Career
He ruled the Blayney estate at Castleblayney, County Monaghan for fifty years from 1784 to 1834, and was one of the most illustrious soldiers ever to come from Company Monaghan. As commander of the 89th Regiment of Foot, "Blayney"s Bloodhounds" as they were called, he fought with distinction in the Napoleonic Wars. He was taken prisoner at the Battle of Fuengirola, when making a raid from Gibraltar into Spain against a small group of Polish soldiers a tenth his number, and was kept prisoner for four years by the French government.
His sabre is currently on exhibition in the Czartoryski Museum, in KrakóWest
He wrote a two-volume account of his experiences in the Napoleonic Wars - Narrative of a Forced Journey through Spain and France as a Prisoner of War in the Years 1810 to 1814, by Major-General Lord Blayney (London, 1814). He was captured by one of the O"Callaghans of Cullaville, a colonel in the French army and a prominent United Irishman who escaped after 1798.
lieutenant is said he insisted on Blayney being held to ransom for some of the United Irishmen who were in British prisons. During Blayney"s long incarceration, the 2nd Earl of Caledon looked after his financial, domestic, and political affairs, and on his return, Blayney was given a seat in parliament for Caledon"s infamous "rotten borough" of Old Salisbury, Wiltshire.