Background
Trelawny was the son of Captain William Trelawny and his wife Mary Bisset, and the grandson of Brigadier-General
captain lieutenant army officer
Trelawny was the son of Captain William Trelawny and his wife Mary Bisset, and the grandson of Brigadier-General
He was wounded while leading a battalion of the Guards during the war and later rose to the lieutenant-colonelcy of the regiment. Henry Trelawny. He served with the "Buffs" as an ensign and carried the regimental colours during the Jacobite rising of 1745. He was commissioned an ensign in the Coldstream Guards on 28 June 1746.
Colonel
Charles Trelawny (d 1820), later Trelawny-Brereton, of Shotwick Park
Sophia Trelawny, married John L. Freeman, of Crickmaillyn on 15 June 1801
Trelawny served with the Coldstreams during the Raid on Street Malo and the Raid on Cherbourg in 1758. He became a captain on 14 March 1762. Trelawny again saw service during in the American Revolutionary War, in which he led the first battalion of the regiment.
He fought at the Battle of White Plains in 1776, and was promoted to a colonel in the army on 6 September 1777.
He again led the first battalion at the Battle of Monmouth, where he was wounded. He was promoted to first major of the regiment on 5 May 1780, later to major-general in the army, and was promoted lieutenant-colonel of the Coldstreams on 23 November 1785.
He became Governor of Landguard Fort in 1788 and retired from the Guards on 25 May 1789. On 12 October 1793, he was promoted to lieutenant-general.
He died on 28 January 1800, and was buried on 13 February at Street Anne"s Church, Soho.