Richard Ingoldsby (British Army officer, died 1712)

Lieutenant General Richard Ingoldsby (died 1712) was an Anglo-Irish  general who enjoyed the personal  regard of John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough, and later played a  prominent role in the government of Ireland.

He was the son of Colonel Sir George Ingoldsby, a soldier who came to Ireland with Oliver Cromwelll, and his wife Mary Gould, daughter of James Gould of Ludden Castle,  Corbally,  County Limerick. His father was the sixth son of Sir Richard Cromwell of Lenborough in Buckinghamshire and Elizabeth Cromwell, aunt of Oliver Cromwell; his uncles included  Richard Ingoldsby the regicide,  and Sir Henry Ingoldsby, 1st Baronet. His father was granted substantial lands in County Limerick, and inherited other holdings in the same county  by marriage:  his main residence was Ballybricken  Castle. He held a variety of official posts, both under Cromwell and after the Restoration.

Richard was commissioned as an army  officer  in 1667, but little more is heard of him until 1692. Given his family's republican background, and his family relationship to Oliver Cromwell, it was natural that he should welcome the Glorious Revolution. He was appointed colonel in 1692 and adjutant-general for the expedition against France. In 1693 he was appointed colonel of the Royal Welch Fusiliers and commanded them at the Siege of Namur. In 1696 he became a brigadier general.

He spent some time in Ireland, and was briefly imprisoned for his involvement in a duel between John Methuen, the Lord Chancellor of Ireland, and Thomas Fitzmaurice, 1st Earl of Kerry. King William III quickly ordered his release.

During the War of the Spanish Succession he became major general and then lieutenant general. He commanded a division under Marlborough 1702–6, and fought at the Battle of Schellenberg. At the Battle of Blenheim he was second in command of the first line under Charles Churchill. He became colonel of the Royal Irish Regiment in 1705. After 1707 he spent much of his time in Ireland, where he combined military and political offices : he was commander of the Irish forces and Master of the Horse, and also sat in the Irish House of Commons as member for Limerick City. He was Lord Justice of Ireland 1709–10; a letter from Marlborough makes clear that this appointment was his doing and a sign of his personal regard for Ingoldsby.

Ingoldsby died in January 1712 and was buried in Christ Church Cathedral. By his wife Frances Naper of Loughcrew, County Meath,  he had one son, Richard, who also served with the Royal Welch Fusiliers.