He quickly picks up on Price's fondness for drink. During the assault on the breach at Badajoz, he is shot dead by one of the French defenders, grieving Windham.
Collip Ensign Collip first appeared in ''
Sharpe's Honour'' as Sharpe's new quartermaster. Sharpe is not impressed with Collip's abilities as quartermaster, having to watch over him constantly. Collip is described as an inexperienced plump officer.
Peter D'Alembord '''Major Peter D'Alembord''', nicknamed "Dally," joins the British Army after killing a man in a duel over a woman's favours. He is of French Huguenot extraction and enters the
South Essex Regiment as one of Sharpe's many Light Company subalterns. D'Alembord becomes Captain of the South Essex Light Company after Sharpe's promotion to Major. He helps Sharpe during ''
Sharpe's Regiment, helping Sharpe find the missing Second Battalion, and again in Sharpe's Revenge'', finding and talking to Jane Sharpe in
London. After Napoleon's return from Elba, D'Alembord returns to the Prince of Wales' Own Volunteers on the hope of being promoted to Major. Just prior to the Battle of Waterloo, he has a strong premonition of his death. After receiving his hoped-for promotion, Dally is badly injured in the fighting and has to have his leg amputated, but survives and is granted command of the battalion after Sharpe's retirement at the end of the war despite his "gammy leg." In the
Sharpe television series, his only appearance is in ''
Sharpe's Honour'', where he was portrayed by the uncredited
Edward Atterton.
Christopher Denny Ensign Christopher Denny first appeared in
Sharpe's Eagle. He accompanied Sharpe and Harper when they broke through the French lines to capture the eagle, and was killed during the fighting. In the
Sharpe television series, his only appearance is in
Sharpe's Eagle, where he is portrayed by
Nolan Hemmings.
Dobbs Private Dobbs was a soldier in the South Essex Regiment, later to be known as The Prince of Wales' Own Volunteers, first appearing in
Sharpe's Eagle. He was part of the light company commanded by originally by Major Lennox, then by Captain Leroy and finally by Sharpe, where he was flogged on Simmerson's orders for collapsing from exhaustion while on parade. He later proved his worth by being able (while still recovering from his flogging) to fire four shots a minute in Sharpe's special musket drill and surviving the battle of Talavera while assisting in capturing the Eagle. Sharpe acknowledged Dobbs' abilities by asking if he would like to join the Rifles; while Dobbs accepted Sharpe's offer, he did not appear in any other episodes.
Joseph Ford Lieutenant Colonel Joseph Ford is not a military man, but a wealthy
landowner who purchases a commission as
lieutenant colonel of the
Prince of Wales Own Volunteers in the peace of 1814–1815, which he subsequently commands during the engagement at
Quatre Bras and at the
Battle of Waterloo. He is not confident in command and relies on the support of other under-experienced senior officers, Major Micklethwaite and Major Vine, both of whom are killed in the course of the campaign. Only the timely intervention of
Richard Sharpe and his fellow
Peninsula veteran,
Major Peter d'Alembord saves the regiment from the twin threats of the incompetent command of the
Prince of Orange and an attack by
Napoleon's
Imperial Guard. In the television adaptation, he was portrayed by
Shaughan Seymour.
Christian Gibbons Christian Gibbons is a British Army Officer in the South Essex as a Lieutenant, and Sir
Henry Simmerson's nephew. In the novel ''Sharpe's Eagle'', he appears to be the senior of the two lieutenants of the South Essex that Sir Henry Simmerson brings with him (the other being his friend Berry). In the television series, his character appears to be that a slack-jawed dilettante with a weak vaccilating character and he constantly loses when gambling with Berry. forcing him to go to his uncle to help pay off his losses. He and Berry rape
Josefina LaCosta as a way of getting back at Sharpe, and in the book he seems to guess that Sharpe killed Berry, In the novel, he is killed by
Patrick Harper after the Battle of Talavera when Gibbons ambushes Sharpe in an attempt to kill him and steal the captured Eagle, and Sharpe takes a locket from him which contains a picture of his sister
Jane Gibbons whom Sharpe later marries; in the television series, he flees after his uncle at the start of the battle and is not seen or heard of again throughout the series. In the television series, he is played by
Neil Dudgeon.
