Hughes was born in Wrexham, Wales on 12 December 1830, one of nine children to William and Mary Hughes. He was baptised at St. Giles Church in Wrexham on 5 January 1831. Hughes became a shoemaker until he joined the 13th Light Dragoons, part of the Light Brigade, at Liverpool on 1 November 1852. He joined his regiment at Hounslow as 1506 Private Hughes, and in 1854 he sailed with them from Portsmouth to the Crimea.
In 1858 Hughes was promoted to corporal, in 1863 to sergeant, and in 1871 to troop sergeant major. On 24 November 1873 he was discharged from the army at Colchester Garrison at his own request, having completed 21 years and 24 days service. He was presented with a marble clock by the non-commissioned officers of the 13th Hussars, as the 13th Light Dragoons had become. He was also awarded the Army Long Service and Good Conduct Medal. His discharge papers describe him as being 42 11/12ths years of age, 5 feet nine inches tall, of fresh complexion with sandy hair and hazel eyes. The day after leaving the army Hughes enlisted in the Worcestershire Yeomanry, staying as sergeant-instructor until 5 January 1886. He was discharged on account of having reached retirement age. At this time Hughes was living in Birmingham.
Later life
Hughes married a woman called Hannah, who died in 1899; they had two sons and two daughters. One of his daughters never married, and in 1910 he went to live with her in Blackpool. Hughes was a member of the Balaclava Commemoration Society, and attended the reunions for survivors of the Charge of the Light Brigade in 1895, 1910, 1912 and 1913. He received a pension from the T. H. Roberts Fund, which had been set up for the soldiers in the Charge who had fallen on hard times, and was also granted a pension from the Royal Patriotic Fund. With the death of William Henry Pennington of the 11th Hussars in May 1923, Hughes was the last survivor of the Charge, and in 1925 the various relief funds ran out. The War Office made a special grant to him, which he continued to receive until his death on 18 May 1927. Hughes was buried with full military honours in Layton Cemetery in Blackpool. A memorial plaque was unveiled in tribute to his memory on his former home in Mount Street, Wrexham in October 1993. His three medals were sold at auction in 2005, realising £16,000.