As the leading British general of the day, he was chosen to put a decisive stop to Prince
Charles Edward Stuart, a grandson of
James VII of Scotland and II of England (James VII/II was the last Stuart king on the male line), in the
Jacobite rising of 1745. His appointment was popular, and caused morale to soar amongst the public and troops loyal to King George. Recalled from
Flanders, Cumberland proceeded with preparations for quelling the Stuart (Jacobite) uprising. The Jacobite army had advanced southwards into England, hoping that English Jacobites would rise and join them. However, after receiving only limited support, such as the
Manchester Regiment, the followers of Charles decided to withdraw to Scotland. Cumberland joined the Midland army under
Ligonier, and began pursuit of the enemy, as the Stuarts retreated northwards from
Derby.
Carlisle was retaken, and he was recalled to London, where preparations were in hand to meet an expected French invasion.
Culloden , Arriving in
Edinburgh on 30 January 1746, Cumberland assumed command of his forces and marched them to
Aberdeen. There, he ordered them to undergo training for approximately two months in preparation for engaging the Jacobite Army. On 8 April, he set out from Aberdeen with his troops for
Inverness; eight days later on 16 April, he engaged the main Jacobite army near the village of
Culloden. In the
ensuing battle, his army decisively defeated the Jacobites. The battle lasted only an hour, with the Jacobites suffering between 1,500 and 2,000 casualties, while approximately 300 government soldiers were killed or wounded. Cumberland alluded to the belief that such orders had been found upon the bodies of fallen Jacobites. However, for the two days after the battle, Cumberland's order was not followed upon; though in the following two days, government troops scoured the battlefield and put to death many wounded Jacobite soldiers they came across. Government forces subsequently embarked upon the pacification of Jacobite regions in the Scottish Highlands, which took several months. They carried out searches for rebels across the Highlands, confiscating property, destroying
nonjuring Episcopalian and
Catholic meeting houses and
summarily executing numerous suspected rebels. While he had been in Inverness, Cumberland emptied the city jails of all of those who had been imprisoned by Jacobites and replaced them with Jacobites themselves; after the battle at Culloden, Jacobite prisoners were taken south to England to stand trial for
high treason. the latter being a taunt first recorded in the
City of London and used for political purposes in England. Cumberland's own brother, the
Prince of Wales (who had been refused permission to take a military role on his father's behalf), seems to have encouraged the virulent attacks upon the Duke. Cumberland preserved the strictest discipline in his camp. He was inflexible in the execution of what he deemed to be his duty, without favour to any man. In only a few cases he exercised his influence in favour of clemency. The Duke's victorious efforts were acknowledged by his being voted an income of £25,000
per annum over and above his money from the
civil list.
Return to the Continent The Duke took no part in the Flanders campaign of 1746, during which the French made huge advances
capturing Brussels and defeating the Allies at
Rocoux. In 1747, Cumberland returned to
Continental Europe. He again opposed the still-victorious
Marshal Saxe and received a heavy defeat at the
Battle of Lauffeld, or Val, near
Maastricht, on 2 July 1747. This and the
fall of Bergen-op-Zoom compelled the two sides to the negotiating table and in 1748 the
Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle was concluded and Cumberland returned home. ==Peacetime==