Bartholomew Girdwood Bartholomew Girdwood is a British Army officer, the nominal commander of the
South Essex Regiment's Second Battalion and later the first Commanding Officer of the Regiment after its renaming as the "Prince of Wales' Own Volunteers." Girdwood served as a Captain in
Ireland during the
United Irish rebellion of 1798. While on patrol he became lost and was ambushed. The court of inquiry at
Dublin Castle dismissed him on half pay, effectively ending his military career. Some 10 years later Girdwood was recruited by
Sir Henry Simmerson, whom he had taken his reprimand to, and Lord Simon Fenner, who promoted him to Major, and then to Lieutenant Colonel and appointed him to command Second Battalion of the
South Essex Regiment, a cover for an extensive financial
fraud and
crimping scheme. Girdwood is also betrothed to Simmerson's orphaned niece,
Jane Gibbons. The scheme is discovered in 1813 by,
Major Richard Sharpe, when he returns to England seeking reinforcements for the Regiment's First Battalion in
Spain. With the help of
Regimental Sergeant Major Patrick Harper, Sharpe, under an assumed identity, tracks the South Essex's recruiting parties to a secret training camp on
Foulness Island, where he observes the new recruits being brutalised, cheated and auctioned to other, less popular regiments. When Harper intervenes to protest the
summary execution of a
deserter, he and Sharpe are hunted through the Foulness marshes by Girdwood and his fellow officers. Sharpe returns to the camp and removes Girdwood from command. Girdwood escapes and Sharpe attempts to follow his trail to evidence that will implicate Simmerson and his allies in Government. After discrediting Simmerson and saving the Battalion, Sharpe retains Girdwood as the nominal commander of the South Essex. On his first experience of battle, a
relatively minor engagement in the
Pyrenees, Girdwood suffers a complete
mental breakdown and is invalided home. Girdwood is punctilious in his dress and military protocol, modelling himself on the reforming military king
Frederick the Great of
Prussia, to the extent of stiffening his
moustache with hot pitch. He harbours irrational fears of the
Irish and of
dogs and writes poetry which glorifies the art of war. The contrast between his image of himself as a great military leader and the reality of battle leads to his breakdown. In the
TV adaption, Girdwood was played by
Mark Lambert.
Gutteridge Private Gutteridge was a soldier in the South Essex Regiment, later to be known as The Prince of Wales' Own Volunteers. He is part of the Light Company commanded by Sharpe. Gutteridge first appeared in
Sharpe's Eagle when Sharpe's riflemen were attached to the Light Company of the South Essex and would have fought with Sharpe in the Battle at Talavera in
Sharpe's Eagle. He also participated in the destruction of Almeida but wasn't mentioned in ''
Sharpe's Gold'' and also partook in
Sharpe's Escape during the battle of Bussaco. Gutteridge was involved in the Siege of Ciudad Rodrigo and the Siege of Badajoz and went on to fight in the Battle of Salamanca in
Sharpe's Sword. Gutteridge wasn't mentioned in Sharpe's Enemy, Honour, Regiment, Christmas, Siege, Revenge or Waterloo.
Obadiah Hakeswill Obadiah Hakeswill is a fictional character who appears in several of the
Sharpe books by
Bernard Cornwell. Hakeswill's early history is related in every novel in which he appears. He was raised by his mother, Biddy, in an unknown "
dale" town in England, where he
sexually assaulted a
parson's daughter. To protect the girl's reputation, he was charged and convicted of stealing a
sheep and
sentenced to death by public
hanging. On the day of his
execution, the
hangman hoisted the numerous victims into the air to die by strangulation, for the amusement of the crowd, and paid little attention to the small boy struggling at the far end of the scaffold. When a heavy rainstorm scattered both executioner and crowd, Hakeswill's uncle was able to cut the boy from the scaffold "for his mother's sake". Hakeswill fled south and enlisted in the
33rd Regiment of Foot as a
drummer boy. As a result of this close encounter with death, Hakeswill was convinced that he was unkillable and protected by God and the spirit of his mother. He extended this reverence to mothers in general, "Mothers were sacred... Mothers were Obadiah Hakeswill's guardian angels" (''
Sharpe's Tiger) and in Sharpe's Enemy, he protects his hostage Josefina LaCosta when she lies that she came to a church in the town of Adrados to pray for the health of her own mother. Sharpe's Enemy'' also hints that Hakeswill's mother was actually
abusive of him before his hanging, but those memories have been eclipsed by his belief that she sent his uncle to save him. The hanging left him with a thick dark scar around his neck and uncontrollable facial
tics. Hakeswill gains promotion to
sergeant by brutalising the lower ranks and pandering to the whims and vanity of less experienced
officers. Outwardly he is punctilious in his military routine and obsequious towards officers, who find him very useful for keeping order among their soldiers. Thus protected, Hakeswill is free to terrorize the soldiers in his units, forcing them to
bribe him to avoid floggings for imaginary infractions and forcing their wives to have sex with him to protect their husbands. In the early 1790s he recruits the young
Richard Sharpe into the 33rd from a
public house in
Sheffield. In subsequent campaigns in
Flanders and
India, Hakeswill torments Sharpe, until in 1799 he conspires with Captain
Charles Morris to have Sharpe
flogged to death (''
Sharpe's Tiger''). Although Sharpe escapes with "only" 202 of the assigned 2000 lashes after an intervention by
Sir Arthur Wellesley, Hakeswill continues to pursue a
vendetta against him for the next three years, during which he betrays Sharpe and Lawford to
Tipoo Sultan (''Sharpe's Tiger''), falsifies a second assault charge and murders Sharpe's friend and mentor Hector McCandless (''
Sharpe's Triumph). He later kidnaps Sharpe and sells him to a corrupt merchant and finally deserts to join the turncoat William Dodd at Gawilghur in Sharpe's Fortress''. After Gawilghur is captured by Major General
