Samuel Campbell Rowley | |
---|---|
Born | 19 January 1774 Drumsna, County Leitrim, Ireland |
Died | 28 January 1846 72) Drumsna, County Leitrim, Ireland | (aged
Allegiance | Kingdom of Great Britain United Kingdom |
Service | Royal Navy |
Rank | Rear Admiral |
Battles / wars |
Samuel Campbell Rowley was a politician and Royal Navy officer who was born in Ireland in 1774. Rowley attended the Royal Naval Academy at Portsmouth in 1785 and joined his first ship in March 1789, serving in the West Indies. He passed the lieutenant's examination in 1792 but was not promoted until January 1794, when he joined HMS Vengeance. In her, Rowley took part in the West Indies campaign under Sir John Jervis and Sir Charles Grey, and was present at the capture of Martinique, St Lucia and Guadeloupe. Rowley returned to England at the beginning of 1795 and shortly after, was appointed to the 32-gun HMS Astraea, serving in the English Channel, where, on 10 April 1795, he assisted in the taking of the French 42-gun frigate, Gloire.
Rowley was promoted to Master and Commander of the bomb vessel HMS Terror in 1799 and fought in her at the Battle of Copenhagen in 1801. He made post-captain on 29 April 1802 and on 14 February 1811, commissioned HMS Laurel for service in the English Channel. While entering Quiberon Bay on 12 January 1812, Laurel hit the rocks and was wrecked. A subsequent court martial absolved Rowley of blame.
Rowley represented the constituency of Kinsale in the last Irish Parliament before the union with Great Britain and was after, elected to the Westminster Parliament, where he served until 1806. Rowley's first wife, whom he married on 16 September 1805, died in 1821. He remarried on 4 November 1830 but neither union resulted in children. Rowley was promoted to Rear Admiral on 10 January 1837 and died on 28 January 1846
Samuel Campbell Rowley was born on 19 January 1774 in Drumsna, County Leitrim, Ireland. He was the third son of Clotworthy Rowley, a barrister and Member of Parliament, and his wife, Letitia. [1] The Rowley's were a naval family, Samuel's paternal grandfather was Admiral of the Fleet Sir William Rowley. His older brother, Josias Rowley, and his first cousin, Charles Rowley would also become Admirals in the Royal Navy. [2]
In 1785, Rowley attended the Royal Naval Academy at Portsmouth. On 10 March 1789, he joined the 32-gun HMS Blonde on the West Indies Station and remained aboard her for the next three and a half years. [1] Rowley passed his lieutenant's examination in 1792 but was not immediately promoted. From 1793, he served in succession, aboard HMS Alligator, HMS Sceptre and HMS Boyne, before his appointment as lieutenant aboard the 74-gun HMS Vengeance, on 30 January 1794. [2] [1]
Rowley took part in the West Indies campaign under Sir John Jervis and Sir Charles Grey, helping to secure the islands of Martinique, St Lucia and Guadeloupe. [1] The expedition, comprising 19 vessels, including Vengeance, and 7,000 men, left Barbados on 2 February and arrived off Martinique four days later. [3] [4] Troops were put ashore at the Bay of Galion, Case de Navire and Sainte Luce, and by 16 March had all the island, save two forts, under control. [3] Following a naval bombardment and an assault, the last French troops capitulated on 22 March. [5]
On 31 March, Rowley was part of a force sent to capture St Lucia. Casualties of battle, sickness and the need to maintain a garrison on Martinique, meant only 4800 troops could be spared but St Lucia was poorly defended. [6] Following his previous strategy, Grey had his troops disembarked at multiple places around the island. The landings were unopposed and with little to do, Jervis' ships anchored in Cul de Sac Bay. The island was secured with the capture of Morne Fortune fort on 4 April. [7]
A small squadron was dispatched to capture the Saintes but Vengeance sailed with Jervis' main fleet to Guadeloupe, arriving in Gosier Bay on 10 April. [8] [9] [10] Troops landed over the next two days, quickly gained control of the island of Grande-Terre. [10] Leaving a regiment to garrison the fort at Pointe-a-Pitre, the British crossed the water on 14 April but it was not until 22 April that the French fully relinquished their hold on the island of Basse-Terre. [11]
