Philippe Hubert Preudhomme de Borre

Philippe Hubert Chevalier Preudhomme de Borre
Born17 September 1717
Liège, Prince-Bishopric of Liège
Died30 May 1789
Brussels
AllegianceKingdom of France France
United States United States
Service/branchCavalry, artillery
Years of serviceKingdom of France 1740–1776
United States 1776–1777
Kingdom of France 1779–1780?
RankUnited States Brigadier General, 1776
Kingdom of France Brigadier General, 1780
Battles/warsWar of the Austrian Succession
American Revolutionary War
AwardsOrder of Saint Louis 1757

Philippe Hubert, Chevalier de Preudhomme de Borre (17 September 1717 in Liège – 30 May 1789 in Brussels) joined the French Army in 1740 and served in the War of the Austrian Succession. During the American Revolutionary War he traveled to America where he was presented as a military expert. Promoted to general officer, his career as a Continental Army officer was brief and undistinguished. He resigned under a cloud and returned to France in 1779. His career ended in obscurity.

De Borre began his military career in the French royal army as a volunteer. He served as a cavalry officer in several campaigns during the War of the Austrian Succession. In 1745 he was seriously wounded. In 1757 he raised a unit from his home town of Liège in what is now Belgium but evidently saw no action in the Seven Years' War. When he arrived in America in 1776, the Second Continental Congress commissioned him a brigadier general. George Washington assigned de Borre to command the 2nd Maryland Brigade in John Sullivan's division. He led his troops at Staten Island and Brandywine. At the latter battle he proved incapable of handling his troops in action. Threatened with a court martial, he resigned and left America in 1779. He was promoted to brigadier general in the French army in 1780 but he was no longer physically capable of active service.