Arthur Wellesley, Hakeswill rejoins the British forces. At one point, he also serves in the Fever Islands, where he contracts
Yellow fever, the result of which stains his skin yellow. Hakeswill reappears in Sharpe's life in 1812, in the novel ''
Sharpe's Company'', as a sergeant in the new draft of the
South Essex Regiment, in which Sharpe has risen to the rank of captain. He is quick to resume the vendetta, conspiring to have Sharpe's friend and ally
Patrick Harper flogged and demoted and disarming Sharpe's remaining
riflemen. He also attempts to rape Sharpe's wife,
Teresa Moreno and plots to assault her during the sack of
Badajoz, murdering
Captain Robert Knowles in the process. He has also stolen the portrait of the Colonel's wife, strangely believing it to be his mother, and constantly talks into the portrait, stored in the top of his
shako. His evil finally exposed, Hakeswill deserts from the army once again, joining a band of cross-national
deserters on the
Portuguese border, led by the Frenchman Deron, known as "Marshal ". He is captured by the now
Major Sharpe during an operation to release hostages, but escapes to shoot and kill Teresa. Hakeswill surrenders to a French officer, Colonel Alexandre Dubreton who, disgusted by his actions, hands him back to Sharpe. Hakeswill is finally executed by firing squad, while Sharpe looks on. The novels record at least four unsuccessful attempts by Sharpe and/or Harper to kill Hakeswill, which lend weight to the latter's conviction that he cannot die: • Confining him in a courtyard with six tigers (''
Sharpe's Tiger'') • Ordering an elephant trained as an executioner to
trample him (''
Sharpe's Triumph'') • Throwing him into a pit inhabited by venomous snakes (''
Sharpe's Fortress'') • Harper shooting him through a window in Badajoz, with a seven-barrelled
Nock gun (''
Sharpe's Company'') However, it can be argued that the first three incidents are not serious attempts at murder; Sharpe is aware that the Tipoo's tigers are not invariably savage after seeing Colonel Gudin stroke one some days earlier; does not give the elephant the final command needed to crush Hakeswill; and is not familiar with the snake pit at Gawilghur. He is not aware at this time that Hakeswill has murdered McCandless and seems to prefer to torment the living Hakeswill with his own continued survival. Only after the murder of Knowles and Hakeswill's threat to kill his infant daughter does Sharpe seek Hakeswill's death, and even then chooses to bring him to justice within the formal structures of the British Army. He feels that Hakeswill has victimised so many people that their families deserve to know that Hakeswill died after a fair legal process. Author
Bernard Cornwell has admitted that he regrets finishing the character off, as he has struggled since to create an antagonist of equal depravity and energy. In the
TV adaptations, Sergeant Obadiah Hakeswill was played by
Pete Postlethwaite. His character follows a similar arc to the later novels, including his framing of Harper, attack on Teresa, desertion and eventual capture and execution. It is revealed in ''
Sharpe's Peril'' that he has a son – Corporal Barabbus Hakeswill (portrayed by
Amit Behl) – whom Sharpe initially distrusts but eventually proves to be a useful ally. In the popular
post-apocalyptic role playing game Fallout 2, a character by the name of Obidiah Hakeswill resides in the town of Redding. In the side quest to aid the sheriff, the player can choose to bring Obadiah to justice for cutting up the face of a
prostitute. Besides their somewhat sociopathic nature, Obadiah and Obidiah share a scar around their necks and obsession with their mothers and a belief in their own invincibility.
Huckfield Colour Sergeant Huckfield was a soldier in the South Essex Regiment, later to be known as The Prince of Wales Own Volunteers. He was part of the light company commanded by Sharpe. Huckfield first appeared in
Sharpe's Eagle as a private soldier when Sharpe's riflemen were attached to the light company of the South Essex. He would have fought with Sharpe in the Battle at Talavera in
Sharpe's Eagle. He also participated in the destruction of Almeida but wasn't mentioned in
Sharpe's Gold and also partook in
Sharpe's Escape during the battle of Bussaco. Huckfield was involved in the Siege of Ciudad Rodrigo and the Siege of Badajoz and went on to fight in the Battle of Salamanca in
Sharpe's Sword where by then he had made the rank of Sergeant. By the time of the Battle of Waterloo, Huckfield had achieved the rank of Colour Sergeant Major. Huckfield was described in the novels as being educated, previously being employed as a clerk in a foundry that made iron. He was from Shropshire and volunteered to join the army to escape encroaching industrialisation of his native Midlands.
Iliffe Ensign Iliffe was an officer in the Light Company of the South Essex. He was the son of an Essex gentleman. To begin with Sharpe had not liked Iliffe, however Iliffe proved himself in battle by showing courage after previously being sick before battle. Ensign Iliffe was killed in
Sharpe's Escape getting shot in the forehead.
Kirby Private Kirby was a soldier in the South Essex Regiment, later to be known as The Prince of Wales Own Volunteers. He part of the light company commanded by Sharpe. Kirby first appeared in
Sharpe's Eagle when Sharpe's riflemen were attach to the light company of the South Essex. He would have fought with Sharpe in the Battle at Talavera in
Sharpe's Eagle. He also participated in the destruction of Almeida but wasn't mentioned in
Sharpe's Gold and also partook in
Sharpe's Escape during the battle of Bussaco. Kirby would have been involved in the Siege of Ciudad Rodrigo and the Siege of Badajoz. He went on to fight in the Battle of Salamanca in [Sharpe's Sword] but he wasn't mentioned. Kirby wasn't mentioned in Sharpe's Enemy, Honour, Regiment, Christmas, Siege, Revenge, or Waterloo. Kirby was described as a small man who had lost most of his teeth.