The British occupation of Guadeloupe did not go unchallenged. On 3 June, a French force arrived and began attacking British positions on Basse-Terre. [12] Jervis was made aware of this on 5 June and immediately sent ships to Martinique for reinforcements while he and Grey set off in Boyne with Veteran in company. [13] They reached Guadeloupe on 7 June, where they were joined by Vanguard and Vengeance. Grey landed on Basse-Terre, and Jervis, with the Boyne, Vanguard, Vengeance and Veteran, proceeded off Point-a-Pitre. [14] Additional troops arrived at Grande-Terre on 19 June but the British counter-attack was not successful. [15] Reinforcements from France reached the islands in September and by 10 December, had driven the British from Guadeloupe. [16] After a period serving ashore in the newly acquired territories, Rowley returned to England in early 1795. [1]
Shortly after his return home, Rowley was appointed to the 32-gun HMS Astraea, serving in the Channel, where, on 10 April 1795, he assisted in the capture of the French 42-gun frigate, Gloire. [1] [17]
Under the command of Captain Henry Paulet, the frigate Astraea was part of Rear-Admiral John Colpoys' squadron, comprising five ships-of-the-line and three frigates that was blockading the port of Brest. At 10:00 on 10 April, three ships were spotted in the west and Colpoys ordered his ships to investigate. At 12:00 the British were close enough to identify their quarry as French frigates. The French squadron scattered. HMS Hannibal and Robust gave chase to Gentille and Fraternité, while Astraea went after Gloire. [18]
At 18:00, Astraea was close enough to her chase to open fire and a running battle ensued with the British frigate slowly gaining. At 22:30 a close action began which lasted about an hour before Gloire surrendered. French casualties amounted to 40 killed and wounded, compared to five aboard Astraea. The masts and rigging of both ships had been heavily damaged and two hours later, Astraea's main mast snapped. [18] [19]
On 6 April 1799, Rowley was appointed master and commander of HMS Terror. [17] In 1801, Terror was sent to the Baltic with a large force, under Admiral Sir Hyde Parker, to disrupt the league of armed neutrality, and took part in the attack on Copenhagen on 2 April. [17] [20] Following an inspection of its defences and a council of war, Vice-admiral Horatio Nelson was awarded a squadron to attack the city. [21] Terror was one of seven bomb vessels that Nelson had anchor outside the British line, off the large shoal known as the Middelgrund, from where they could throw their shells over the top, into the city. [22] The fighting lasted for more than five hours, [23] after which Denmark agreed to suspend its armed neutrality and open its ports to British shipping. [24] [25]
Following petitioning from his brother, an influential naval captain and politician, Rowley was promoted to post-captain on 29 April 1802. [1] [17] He was without a ship during the peace of Amiens, and for some time after, until 7 January 1811, when he boarded the 74-gun HMS Venerable, anchored at Spithead. This was a brief appointment, lasting only until 14 February, when Rowley commissioned HMS Laurel for service in the Channel. [1] [17] The 36-gun frigate was formerly Fidele, a French prize captured during the attack on Vlissingen in 1809. [26] In her, Rowley made a return trip to St Helena, before she was wrecked in Quiberon Bay on 12 January 1812. [1] [17]
In low light and stormy seas, while taking the Teigneuse Passage, Laurel hit the Govivas Rocks. Rowley tried to prevent his ship from sliding off into deep water by deploying her anchors but the situation was worsened when the sudden halting of the Laurel broke off part of her keel. [17] Rowley was left with no option but cut his cables and run for the shore. Laurel grounded with water up to the quarterdeck; the force of the collision snapping her masts and throwing the boats and guns overboard. Under fire from a nearby fort, Rowley evacuated his crew. Around 200 were picked up by British ships but 96 were taken prisoner. [17]
Rowley was court martialled for the loss of Laurel on 19 February 1812 but was exonerated. [27] From 24 March 1815, until the end of the year, he was the captain aboard his brother's flagship, the first-rate HMS Impregnable, in the Mediterranean. On 28 September 1818, Rowley was again appointed as his brother's flag captain, this time in HMS Spencer while she was a guardship at Cork. Rowley commanded HMS Wellesley from 15 September 1830, until she was paid off at the beginning of 1832.
