Sir Hugh Gough (born Nov. 3, 1779, Limerick, County Limerick, Ire.—died March 2, 1869, St. Helen’s, near Dublin) was a British soldier prominent in the Peninsular War and in India, who was said to have commanded in more general actions than any British officer except the Duke of Wellington.
The son of a lieutenant colonel in the Limerick city militia, Gough obtained a commission in the British Army at age 13. He took part in the British occupation of the Cape of Good Hope in 1796 and campaigned in the West Indies in 1797–1800. A major by purchase at 25, he commanded the Royal Irish Fusiliers regiment in Portugal and Spain during the Peninsular War (1808–14). He was severely wounded at Talavera (1809), led his forces to victory at Barrosa (1811), helped defend Tarifa, and captured the baton of the French marshal Jean-Baptiste Jourdan at Vitoria (1813). He was knighted in 1815 and pensioned, and for 20 years he saw action only briefly, against the peasantry of southern Ireland (1821–24). As a major general, he was given command in Mysore, India, in 1837 and led the expedition to China in the first Opium War (1839–42). He was appointed commander in chief in India in 1843 and defeated the Marāthā army that year and then the Sikhs in the Sikh Wars in 1845–46 and in 1848–49.
Gough suffered unexpectedly heavy losses against the Sikhs; his tactics were criticized, and he was replaced by Sir Charles Napier. Gough was made a baron after the First Sikh War (1846) and raised to a viscountcy after the second (1849); he returned home to the thanks of both houses of Parliament. In 1855 he was appointed colonel of the Royal Horse Guards and in 1862 was made field marshal.