Robert Knowles Captain Robert Knowles first appears in
Sharpe's Eagle as an inexperienced
lieutenant in the Light Company of the
South Essex Regiment. He is one of the handful of officers who sides with Lieutenant
Richard Sharpe in his feud with
Sir Henry Simmerson, quickly recognising Sharpe's abilities as a soldier and adopting him as a role model. Knowles plays a significant role in the recovery of stolen Spanish gold behind enemy lines in
Sharpe's Gold and is shortly afterwards appointed as
Adjutant to
Lt Colonel William Lawford, the South Essex's senior officer (
Sharpe's Escape). By early 1812 Knowles has
purchased a
captaincy in
45th Regiment of Foot, but is on hand to assist Lawford when the latter is seriously injured during the storming of
Ciudad Rodrigo (
Sharpe's Company). Knowles sympathises with Sharpe when he learns that his mentor has been demoted from captain to lieutenant and promises to protect Sharpe's lover,
Teresa Moreno, who is trapped with her young child in the besieged city of
Badajoz. Subsequently, Knowles takes part in a successful
escalade of the castle at Badajoz (in this Cornwell has borrowed the real life achievement of a Lieutenant James MacPherson). He then seeks out Teresa, but is shot and killed by
Obadiah Hakeswill. Knowles does not appear in the
TV adaptations of the Sharpe series; his role in
Sharpe's Gold was abandoned when the script was revised following an injury to the actor originally cast as Richard Sharpe,
Paul McGann. In
Sharpe's Company the character is combined with that of
Lieutenant Harry Price and it is Price who is shot in the last minutes of the film, though his character re-appears in
Sharpe's Waterloo.
William Lawford Sir William Lawford is a fictional
British officer and a character in
Bernard Cornwell's
Sharpe books. Lawford is the son of a
Scottish mother and
English father and raised near
Portsmouth in
Hampshire. He is a member of the
gentry and is able, with the help of his maternal uncle, Hector McCandless, to purchase a
commission as a
lieutenant in the
33rd Regiment of Foot. As McCandless is an officer in the
East India Company, it is probable that Lawford joins the regiment, then under the command of
Lieutenant Colonel Arthur Wellesley sometime after its arrival in India in 1796. He is posted to the light company under Captain Charles Morris and there meets Private
Sharpe for the first time. When McCandless, who acts as an
exploring officer for the company, is captured by the forces of the
Tipoo Sultan, Lawford is tasked with his rescue and chooses Sharpe to accompany him, thus saving the latter from execution by
flogging. The pair infiltrate the city of
Seringapatam and, posing as deserters, are recruited into the Tipoo's army. Lawford learns to rely on and trust Sharpe's instincts and experience as a soldier to ensure the success of their mission. Unfortunately they are betrayed by
Sergeant Obadiah Hakeswill and thrown into prison, where Lawford teaches Sharpe to read, using a single page of the
Bible. During the British assault on the city, Lawford and Sharpe escape and successfully detonate a
mine built into the city walls, saving many British lives and ensuring a British victory. As a result of this both men are promoted, Sharpe as a
sergeant, Lawford as
captain. Lawford is still in India at least as late as 1803, when his uncle is killed in the closing stages of the
Battle of Assaye, but he returns at some point in the next six years. In 1809 Lawford is part of the garrison of
Dublin Castle in Ireland, but purchases a
lieutenant colonelcy and transfers to Wellesley's staff in Portugal (''
Sharpe's Eagle''). There he is reunited with Sharpe, now a
lieutenant in the
95th Rifles. During the
Battle of Talavera Lawford is given command of the
South Essex Regiment when its commander
Sir Henry Simmerson attempts to flee the field, thus once again becoming Sharpe's commanding officer. Lawford continues in that role until early 1812, when he is gravely wounded in the assault on
Ciudad Rodrigo, loses his left arm and is invalided back to Britain (
Sharpe's Company). Back in England Lawford dedicates himself to his family and political career. He is knighted and elected to parliament, seeking advancement through alliance with the ruling
Tory administration. He attempts to use these contacts to extricate Sharpe from the scandals that threatens to destroy their old regiment (
Sharpe's Regiment). He is mentioned by D'Alembord in ''
Sharpe's Revenge'', having spoken to him about Jane Sharpe and Lord John Rossendale, and claims they are "intimate". Lawford is the South Essex's second Commanding Officer, preceded by
Sir Henry Simmerson and succeeded by Colonel Brian Windham.
Lennox Captain Lennox is an officer of the South Essex Light Company in Sharpe's Eagle. Lennox was a Scotsman, who retired after returning from India. But after losing his wife, and because a pension on half pay wasn't enough, he rejoined the army as an officer of the South Essex then being raised by Sir Henry Simmerson. General Wellesley dispatches the South Essex, alongside Sharpe's Riflemen and the engineers of Major Hogan, to blow up the bridge at Valdelacasa, so as to protect the army's flank as they march. During an unnecessary action against the French ordered by Simmerson, Lennox was mortally wounded, and the King's Colour was lost. As a dying request, Lennox asks Sharpe to take a French Eagle, to erase the shame of losing their own standard. In the television adaption Lennox was a Major.
