In an army career of 67 years General Handasyde, of a Northumberland family,
In the Forty-five, as commander-in-chief in Scotland in succession to Sir John Cope, Handasyde occupied Edinburgh on 14 Nov., while Prince Charles Edward was marching into England. In February 1747 he complained to Newcastle that the command in Scotland had once more been given to his inferior in rank.
his Royal Highness has persuaded my old antagonist Handasyde to endeavour to give me what trouble he could in Huntingdonshire, and I believe it is as represented because I can no other way account for his forgetting the most formal and public promises he has made me without any kind of condition to support my interest both in town and county. He now talks of opposing me in both, but it is absolutely out of his power to do me the least hurt in either, except hurting my pocket.
Sandwich to Newcastle, 21 Mar. (N.S.) 1747, Add. 32807, f.209.
At the general election of 1747 Handasyde did not stand for Huntingdonshire but was returned for Scarborough by Lord Carlisle as a Leicester House candidate. On 22 Jan. 1751, described as ‘a blundering commander on the Prince’s side’, he spoke strongly against a libellous attack on the Duke of Cumberland.
