James Hanway Plumridge Explained

Sir James Hanway Plumridge
Birth Date:13 March 1787[1]
Death Date:29 November 1863 (aged 76)
Birth Place:Mayfair, London, England
Death Place:Hopton-on-Sea, Norfolk, England
Placeofburial:St. Margaret's Church, Hopton-on-Sea, Norfolk
Branch:Royal Navy
Serviceyears:1799–1854
Rank:Admiral
Battles:
Awards:Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath

Admiral Sir James Hanway Plumridge (13 March 1787 – 29 November 1863) was a British naval officer whose career extended from Trafalgar to the Crimean War, and a Liberal Party Member of Parliament (MP).

Early life and education

There are contradictory accounts of Plumridge's origins. He was born at Hertford Street, Mayfair, either the illegitimate son of a man named Preston and a daughter of James Plumridge,[2] or, the son of architect James Plumridge of Littleworth, Berkshire, and the daughter of a man called Hanway of Hertford Street.[3] There is an entry in the baptismal register at St George's, Hanover Square on 1 April 1787 for a James Hanway Plumridge, son of James and Susanna Plumridge.[4]

According to a biography of Jonas Hanway, James Hanway Plumridge was his great-great-nephew, and the son of his great-niece, who was the sister of a man called Hanway Hanway.[5] [6]

He was educated at the Naval Academy in Chelsea.[7]

Wars against France

He entered the Navy on 6 September 1799 as a first-class volunteer aboard the sloop, employed in home waters under Commander John Watts. From December 1800 he served in the Mediterranean, as midshipman, master's mate, and for a short time as acting-lieutenant; firstly aboard the frigate, under Captains George Johnstone Hope and Robert Honyman, seeing action in the Egyptian campaign under the former. He then followed Captain Hope into the 74s, taking part in the battle of Trafalgar on 21 October 1805, and . Finally, he served aboard, under Captain Peter Parker, from where he was promoted to lieutenant on 20 August 1806.[8]

For the next seven years Plumridge served as a lieutenant; aboard the under Captain the Honourable Arthur Kaye Legge, in under Captains John Giffard and William Pierrepont, and then Melpomene again, under Captain Peter Parker. There, on 1 May 1809, during the Gunboat War, he commanded the boats of Melpomene in an attack on a Danish cutter of 6 guns and several merchantmen, which were lying under the protection of gun batteries in the harbour of Huilbo, Jutland. The cutter was destroyed, but with the loss of Lieutenant George Rennie, and five men severely wounded. Soon after Melpomene fought off an attack by a flotilla of 20 gun-boats, suffering considerable damage, and losing 34 men killed and wounded.[8] He then served aboard the frigate, Captain Joseph Baker, in the Baltic.[8]

By December 1810 Plumridge was serving aboard the frigate under Captain Peter Parker again, and taking part in the capture of Isle de France. He then served aboard the 80-gun ship, Captain Sir John Gore; in and, the flag-ships of Sir William Sidney Smith in 1812; and the frigate, Captain Fleetwood Pellew. On 5 October 1813 he commanded the boats of Resistance at the destruction of batteries and the capture of a convoy in Porto d'Anzo. He then served aboard, Captain Thomas Gordon Caulfeild, and, the flagship of Sir Edward Pellew. In April 1814 he served as Pellew's aide-de-camp during the capture of Genoa.[8]

Peacetime service

On 7 June 1814 Plumridge was promoted to commander in the sloop, but within a month was transferred to command of and ordered to the East Indies. There on 29 April 1816, he was appointed acting-captain of the Bombay-built frigate, in which he returned to England by February 1817.[8]

He then commanded the 18-gun brig-sloop from February 1818 until March 1821, visiting Saint Helena, and in 1820, while on the Irish station, capturing three American smugglers;[8] Clinton on 13 August, Liberty on 14 August, and Maria on 12 October. Plumridge was finally promoted to post-captain on 9 October 1822, but had to wait until July 1831 before being appointed to command of the frigate, serving in the East Indies until early 1835. From April 1837 until 1841 he was the Superintendent of the Packet Service at Falmouth.

In the 1837 election he stood unsuccessfully for Parliament in Penryn and Falmouth, but won the seat in 1841. He did not seek re-election in 1847.[9] In June 1842 he was appointed Storekeeper of the Ordnance, and on 29 June 1847 was awarded the Good Service Pension.[8]

Plumridge returned to sea duty in August 1847, commanding the frigate on the East Indies and China Station, and serving as second-in-command with the rank of commodore.[8] Following the death of the Commander-in-Chief, Francis Augustus Collier, on 28 October 1849, Plumridge served as C-in-C pro tem until the arrival of Charles Austen in January 1850.[10] He was raised to the rank of rear admiral on 8 October 1852.