Thomas Leroy Lieutenant Colonel Thomas Leroy is a fictional character in the
Richard Sharpe series of novels by
Bernard Cornwell. He is an American
Loyalist serving as an
officer in the
British Army during the
Peninsular War. Thomas Leroy was born in
Virginia to a
gentry class planter family at some point prior to the
American War of Independence. As Leroy's family support the Crown, they fled first to
Canada and then to
Britain on the defeat of loyalist forces. In 1809, Leroy purchased a Captain's commission in the fictional
South Essex Regiment, where he first meets
Richard Sharpe in the novel ''
Sharpe's Eagle''. During Sharpe's first mission with the South Essex, its officers quickly place themselves into one of two categories: inept, cowardly dilettantes, such as the regiment's Colonel, Sir
Henry Simmerson and his nephew, Lt.
Christian Gibbons and professional, or at least competent officers, such as Leroy, Major Forrest and the regiment's only veteran officer Lennox (a captain in the novel, but a major in the television adaptation). Leroy remains with the South Essex throughout his military career, rising steadily in ranks through the Peninsular Campaign. He is present at the loss of the regiment's colours at the fictional engagement at Torrecastro and at the subsequent capture of a
French Imperial Eagle at the
Battle of Talavera in 1809. (Sharpe's Eagle), is severely injured in the breach at
Siege of Badajoz in 1812, (
Sharpe's Company), but recovers to take command of the regiment after the death of
Colonel Windham shortly before the
Battle of Salamanca in the same year (''
Sharpe's Sword''). He dies in action at the
Battle of Vitoria in 1813, leading the assault on the village of
Gamarra-Mayor. Leroy is the last Commanding Officer of the South Essex, before its change of name to the Prince of Wales' Own Volunteers, commanded by Lt. Col
Bartholomew Girdwood (
Sharpe's Regiment). In the
TV Adaptations, Leroy was played by
Gavan O'Herlihy. The character appears only in the
episode based on
Sharpe's Eagle.
MacLaird Regimental Sergeant Major MacLaird was a soldier in the South Essex Regiment. MacLaird would have fought with Sharpe in the Battle at Talavera in
Sharpe's Eagle. He also participated in the destruction of Almeida but wasn't mentioned in
Sharpe's Gold and also partook in
Sharpe's Escape during the battle of Bussaco. MacLaird was involved in the Siege of Ciudad Rodrigo and the Siege of Badajoz and went on to fight in the Battle of Salamanca in
Sharpe's Sword. MacLaird wasn't mentioned in Sharpe's Enemy but appeared at the battle of Vitoria in
Sharpe's Honour. He died in Sharpe's arms a week later as the South Essex fought off a French attempt to break up the line of march to Pasajes in
Sharpe's Regiment. Sharpe promoted Harper to take his place.
William Matthews Ensign William Matthews appeared in
Sharpe's Company when the South Essex received reinforcements. He was killed during the siege of Badajoz by a gunpowder charge detonated by Sharpe, intended to destroy a dam to allow for an easier attack on Badajoz. He was of a rich family, and was himself a viscount. His replacement, Ensign McDonald, was killed by Colonel Leroux when he broke his parole to escape to the French-held forts in Salamanca after being captured by Sharpe and his men.
McGovern Sergeant McGovern was a Sergeant in the South Essex Regiment, later The Prince of Wales Own Volunteers, as part of the Light Company commanded by Sharpe. McGovern first appeared in
Sharpe's Eagle when Sharpe's riflemen were attached to the Light Company of the South Essex. He would have fought with Sharpe in the Battle at Talavera in
Sharpe's Eagle. He also participated in the destruction of Almeida but wasn't mentioned in
Sharpe's Gold and also partook in
Sharpe's Escape during the battle of Bussaco. McGovern would have been involved in the Siege of Ciudad Rodrigo and the Siege of Badajoz. He went on to fight in the Battle of Salamanca in
Sharpe's Sword but he wasn't mentioned. McGovern wasn't mentioned in Sharpe's Enemy, Honour, Regiment, Christmas, Siege, Revenge, or Waterloo. McGovern was described as a strong but slow man from Scotland with children.
Mellors Private Mellors was a soldier in the South Essex Regiment, later to be known as The Prince of Wales Own Volunteers. He part of the light company commanded by Sharpe. He would have fought with Sharpe in the Battle at Talavera in
Sharpe's Eagle. He also participated in the destruction of Almeida but wasn't mentioned in
Sharpe's Gold and also partook in
Sharpe's Escape during the battle of Bussaco. Mellors would have been involved in the Siege of Ciudad Rodrigo and the Siege of Badajoz. He went on to fight in the Battle of Salamanca in
Sharpe's Sword. Mellors wasn't mentioned in Sharpe's Enemy, Honour, Regiment, Christmas, Siege, Revenge, or Waterloo. He was described as being one of the useless members of the light company along with private Batten.