Rowley was promoted to Rear Admiral on 10 January 1837. He died at the family home where he was born, on 28 January 1846, at the age of 72. [27] [28]
In 1797 Rowley embarked upon a political career, following in the footsteps of his father and older brother, although his life at sea probably kept him from attending frequently. He represented the constituency of Kinsale in the last Irish Parliament before the union with Great Britain which, despite his allegiance, he initially voted against. [28] He was subsequently elected to the Westminster Parliament, where he served until 1806. [17] [28]
In February 1801, his father was given the position of commissioner of compensation and Rowley replaced him as Member of Downpatrick. At the following general election, Rowley took over as Member for Kinsale, when his brother resigned. [28]
On 4 March 1803, Rowley voted against an inquiry into the Prince of Wales's finances, following the government line. Although the evidence suggests that Rowley always voted with the government and, in December 1804, was listed as "pro government", in July, he was recorded as being in "opposition". Political historian Arthur Aspinall suggests there may have been some confusion due to Rowley's extended absences. [28]
In 1819, Rowley was given the freedom of the city of Cork. [27]
On 16 September 1805, Rowley married his first wife, Mary Thompson from County Fermanagh. She died in 1821. Rowley remarried on 4 November 1830, to Mary Frances Cronyn of County Kilkenny. Neither union produced children. [17]
HMS Astraea was a 32-gun fifth rate Active-class frigate of the Royal Navy. Fabian at E. Cowes launched her in 1781, and she saw action in the American War of Independence as well as during the Napoleonic Wars. She is best known for her capture of the larger French frigate Gloire in a battle on 10 April 1795, while under the command of Captain Lord Henry Paulet. She was wrecked on 23 March 1808 off the coast of Anegada in the British Virgin Islands.
The action of 25 September 1806 was a naval battle fought during the Napoleonic Wars off the French Biscay port of Rochefort. A French squadron comprising five frigates and two corvettes, sailing to the French West Indies with supplies and reinforcements, was intercepted by a British squadron of six ships of the line that was keeping a close blockade of the port as part of the Atlantic campaign of 1806. The British ships, under the command of Commodore Sir Samuel Hood, spotted the French convoy early in the morning of 25 September, just a few hours after the French had left port, and immediately gave chase. Although the French ships tried to escape, they were heavily laden with troops and stores, and the strong winds favoured the larger ships of the line, which caught the French convoy after a five-hour pursuit, although they had become separated from one another during the chase.
HMS Hannibal was a 74-gun third-rate ship of the line of the Royal Navy, launched on 15 April 1786, named after the Carthaginian general Hannibal. She is best known for having taken part in the Algeciras Campaign, and for having run aground during the First Battle of Algeciras on 5 July 1801, which resulted in her capture. She then served in the French Navy until she was broken up in 1824.
Robert Faulknor the younger (1763–1795) was an 18th-century Royal Navy officer, part of the Faulknor naval dynasty. He was court-martialled and died in an action off Guadeloupe in the eastern Caribbean Sea.
Vice-Admiral Sir Joshua Rowley, 1st Baronet was a Royal Navy officer who was the fourth son of Admiral Sir William Rowley. Sir Joshua was from an ancient English family, originating in Staffordshire (England) and was born on 1 May 1734. Rowley served with distinction in a number of battles throughout his career and was highly praised by his contemporaries. Unfortunately whilst his career was often active he did not have the opportunity to command any significant engagements and always followed rather than led. His achievements have therefore been eclipsed by his contemporaries such as Keppel, Hawke, Howe and Rodney. Rowley however remains one of the stalwart commanders of the wooden walls that kept Britain safe for so long.
John Maitland was an officer of the Royal Navy, who saw service during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, eventually rising to the rank of Rear-Admiral.
Troude's expedition to the Caribbean was a naval operation by a French force under Commodore Amable Troude during the Napoleonic Wars. The French squadron departed from Lorient in February 1809 in an attempt to reach and resupply the island colony of Martinique in the Caribbean Sea, then under invasion from a British expeditionary force. The force arrived much too late to affect the outcome of the successful invasion and took shelter from a British squadron in the Îles des Saintes, where they were blockaded by part of the British invasion fleet, led by Vice-Admiral Sir Alexander Cochrane. Two weeks after the French ships arrived, British troops invaded and captured the Saintes, constructing mortar batteries to bombard the French squadron. With his position unsustainable, Troude decided to break out.