Crimean War

In 1854, during the Crimean War, he was assigned to the fleet headed by Vice-Admiral Sir Charles Napier for operations in the Baltic, commanding a detached "flying squadron" of steamships. Flying his flag in the frigate, Plumridge operated in the Gulf of Bothnia during the Åland War (part of the Crimean War) bombarding a number of Finnish settlements to destroy fortifications, telegraph apparatus, and capture enemy shipping. He was afterwards sharply criticized for firing on civilian settlements. Furthermore, the destroyed Finnish commodities were for the greater part actually bought by British customers and often paid in advance, Plumridge effectively pillaging on his own nations's goods.[11] On 21 June his force bombarded the fortress of Bomarsund in Åland, expending most of their ammunition for little result. It was on this occasion that a midshipman of the gunboat HMS Hecla won the first-ever Victoria Cross. In common with the other commanders of the 1854 Baltic campaign Plumridge's command was not renewed in 1855, but he was made a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath on 5 July 1855.

Plumridge was made a vice admiral on 28 November 1857 and admiral on 27 April 1863, but died in November of the same year at Hopton Hall. He is buried in the churchyard of old St Margaret's Church, Hopton-on-Sea, Norfolk.[12]

Personal life

Plumridge was married three times.[13] He married first in 1821, to a daughter of a Rear-Admiral Hart.[13] She died in 1827, and he married for a second time in 1835 to Harriet Agnes, daughter of the Rt Hon Hugh Elliot, by whom he had several children. He was again left a widower in 1845.[8] He married for a third time to Georgina Skinner, the sister of Thomas Skinner, who was the daughter of Lt-Col William Thomas Skinner, RA.[13] He and his third wife also had several children, including Mabel Ann (1861-1931) who married the art critic, novelist and illustrator Haldane MacFall.[14]

His maternal niece Catherine German married Hermann Philipp Rée,[15] and their great-great-great-grandson is the former Prime Minister Rt. Hon. David Cameron.[16]

Notes and References

  1. News: Obituary . 25 May 2019 . Army and Navy Gazette . 5 December 1863 . 21 . subscription.
  2. Book: Walford . Edward . The County Families of the United Kingdom, Or Royal Manual of the Titled and Untitled Aristocracy of Great Britain and Ireland. 2. Ed. Greatly Enl . 1864 . Hardwicke . 803 . 25 May 2019 . en.
  3. Book: The Peerage, Baronetage, And Knightage, Of Great Britain And Ireland For . 457 . 25 May 2019 . en . Dod . Charles Roger Phipps . 1860 .
  4. Web site: Westminster Baptism: St George, Hanover Square, via FindMyPast . 16 January 2021.
  5. Book: Taylor . James Stephen . Jonas Hanway: Founder of the Marine Society: Charity and Policy in Eighteenth-Century Britain . 1985 . Scolar Press . 9780859677004 . 25 May 2019 . en.
  6. Book: Pugh . John . Remarkable occurrences in the Life of Jonas Hanway, Esq. comprehending an abstract of his travels in Russia and Persia: ... several anecdotes and an attempt to delineate his character . 1788 . Davis . 256 . 25 May 2019 . en.
  7. Admiral Sir. J. H. Plumridge, K.C.B. . The Gentleman's Magazine . February 1864 . 249 . R. Newton . en.
  8. William Richard . O'Byrne . Plumridge, James Hanway . A Naval Biographical Dictionary . 1849 . John Murray.
  9. Book: Craig, F. W. S. . F. W. S. Craig

    . F. W. S. Craig . British parliamentary election results 1832–1885 . 1977 . 2nd . 1989 . Parliamentary Research Services . Chichester . 0-900178-26-4 . 235 .

  10. Web site: Letters of Captain Charles Barker RN, 1811-1860 . Marjorie . Rear . Persona Naval Press . 2008 . 4 November 2013 . 6 November 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131106210130/http://www.personanavalpress.co.uk/articles_barker3.htm . dead .
  11. Book: Reagan, Geoffrey . The Guinness Book of Naval Blunders . London . 1993 . 25.
  12. Web site: James Hanway Plumridge . Gravestone Photographic Resource . 2013 . 4 November 2013.
  13. Web site: Victorian Royal Navy: James Hanway Plumridge . 16 January 2021.
  14. Web site: England and Wales Census, 1861 . www.familysearch.org . 27 April 2021.
  15. Died 30 Dec. 1877, aged 79; buried at Chorlton-cum-Hardy
  16. Web site: Ancestry of David Cameron . William Addams . Reitwiesner . wargs.com . 2013 . 4 November 2013.