Peters Private Peters was a soldier in the South Essex Regiment, later to be known as The Prince of Wales Own Volunteers. He part of the light company commanded by Sharpe. Peters first appeared in
Sharpe's Eagle when Sharpe's riflemen were attach to the light company of the South Essex. He would have fought with Sharpe in the Battle at Talavera in
Sharpe's Eagle. He also participated in the destruction of Almeida but wasn't mentioned in
Sharpe's Gold and also partook in
Sharpe's Escape during the battle of Bussaco. Peters was involved in the Siege of Ciudad Rodrigo and the Siege of Badajoz guarding the gates of the chapel where Teresa was being held. He and went on to fight in the Battle of Salamanca in
Sharpe's Sword. Peters wasn't mentioned in Sharpe's Enemy, Honour, Regiment, Christmas, Siege, Revenge or Waterloo. Peters is described as a huge sensible man who was older than most. Sharpe saw Peters as a sensible man and a trust worthy reliable soldier.
Harry Price Harry Price is a fictional character in the
Richard Sharpe stories written by
Bernard Cornwell. Characters named Harry Price appeared in two episodes of the
Sharpe television series, played by different actors. Price makes his first appearance in the novel
Sharpe's Company (although he has a small role in
Sharpe's Battle, a novel written after but set before
Sharpe's Company). He is a new lieutenant in the
South Essex Regiment, serving as Sharpe's second-in-command in the light company, replacing
Robert Knowles from the earlier books. He is fond of alcohol but affable and well liked by the men. He was born in
Portsmouth, the son of a ship builder, but gambling debts and unwanted pregnancies with local women made his father sent him to the army, purchasing an Ensign's commission, and four years later, paid £550 to promote him to Lieutenant. Price has minor roles in the next few novels. In
Sharpe's Sword, he is briefly placed in command of the light company after Sharpe is believed killed during the capture of
Salamanca. He is involved in the action on the Portuguese/Spanish border in
Sharpe's Enemy and is present at the
Battle of Vitoria in
Sharpe's Honour. He is given a larger role in the next novel,
Sharpe's Regiment, where he accompanies Sharpe,
Harper and
D'Alembord back to England to try to find recruits to bolster the depleted regiment. He plays a part in helping Sharpe take control of the battalion's training camp and expose a plan by corrupt officers to sell the recruits to other regiments. He then returns to
Spain with the regiment, now known as the Prince of Wales' Own Volunteers, and is promoted to captain and given command of a company after Captain Thomas is killed at the
Battle of Nivelle. In
Sharpe's Waterloo, he is still with the regiment and, after they suffer casualties at
Quatre Bras and
Waterloo, the most senior officer after
Colonel Ford to escape uninjured. When Sharpe takes command of the battalion, he promotes Price to major and places him in command of the light company. Despite this, the novel
Sharpe's Assassin, set immediately afterwards, portrays him as still being a captain. He accompanies Sharpe to Paris and takes part in his battle with a rogue French battalion attempting to avenge Napoleon's defeat. Price appears in the TV adaptation
Sharpe's Company, played by
Scott Cleverdon. He is given a similar role to that in the book but he is shot and apparently killed by
Sergeant Hakeswill during the
storming of Badajoz while trying to protect
Teresa, a fate that befell Captain Knowles in the book. However, a character named Harry Price appears in
Sharpe's Waterloo, played by
Nicholas Irons. He talks to Sharpe and Harper and it is clear they know him quite well and that he is a veteran, possibly indicating that this is meant to be the same Harry Price from Sharpe's Company. When several soldiers are killed as a result of
the Prince of Orange's incompetent orders at Quatre Bras, Price worries that his brother, who has just joined up, is among the dead. He is last seen in the closing seconds of the episode, standing alongside Sharpe as he turns back the French advance at Waterloo.
Read Sergeant Read was a soldier in the South Essex Regiment. He part of the light company commanded by Sharpe. Read first appeared in
Sharpe's Eagle when Sharpe's riflemen were attach to the light company of the South Essex. He would have fought with Sharpe in the Battle at Talavera. He also participated in the destruction of Almeida but wasn't mentioned in
Sharpe's Gold and also partook in
Sharpe's Escape during the battle of Bussaco. Read was involved in the Siege of Ciudad Rodrigo and the Siege of Badajoz. He was unfortunately blinded in the siege of Badajoz in
Sharpe's Company. He was unable to continue as a soldier due to losing his sight and was presumably sent back home to England. Huckfield took his place as Sergeant in the light company. Read was described as a Methodist who worried about the souls of others. He never swore or drank.
Roach Private Roach was a soldier in the South Essex Regiment, later to be known as The Prince of Wales Own Volunteers. He part of the light company commanded by Sharpe. Roach first appeared in
Sharpe's Gold when Sharpe's riflemen were attach to the light company of the South Essex. In
Sharpe's Gold it mentioned that Roach pimped his wife for a shilling. He would have fought with Sharpe in the Battle at Talavera in
Sharpe's Eagle. He also participated in the battle of Bussaco in
Sharpe's Escape. Roach was involved in the Siege of Ciudad Rodrigo and the Siege of Badajoz and went on to fight in the Battle of Salamanca in
Sharpe's Sword. Roach wasn't mentioned in Sharpe's Enemy, Honour, Regiment, Christmas, Siege, Revenge or Waterloo.
