Walter Douglas
Deceased Person
1670 – 1739
Who was Walter Douglas?
Colonel Walter Douglas was Captain-General and Governor-General of the Leeward Islands.
Walter Douglas appears to have been educated at the University of Utrecht, which he is said to have left to join King William of Orange when he invaded England in 1688. The Duke of Queensbury was his patron.
Col Douglas was appointed Governor following the assassination his predecessor, Colonel Parke, during a mutiny triggered by his self-enriching enforcement of Stuart imperialism. He was superseded as Governor in 1716.
Governor Douglas had been tried by the Court of Queen's Bench and found guilty of bribery and extortion, having exacted £10,000 from the Island of Antigua before publishing the Queen's pardon for those involved in the killing of his precessor. He was sentenced to a £500 fine and five years' imprisonment, and was then in the King's Bench Prison. His fine was remitted. At the time of his trial, he was described as Major Douglas.
It is thought he retired to France. In 1720 he succeeded to the estate of Baads on the renunciation of his brother William but then sold it.
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