Vice-Admiral Lord Henry Paulet KCB was an officer in the Royal Navy who saw service in the American War of Independence, the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. Born into the British nobility as a younger son of the Marquess of Winchester, he rose through the ranks and had gained his own command by the early stages of the French Revolutionary Wars. He was involved in a number of famous engagements during his career, such as the capture of the French frigate Gloire in 1795, though he narrowly missed out on seeing direct action at two of the most significant naval battles of the wars with the French. The first was the Battle of Cape St Vincent, where he had left Jervis's fleet a few days previously, the second was the Battle of Copenhagen, where he remained with Sir Hyde Parker's reserve squadron. He nevertheless rose through the ranks to reach vice-admiral, despite an incident that saw him court-martialled and dismissed, only to be reinstated by the intervention of the King; and a tendency to eccentricity. He married towards the end of the wars with France, and had several children. Paulet served as one of the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty from 1813, and was installed as a Knight Commander of the Bath in 1815, but ill-health forced his retirement from active service shortly afterwards, and he would die of cancer in 1832.
Roquebert's expedition to the Caribbean was an unsuccessful operation by a French naval squadron to transport supplies to Guadeloupe in December 1809 at the height of the Napoleonic Wars. Over the previous year, British Royal Navy squadrons had isolated and defeated the French Caribbean colonies one by one, until by the autumn Guadeloupe was the only colony remaining in French hands. Cut off from the rest of the world by British blockade squadrons that intercepted all ships coming to or from the island, Guadeloupe was in a desperate situation, facing economic collapse, food shortages and social upheaval, as well as the impending threat of British invasion. In an effort to reinforce and resupply the colony, the French government sent four vessels to the West Indies in November 1809 under Commodore François Roquebert. Two of the ships were 20-gun flûtes carrying supplies and troops. The two others were 40-gun frigates, ordered to protect the storeships on their journey from the British forces operating off both the French and Guadeloupe coasts.
HMS Vengeance was originally the 48-gun French Navy frigate Vengeance and lead ship of her class. She engaged USS Constellation during the Quasi-War, in an inconclusive engagement that left both ships heavily damaged. During the French Revolutionary Wars, HMS Seine hunted Vengeance down and captured her after a sharp action. She was recommissioned in the Royal Navy as the 38-gun fifth rate HMS Vengeance, but the British apparently never returned her to seagoing service. Accounts are divided as to her eventual fate. She may have been broken up in 1803 after grounding in 1801, or continued as a prison ship until 1814.
The Invasion of Guadeloupe was a British amphibious operation fought between 28 January and 6 February 1810 over control of the Caribbean island of Guadeloupe during the Napoleonic Wars. The island was the final remaining French colony in the Americas, following the systematic invasion and capture of the others during 1809 by British forces. During the Napoleonic Wars, the French colonies had provided protected harbours for French privateers and warships, which could prey on the numerous British trade routes in the Caribbean and then return to the colonies before British warships could react. In response, the British instituted a blockade of the islands, stationing ships off every port and seizing any vessel that tried to enter or leave. With trade and communication made dangerous by the British blockade squadrons, the economies and morale of the French colonies began to collapse, and in the summer of 1808 desperate messages were sent to France requesting help.
The action of 19 December 1796 was a minor naval engagement of the French Revolutionary Wars, fought in the last stages of the Mediterranean campaign between two British Royal Navy frigates and two Spanish Navy frigates off the coast of Murcia. The British squadron was the last remaining British naval force in the Mediterranean, sent to transport the British garrison of Elba to safety under the command of Commodore Horatio Nelson. The Spanish under Commodore Don Jacobo Stuart were the vanguard of a much larger squadron. One Spanish frigate was captured and another damaged before Spanish reinforcements drove the British off and recaptured the lost ship.