Sir Henry Simmerson Colonel Sir
Henry Simmerson is a recurring villain, portrayed as a stereotypical snobbish, petty and tyrannical minor English
aristocrat. He is narrow-minded, militarily inept and cowardly; while he is not presented as a clever man, he does display a certain cunning and deviousness. In his first appearance in the novels, he is described as short, squat, and red-faced giving the impression of "a pig sitting on horseback". Simmerson first appears in ''
Sharpe's Eagle'', as commanding officer of the
South Essex Regiment of the
British Army, during the
Talavera Campaign. Captain
Michael Hogan briefly sketches Simmerson's background as a
Justice of the Peace,
Member of Parliament for
Paglesham, (a
rotten borough), and a colonel in the
Militia. He is also a distant cousin of General Sir
Banastre Tarleton and thus has some influence at
Horse Guards which serves to protect him, to a considerable extent, from the full consequences of his cowardice and military ineptitude. His considerable (inherited) wealth has allowed him to not only purchase his commission in the army, but also raise the regiment at his own expense. Simmerson is thus portrayed as the archetype of the military dilettante allowed to hold rank and responsibility in the British Army, a type which is the constant bane of professional soldiers like Sharpe. Throughout the first novel, he consistently ignores the advice of the few professional soldiers among his officers, and blames the often disastrous consequences of his own blunders on them. He also displays blatant
nepotism in favouring his nephew, Christian Gibbons, as his aide. The South Essex is assigned the relatively easy mission of linking up with an allied Spanish regiment and escorting Hogan to a point on the River
Tagus to destroy a bridge that the French could use. In a minor skirmish with a French cavalry patrol, however, Simmerson's appalling judgement leads to the loss of a substantial number of men, and the loss of one of his regiment's two
colours (presented by the king and representing the regiment's honour). At the end of the novel, when the South Essex is positioned on the British flank during the
Battle of Talavera, Simmerson panics and starts to withdraw the regiment, before he is ignominiously relieved from his post by
William Lawford. He is mentioned in passing in the subsequent novels as having returned to England and resumed his political activities, in particular helping to implement the new
income tax, and becomes "Commissioner of the Excise". In 1813, (
Sharpe's Regiment) Simmerson, with Lord Simon Fenner, and Lieutenant Colonel Batholomew Girdwood (whom he had promoted), uses the second battalion of the South Essex in an illegal
crimping operation, recruiting men for the South Essex then selling them to posts overseas. Sharpe exposes him and presumably this is the end of his military career (Simmerson was (legally) crimping long before this and the historical notes to
Sharpe's Regiment reveal this is how he obtained his commission). Sharpe also snubs Simmerson by eloping with his niece,
Jane Gibbons. In the first run of the television adaptations, Simmerson, played by
Michael Cochrane, appears in
Sharpe's Eagle (1993),
Sharpe's Sword (1995) and
Sharpe's Regiment (1996). His appearances in
Eagle and
Regiment remain faithful to the novel versions, while his appearance in
Sword is a creation of the show's writers, since that story was largely re-vamped from the novel. Simmerson proved to be a popular character with the viewers, and was brought back for several subsequent appearances. In
Sword he has renounced his military rank in favour of being a political
commissar with the British Army in Spain (and reports that a court of inquiry found him innocent of losing the colour in
Eagle). Simmerson takes a licentious interest in "Lass" (
Emily Mortimer), a novice
nun under Sharpe's protection, rendered
mute by the trauma of watching her sisters tortured for information by a French spy. Simmerson tries, on two occasions, to
rape Lass, but fails both times, due both to Lass's pluck, and the intervention of an Irish priest, who thrashes Simmerson in a sword fight. It is also implied that Simmerson betrayed a night attack attempted by the South Essex to the French, in the hopes that Sharpe would be killed. In the revival series, Cochrane returns as Simmerson, now an officer in the army attached to the
British East India Company, in the 2006 revival,
Sharpe's Challenge and its 2008 sequel
Sharpe's Peril. In
Peril, Simmerson is found naked, staked to the ground and is saved by Sharpe, and whether it is the severe sunstroke he has suffered or an offer of genuine friendship, becomes Sharpe's ally and commands a section of musketeers during the final assault by the 3rd Native Horse. At the end of the episode, a seemingly normal Simmerson offers his gratitude to Sharpe, with the two men shaking hands before parting ways.
