Gustavus Guydickens

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NicknameGusty
Born1732
DiedMarch 1802(1802-03-00) (aged 69–70)
Fleet Prison, England

Gustavus Guydickens
NicknameGusty
Born1732
DiedMarch 1802(1802-03-00) (aged 69–70)
Fleet Prison, England
Buried
AllegianceGreat Britain
BranchBritish Army
Service years1754–1793
RankMajor-General
Unit3rd Foot Guards
Conflicts
Alma materWestminster School
Christ Church, Oxford
RelationsMelchior Guy Dickens (father)
Mary Ann Costello (niece)

Major-General Gustavus Guydickens (1732 – March 1802) was a British Army officer and courtier who resigned his positions amidst accusations of homosexuality in 1793. An officer in the 3rd Foot Guards, Guydickens served in the Seven Years' War as aide de camp to Duke Ferdinand of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel. He also became a Gentleman Usher to the British royal household, rising to become Gentleman Usher of the Privy Chamber. Having briefly served in North America during the American Revolutionary War, Guydickens was promoted to major-general in 1790 and assumed command of his regiment in the following year.

Guydickens was caught having sexual intercourse with a lawyers' clerk in Hyde Park, London, on 16 August 1792. After briefly arresting the two soldiers who had detained him, he was indicted for gross indecency and suspended from the army. He failed in attempts to both bribe his accusers and undermine them with counter-accusations. His trial, repeatedly delayed, never began, and Guydickens retired from the army in 1793. Heavily in debt, he was imprisoned in Fleet Prison in the same year and died there in 1802.

Gustavus Guydickens was born in County Westmeath, Ireland, in 1732. He was the second son of Lieutenant-Colonel Melchior Guy Dickens, a diplomat who served as ambassador to Russia, and Hannah née Handcock.[1][2][3] Guydickens was named after Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden, as his father was on a diplomatic mission there at the time of his birth.[3] His niece, the actress Mary Ann Costello, lived with the family and was brought up by his father.[4][5] His elder brother, Frederick William Guydickens, became a clergyman.[3]

As children Guydickens and his brother spent time living with Johan Ihre in Sweden, learning eloquence and politics.[6] Known to his family as "Gusty", Guydickens was educated at Westminster School before moving on to Christ Church, Oxford, from which he matriculated on 16 February 1749.[1][3]

Military career

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