John Gore (Royal Navy officer, born 1772) explained

Honorific Prefix:Admiral
Sir John Gore
Birth Date:1772 2, df=yes
Birth Place:County Kilkenny, Ireland
Death Place:Datchet, Buckinghamshire
Allegiance:Kingdom of Great Britain
United Kingdom
Branch:Royal Navy
Serviceyears:1781–1836
Rank:Admiral
Commands:
HMS Fleche
HMS Triton
HMS Medusa
East Indies and China Station
Nore Command
Battles:French Revolutionary Wars
Napoleonic Wars
Awards:Order of the Bath

Admiral Sir John Gore, KCB (9 February 1772, County Kilkenny, Ireland  - 21 August 1836, Datchet, Buckinghamshire) was a British naval commander of the 18th and 19th centuries. His father was Colonel John Gore.

Naval career

Gore joined the Royal Navy in August 1781, as a captain's servant, and would have served as a midshipman, before gaining promotion to lieutenant on 26 November 1789 and commander on 24 May 1794.[1] The Royal Navy had just captured the French corvette Fleche at the capture of Bastia, in which Gore had played a significant role and had been injured. The Navy took the corvette into service as HMS Fleche and commissioned her under Gore. He fitted her out and sailed her to Malta where he negotiated with the Grand Master of the Knights Hospitaller Emmanuel de Rohan-Polduc for seamen, supplies, and the like. On 13 September Gore was a witness at the trial of Lieutenant William Walker, commander of the hired armed cutter Rose, on charges that Walker had accepted money from merchants at Bastia to convoy their vessels to Leghorn, where the court martial took place. Walker was acquitted.[2]

Gore received promotion to post captain on 14 November 1794.[1] When in command of, he took part in the successful Action of 16 October 1799, in which two Spanish frigates were captured and more than 2 million silver dollars taken. While commanding the 32-gun frigate HMS Medusa, he took part in the action of 5 October 1804. Promoted to rear-admiral on 4 December 1813, he became Commander-in-Chief, The Nore from 1818 to 1821.[3] Promoted to vice-admiral on 27 May 1825,[1] he served as Commander-in-Chief, East Indies and China Station from 1831 to 1834.[4]

Family

On 15 August 1808, at St George's, Hanover Square, he married Georgiana Montagu, daughter of Admiral Sir George Montagu and Charlotte Wroughton. The couple had four children:[1]

Popular culture

In fiction, he appears in CS Forester's Hornblower and the Hotspur and in MC Muir's Admiralty Orders as the Medusas captain. In the latter book the action of 5 October 1804 is described.

His surviving portrait, which is in the collection of the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, has been attributed to the artist John Westbrooke Chandler.[5]

See also

References

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Vice-Admiral Sir John Gore . Darryl . Lundy . The Peerage.com . 28 July 2016.
  2. Book: Byrn, John D. . 2009 . Naval courts martial, 1793–1815 . Barnham, Surrey, England; Burlington, Vermont . Ashgate for the Navy Records Society . Publications of the Navy Records Society . 155 . 31–33 . 978-0-75466-781-0.
  3. Book: Stewart, William . Admirals of the World: A Biographical Dictionary, 1500 to the Present . 145 . McFarland & Co. Inc . 2009 . 978-0-78643-809-9.
  4. Web site: Principal Royal Navy Commanders-in-Chief 1830–1899 . William Loney RN . 28 July 2016.
  5. https://adamfineart.wordpress.com/2019/05/20/capitano-magnifico-a-portrait-of-sir-john-gore/ A. Busiakiewicz, 'Capitano Magnifico – A portrait of Sir John Gore'