Eugene de Lisle Brock

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Eugene de Lisle BROCK

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Guernsey
Death: 1844 (36-37)
Bermuda
Immediate Family:

Son of Daniel de Lisle Brock and Esther Brock (Tourtel)
Brother of Daniel Brock; Harriet Cath. Brock and Sophy de Lisle (Brock)

Occupation: Captain 20th Regiment of Foot
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Eugene de Lisle Brock

Name: EUGENE DE LISLE BROCK

SURNAME: Brock............GIVEN NAMES: Eugene de Lisle.........Sex: M

Birth: 22 JUN 1807 in Guernsey, Channel Islands

Death: 1844 in Bermuda

Captain Eugene Brock, of the 20th regiment, died at Bermuda, in January, 1844.

  • FATHER: Daniel DeLisle Brock b: 10 DEC 1762 in Guernsey, Channel Islands
  • MOTHER: Esther Tourtel b: ABT 1770 in Guernsey, Channel Islands

MARRIAGE...not married

CHILDREN:

NO ISSUE

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NOTES:

from the book..... CHAPTER XVI.

THE LIFE AND CORRESPONDENCE OF MAJOR-GENERAL SIR ISAAC BROCK, K.B.

INTERSPERSED WITH NOTICES OFTHE CELEBRATED INDIAN CHIEF, TECUMSEH;

AND COMPRISING

BRIEF MEMOIRS OF DANIEL DE LISLE BROCK, ESQ.;

LIEUTENANT E.W. TUPPER, R.N.,

AND COLONEL W. DE VIC TUPPER,

http://www.gutenberg.org/files/14428/14428-h/14428-h.htm

Of Sir Isaac Brock's brothers, the eldest, John, a brevet lieutenant-colonel in the 81st regiment, was killed in a duel, in July, 1801, at the Cape of Good Hope, by Captain M——,[149] in consequence of his having, as steward of a public ball, very properly resisted the introduction, by his antagonist, of a female of disreputable character. The second brother, Ferdinand, a lieutenant of the 60th regiment, was slain in the defence of Bâton Rouge, on the Mississippi, 21st September, 1779, at the early age of nineteen. The third brother, Daniel De Lisle, a man of distinguished ability, was bailiff and president of the States of Guernsey. No chief magistrate of the island was ever so beloved, honored, and regretted, as Mr. Brock; and so universal was the feeling of admiration for his talents and services, that the Royal Court decreed him a public funeral at the public expense—a tribute of respect never previously paid by that body to any individual.[150] The ninth brother, Savery, who died on the 7th August, 1844, has been already noticed, and the tenth, Irving, who died in 1838, at Bath, was "the accomplished translator of Bernier's Travels in India," and a very powerful writer in support of the government in 1810, at a very eventful and critical period.[151] Singularly enough, of the eight brothers of this Family of the Brocks who reached maturity, no male descendant of their name is now in existence. Of their two sisters, who grew to womanhood, the elder, Elizabeth, now the only survivor of the family, married John E. Tupper, Esq., of Guernsey; and the younger, Mary, was the wife of Thomas Potenger, Esq., of Compton, in Berkshire, first cousin to the Countess of Bridgewater.

Of the five nephews and one great nephew of Sir Isaac Brock, who have hitherto embraced the profession of arms, not one survives, four of the former and the latter having sadly and prematurely perished, viz: first, Midshipman Charles Tupper, of his majesty's ship Primrose, drowned at Spithead, in 1815, by the upsetting of the boat in which he was accompanying his commander from Portsmouth to the ship; second, Lieutenant E.W. Tupper,[152] his majesty's ship Sybille, mortally wounded in action with Greek pirates, near Candia, on the 18th June, 1826; third, Lieutenant William Potenger, adjutant 22d regiment, died on the 19th November, 1827, of the fever, at Jamaica; fourth, Colonel W. De Vic Tupper,[153] of the Chilian service, slain in action near Talca, on the 17th April, 1830; and, fifth, the great nephew, Ensign A. Delacombe Potenger,[154] of the 5th Bengal Native Infantry, while in command of the light company, was killed by a bullet, which entered his breast, in the disastrous retreat of the British army from Cabool, in January, 1842.

The remaining nephew, Captain Eugene Brock, of the 20th regiment, died at Bermuda, in January, 1844.

When Sir Isaac Brock died in 1812 ,there were only one sister and four brothers alive from his siblings
: Elizabeth, Daniel de Lisle, William, John Savery and Irving.

There were 17 direct nephews of the celebrated general, four of them were Brocks (only one man, Eugene), ten were Tuppers and three were Potengers.

When captain Eugene Brock, only son of Daniel de Lisle, died in 1844, in Bermudas, extinguished the closer male descent to Sir Isaac.

The number of alive nephews and with descendants was substantially reduced. With the time it was also reduced the number of beneficiaries with the lands that the British Crown gave to the inheritors of Sir Isaac, lands that part of them were in Waterdown, near Hamilton, Canada, and its settlement was organized by Ferdinand B. Tupper
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Eugene de Lisle Brock's Timeline

1807
1807
Guernsey
1844
1844
Age 37
Bermuda