François de Fleury Military person

François-Louis Teissèdre de Fleury (August 28, 1749–1799) was a French nobleman who joined the Royal Army in 1768 and later volunteered to fight in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War. In America he demonstrated his bravery at Piscataway in May 1777 after which he was appointed an officer of engineers. He fought at the Brandywine in September and was wounded at Germantown in early October. He served capably during the Siege of Fort Mifflin where he was wounded again in November. George Washington made him an assistant to Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben at Valley Forge in the spring of 1778. He served during the Monmouth Campaign in June 1778 and fought in Rhode Island in August.While leading one of the attacking columns at Stony Point in July 1779, Fleury won an award for being the first attacker to enter the British bastion. Granted leave to return to France later that year, he returned to fight at Yorktown in October 1781. Back in the French army, he held commands in India and the Indian Ocean until 1790 when he returned to France. In the early part of the French Revolutionary War he was badly wounded and later resigned from the army. He received a pension in June 1796 and died in 1799. The De Fleury Medal, named for Fleury, is awarded to outstanding members of the United States Corps of Engineers.

Personal facts

Birth dateAugust 28, 1749
Birth place
Provence , France , Saint-Hippolyte-le-Graveyron
Date of deathJanuary 01, 1799
Place of death
France

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Military person

allegiance
France
United States
award
Order of Saint Louis
military operations
Battle of Stony Point
Battle of Brandywine
Siege of Yorktown
Battle of Monmouth
French Revolutionary Wars
Battle of Germantown
Siege of Fort Mifflin
Battle of Rhode Island
service start1768
service end1768

François de Fleury on Wikipedia

External resources

  1. http://www.armyengineer.com/aea_awards.html