The action of 13 October 1796 was a minor naval engagement of the French Revolutionary Wars, fought off the Mediterranean coast of Spain near Cartagena between the British Royal Navy 32-gun frigate HMS Terpsichore under Captain Richard Bowen and the Spanish Navy 34-gun frigate Mahonesa under Captain Tomás de Ayalde. The action was the first battle of the Anglo-Spanish War, coming just eight days after the Spanish declaration of war. In a battle lasting an hour and forty minutes, Mahonesa was captured.
The action of 10 April 1795 was a minor naval engagement during the French Revolutionary Wars in which a squadron of French Navy frigates was intercepted by a British battle squadron under Rear-Admiral John Colpoys which formed part of the blockade of the French naval base of Brest in Brittany. The French squadron split up in the face of superior British numbers, the three vessels seeking to divide and outrun the British pursuit. One frigate, Gloire was followed by the British frigate HMS Astraea and was ultimately brought to battle in a closely fought engagement. Although the ships were roughly equal in size, the British ship was easily able to defeat the French in an engagement lasting just under an hour.
The Battle of Guadeloupe or the Action of 21–22 December 1779 was a naval engagement that took place off the French island of Guadeloupe in the Caribbean during the American Revolutionary War between three Royal Navy ships and three French Navy frigates. The Royal Navy under Joshua Rowley sighted and promptly chased the French frigates, all of which were captured after a brief fight.
HMS Roebuck was a fifth-rate ship of the Royal Navy which served in the American and French Revolutionary Wars. Designed in 1769 by Sir Thomas Slade to operate in the shallower waters of North America, she joined Lord Howe's squadron towards the end of 1775 and took part in operations against New York the following year. She engaged the American gun batteries at Red Hook during the Battle of Long Island in August 1776, and forced a passage up the Hudson River in October. On 25 August 1777, Roebuck escorted troopships to Turkey Point, Maryland, where an army was landed for an assault on Philadelphia. She was again called upon to accompany troopships in December 1779, this time for an attack on Charleston. When the ships-of-the-line, which were too large to enter the harbour, were sent back to New York, Admiral Marriot Arbuthnot made Roebuck his flagship. She was, therefore, at the front of the attack, leading the British squadron across the shoal to engage Fort Moultrie and the American ships beyond.
Ganteaume's expedition of 1795 was a French naval operation in the Aegean Sea in the autumn of 1795 during the French Revolutionary Wars. Commanded by Commodore Honoré Ganteaume in the ship of the line Républicain, with a squadron of four frigates and two corvettes, the French force was ordered to attack First Coalition shipping in the Aegean Sea. The principal target was the Ottoman city of Smyrna, the most significant trading port of the region, Ganteaume ordered to prey on merchant shipping sailing for European destinations and in particular a large convoy due to sail to Britain.
Velters Cornewall Berkeley was an officer in the Royal Navy. He served in both the American and French Revolutionary Wars but never rose above the rank of Captain. He died at his home in Oxford in 1804, aged 50.
Rear-Admiral Sir John Ferris Devonshire (1774–1839) was an officer in the Royal Navy. He joined as a volunteer aboard HMS Cumberland in 1788 and served in various vessels in the waters around North America and the West Indies until 1795 when he moved to HMS Boyne, the flagship of John Jervis. Devonshire was acting lieutenant for a while before Jervis promoted him to full lieutenant aboard HMS Terpsichore, at that time employed in the defence of a British garrison under siege on Basse-Terre.
HMS Beaulieu was a 40-gun fifth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy. The ship was laid down in 1790 as a speculative build by the shipwright Henry Adams and purchased by the Royal Navy in June of the same year. Built to the dimensions of a merchant ship, Beaulieu was broader, with more storage capacity, than a standard frigate; though may not have had good sailing qualities. The frigate was commissioned in January 1793 by Lord Northesk and sent to serve on the Leeward Islands Station. She participated in the capture of Martinique in February 1794, and then was similarly present at the capture of the island of Saint Lucia in April. The frigate also took part in the initial stages of the invasion of Guadeloupe. Later in the year the ship's crew was beset by yellow fever and much depleted. Beaulieu was sent to serve on the North America Station to allow them to recuperate, returning to the Leeward Islands in 1795. In the following two years the ship found success in prizetaking and briefly took part in more operations at Saint Lucia. She returned to Britain at the end of 1796.