Sir Joseph MuterCBKCHFRSE (1780 – 23October 1840) was a British Army officer who fought in the Peninsular War and led the Inniskilling Dragoons at the Battle of Waterloo on 18June 1815. In 1816, following the inheritance of the Kirkside estate from his aunt, Miss Straton, he changed his name to Joseph Straton.[1]
During the battle, in response to the French Infantry assault on Wellington's left centre, the Union Brigade moved forward. Unobserved until late in their advance, they caught the French by surprise and took around 1,000 prisoners, despite the two British heavy cavalry brigades losing half their numbers at the hands of the French lancers and cuirassiers.[7]
At around 6pm, after La Haye Sainte farm had fallen to the French, Muter was struck by a musket ball in the right wrist. The injury later became infected due to pieces of glove entering his body, with pus oozing from the wound. With treatment he subsequently recovered without the need for amputation.[7] His role in the battalion was filled by Colonel Clifton after his removal from the battlefield.
In 1816 he inherited considerable estates in Montrose and was thereafter known as Joseph Straton.
He served in Ireland in 1819. In 1821, during a period in Edinburgh, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, his proposer being Sir David Brewster. He presented a lecture to the Society on the "Monuments of Thebes".[9] He was also a member of the Bannatyne Club in Edinburgh. He was promoted to major general in 1825 and lieutenant general in 1838.
He was made colonel of the 8th Light Dragoons on 24August 1839 and colonel of the 6th Inniskilling (Irish) Regiment of Dragoons on 30April 1840.[2]
Some time around 1816 he changed his surname to Straton after inheriting a property belonging to his aunt in Kirkside, 3 miles (4.8 km) north of Montrose in Scotland.
He retired due to ill health in the summer of 1840 and died in October 1840. Having no children, his estates went to his nephew, Joseph Muter, who also renamed himself (to Joseph Muter Straton). Muter left a legacy of around £70,000 (about £6.2 million at 2015 values) to the University of Edinburgh.[8] He was later described as one of the greatest benefactors of the university.[4]
Death
Muter died at Park Street off Grosvenor Square[10] in London on 23October 1840 at the age of 63 and is buried in the family plot in Nether Kirkyard, St Cyrus, near Montrose, where there is monument with a dedication to him.[2]