Major Richard Maitland |
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Born | ca. 1714 |
Died | February 21, 1763 Bombay, India |
Allegiance | East India Company |
Service/branch | British Army |
Years of service | 1732–1763 |
Rank | Major |
Unit | Royal Artillery |
Major Richard Maitland (ca. 1714–21 February 1763) was a British Army officer who served in the Royal Artillery, and the captor of Surat while in the service of the East India Company.
Maitland was born in around 1714. He enlisted in the Royal Artillery as a matross on 1 November 1732, at about 18. He rose by merit through the enlisted and non-commissioned officer grades, and received a commission as lieutenant-fireworker in 1742. The dates of his subsequent commissions show that his promotion was at first uncommonly rapid: he was a second lieutenant on 1 May 1743, a first lieutenant on 1 April 1744, a captain-lieutenant on 1 August 1747, and a captain on 1 March 1755. Maitland fought at the battle of Fontenoy in 1745, and likely in some of the less successful battles of the War of the Austrian Succession during the following two years.
In 1755, four companies of the Royal Artillery, one of which Maitland commanded, were specially formed for Indian service under the East India Company. They embarked for India in that year; one was totally lost on the voyage out, but the other three arrived safely at Bombay, where they joined the garrison. Maitland participated in the capture of Gheriah, a stronghold of Maratha Empire pirates, in February 1756, on which occasion the land forces were commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel Robert Clive.