Henry Dundas is largely held responsible for…
September 1793 CE
Henry Dundas is largely held responsible for the lack of organization and confused planning in the Flanders Campaign, especially the aborted siege of Dunkirk in September 1793.
It is said that he was "so profoundly ignorant of war that he was not even conscious of his own ignorance". (Fulford, Roger. Royal Dukes William Collins London 1933).
In a letter to Lord George Macartney dated September 8, 1792, Dundas had made it clear that the proceeds from the opium trade are a significant part of the British economy and proposes that Britain gain a territorial foothold in China.
The fourth son of Robert Dundas, of Arniston, the elder (1685–1753), Lord President of the Court of Session, Henry was born at Dalkeith in 1742.
Educated at the Royal High School, Edinburgh, and the University of Edinburgh, he had become a member of the Faculty of Advocates in 1763 and soon acquired a leading position in the Scottish legal system.
He had the advantage of the success of his half-brother Robert (1713–1787), who had become Lord President of the Court of Session in 1760.
He became Solicitor General for Scotland in 1766; but after his appointment as Lord Advocate in 1775, he gradually relinquished his legal practice to devote his attention more exclusively to public affairs.
In 1774 he was returned to the Parliament of Great Britain for Midlothian, and joined the party of Frederick North, Lord North; a proud Scots speaker, he had soon distinguished himself by his clear and argumentative speeches.
His name appears in the 1776 minute book of the Poker Club.
After holding subordinate offices under William Petty, 2nd Earl of Shelburne and William Pitt the Younger, he had entered the cabinet in 1791 as Secretary of State for the Home Department.
It is during this period that Dundas, without whose "skillful obstructions the slave trade would have been abolished in 1796, if not 1792", was influential in obstructing the abolition of the Slave Trade (Thomas, Hugh. The Slave Trade; Simon & Schuster, 1997; pp. 549.)
Appointed Minister for War on the outbreak of the Wars of the French Revolution, he is Pitt's closest advisor and planner for Britain's military participation in the First Coalition.