Decoster's house (c. 1900)

Decoster's house was a landmark location during the Battle of Waterloo. It stood on the eastern side of the Waterloo–Genappe main road south of the junction with the minor road to Plancenoit (south La Belle Alliance and north the farm of Rossomme).[lower-alpha 1] According to Jean-Baptiste Decoster Napoleon spent the early part of the Battle of Waterloo and around Rossomme and then at about 17:00 moved to a position near Decoster's house where he remained until about 19:00.

History

The smallholding belong to Jean-Baptiste Decoster who was an unwilling local guide for Napoleon Bonaparte and his reminiscences form an important primary source for the locations where Napoleon resided during the battle, including a hillock or a mound close to his house. According to Decoster Napoleon spent the early part in and around Rossomme and then at about 17:00 moved to a position near Decoster's house where he remained until about 19:00.

Map of the Battle of Waterloo on which is marked "Maison de Coster" (House of Decoster).

Decoster owned about 6 acres (2.4 ha) of land on which the house was located. The house was used by Decoster as a small inn or "cabaret".[1] Decoster's house is not marked on the Ferraris van kaart of 1777,[2] but the tracks and roads in the area are and the location of the house was recorded in documents written shortly after the battle. For example, Sir Walter Scott writing a few months after the battle places the house "at the distance of a gun-shot from La Belle Alliance",[3] and a map in (to the right) places the house about half a kilometre south of La Belle Alliance and it places Rossomme at 1.5 km from La Belle Alliance—Siborne's 1844 map which is a much or accurate one places Decoster's house at a distance of 14 mile (0.40 km) from La Bell Alliance and Rossomme at 34 mile (1.2 km),[4] which is a similar ratio—on modern maps as the Rossomme site is 1.3 kilometres (0.81 mi) from La Bel Alliance, this would place Decoster's house 430 metres (470 yd) south La Belle Alliance.[lower-alpha 2]

See also

Notes

  1. "In some maps Decoster's tavern situated a few hundred yards south of La Bell Alliance, is marked Maison d'Ecosse, a corruption of Maison Decoster" (Maxwell 1899, p. 60).
  1. Glover 2014, p. 411.
  2. Kaart van Ferraris 1777, 'Braine la Leud' #78.
  3. Scott 1850, p. 343.
  4. Siborne 1844, Plate 6.

References

  • "'Braine la Leud' #78", Kabinetskaart der Oostenrijkse Nederlanden et het Prinsbisdom Luik, Kaart van Ferraris, 1777
  • Glover, Gareth (1 September 2014), "Was Decoster really an eye witness to the battle", Waterloo: Myth and Reality, Pen and Sword, pp. 394–396, ISBN 978-1-4738-3834-5 starts: "Jean-Baptiste Decoster ..."
  • Maxwell, Sir Herbert (1899), The Life of Wellington: The Restoration of the Martial Power of Great Britain, Little, Brown and Company, p. 60
  • Scott, Sir Walter (1850) [1829], The Miscellaneous Prose Works of Sir Walter Scott, Bart, R. Cadell, pp. 341
  • Siborne, William (1844), Atlas to William Siborne's History of the Waterloo Campaign

Further reading

  • Navez, Louis (1896), Waterloo (in French) (2nd ed.), J. Lebègue, p. 134 — "La Belle—Alliance est situéésur la route de Charleroi à 500 mètres au nord de la maison De Coster"
  • Wit, Pierre de, French headquarters (PDF), www.waterloo-campaign.nl — "Decoster was a Flemish peasant, owning a tiny farm on the east-side of the Brussels-road, between La Belle Alliance and the farm of Rossomme, about 800 metre north of this farm, in the corner of the road and the track leading to Plancenoit."

50°39′50.72″N 4°24′49.72″E / 50.6640889°N 4.4138111°E / 50.6640889; 4.4138111

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