Cornelius Slingsby Lieutenant (later brevet Captain)
Cornelius Slingsby appeared in ''
Sharpe's Escape''. At 31, he is old for a Lieutenant, but inexperienced, having served most of his army career in the
East Indies. He is the brother-in-law of Col. Lawford's wife, Jessica, who pressures her husband to advance Slingsby's career in the South Essex (Sharpe's friend, Robert Knowles, confides that Jessica's sister was impregnated by a lover who abandoned her, and Slingsby was hastily "recruited" by her family to marry her and avoid scandal). He is assigned as second-in-command of the Light Company under Sharpe, who detests him. At
Bussaco, after Sharpe rescues a detachment of the Light Company from one of Slingsby's blunders, Slingsby demands an apology for Sharpe using harsh language towards him. When Sharpe refuses, Lawford reluctantly reassigns Sharpe as a
quartermaster and puts Slingsby in temporary command of the Light Company. Even Lawford quickly becomes annoyed with Slingsby, silently comparing him to a dog that barks too often, just to ensure that people are still paying attention to him. Under the pressures of his new position, Slingsby quickly breaks down, getting drunk on duty with hoarded
rum. After another brief skirmish with the French in which Sharpe rescues the Light Company (again), Lawford quietly reinstates him to command, while leaving Slingsby's fate ambiguous.
Smith Captain Smith first appeared in
Sharpe's Regiment. He is one of the officers at the recruitment camp of the South Essex, a secret and brutal training camp in Foulness, run by the second battalion's commanding officer Lieutenant-Colonel Girdwood and the regiment's disgraced founder Sir Henry Simmerson.
Michael Trumper-Jones Lieutenant Michael Trumper-Jones first appears in
Sharpe's Honour as an inexperienced
lieutenant in the South Essex. He is one of the handful of officers who sides with Major
Richard Sharpe. Trumper-Jones acts as Sharpe's legal representative when he is accused of murder.
Charlie Weller Sergeant Charlie Weller first appeared in
Sharpe's Regiment. Charlie Weller first appeared in Sharpe's Regiment when he was recruited into the South Essex's second battalion by Sergeant Horatio Havercamp. In the brutal conditions at the training camp under Col. Bartholomew Girdwood, however, he finds army life is not how expected it. He was the rarest of recruits, something respected by fellow undercover recruit, Richard Sharpe, a man who joined the army out of patriotism rather than desperation. Sharpe and Harper, disguised as fellow recruits, can see in Charlie the makings of a good soldier, and try their best to look out for him. Weller had been promised by Havercamp that his small terrier, Buttons, would be welcome at camp, but Girdwood, who hates and fears dogs, orders it killed, earning Weller's eternal enmity. When Major Sharpe finally takes the new recruits and Col. Girdwood back with him to Spain to fill out the depleted ranks of the newly named Prince of Wales' Own Volunteers, he tells the men that they may all keep dogs as pets in the ranks, making it clear who actually is in command of the Regiment. Weller survives the remainder of the war, and appears in Sharpe's Waterloo, where he is asked by Private Clayton to watch out for his wife Sally, should he fall. When Clayton does indeed die in the final hour of the battle, Weller is as good as his word. After the battle Sharpe notices Weller and Sally together and tells the young man he can be a sergeant if only he'd fetch Sharpe a cup of tea. After accompanying Sharpe on his mission to Paris in Sharpe's Assassin, Weller and Sally marry and take up employment on the Sharpe-Lassan farm in Normandy, where they are expecting their first child.
Brian Windham Colonel Brian Windham first appears in
Sharpe's Company as the new commander of the South Essex, replacing the injured Colonel William Lawford. He is described as a bluff man, not unkind, with cropped grey hair. Sharpe thought his was a face one might expect to see sitting on the bench in a county court; a knowing face, experienced. He is obsessed with hunting and brought both hunters and hounds with him to Spain. He is utterly devoted to his wife Jessica, whose portrait shows a rather stern, somewhat chinless woman. Initially he wants a regular inspection of the wives attached to the South Essex, saying he wants no girls like the one he'd seen Sharpe arguing over. Sharpe, anticipating future events, named Teresa his wife. That the wedding had been private nearly 16 months previously, and that they had a seven month old daughter. He further informed the Colonel that his wife was employed outside the Regiment - as a partisan. Flustered, Windham apologized for mistaking Sharpe's wife. He then, however, fell back on accepted lore. That officers from the ranks never succeeded except in administration. Taking pains to ease Sharpe into the reality of his situation, he informs him that the captaincy he'd been hoping for had been purchased by another, and his gazette rank denied. He then sends Lieutenant Sharpe back to quartermaster duties, so that the new captain of the Light Company would not have to compete with Sharpe for the men. When Sharpe then immediately asks for the Forlorn Hope at Badajoz, Windham calls him unbalanced, that there will be vacancies a plenty after the attack. When his wife's portrait is stolen, the silver frame for it is found in Harper's kit. The furious Windham demands to know where the portrait was, but Harper, innocent of the crime, could not tell him. Windham, in his fury, breaks Harper back to private and sentences him to 100 lashes. After the intervention of Michael Hogan, Windham reduces the sentence to 60 lashes. After Badjoz, Sharpe returns Jessica Windham's portrait to him, and explains where it had been found. That Harper had been innocent. Windham, to his credit, offers Harper an apology. Harper brushed off the need by telling him a striped back was very attractive to the ladies. He returns the command of the Light Company to Sharpe after the death of the new captain. In Sharpe's Sword, he was murdered by a Philippe Leroux, a man he thought was a paroled French officer, who then broke parole, killed his ensign and then the Colonel before escaping into the forts outside Salamanca. ==British==