Peter Denis Explained

Sir Peter Denis, 1st Baronet
Birth Date: 1713
Allegiance:Great Britain
Rank:Vice admiral
Branch:Royal Navy
Commands:Nore Command
Battles:War of the Austrian Succession
Seven Years' War

Vice-Admiral Sir Peter Denis, 1st Baronet (1713 – 11 June 1778) was an English naval officer and Member of Parliament.

Life

The son of Huguenot refugee, the Rev. Jacob Denis and his wife Martha Leach, Denis was educated at The King's School, Chester[1] and joined the navy as a young man. He was a midshipman in HMS Centurion under the command of Commodore George Anson at the start of his famous circumnavigation (1740–1744). He was promoted to lieutenant in 1739. On 5 November 1741, in the South Seas, he was sent in command of 16 men in a cutter to pursue a Spanish vessel. He boarded and carried his prize, which proved to be bound from Guayaquil to Callao. The cargo was of little value to its captors, but intelligence derived from the capture led to the attack on the town of Paita a few days afterwards.

By 1745 Denis had been promoted to command and given the 26-gun sixth rate . Soon afterwards he was transferred to temporary command of, during which time he captured a French privateer and recaptured two British merchantmen. By 1747 Denis was back in the 50-gun Centurion as her captain, commanding her at the Battle of Cape Finisterre, where he once more served under Anson, now an admiral. When the enemy was sighted, Anson signalled a general chase as he expected the French to evade action if possible until they could escape under cover of darkness; Centurion was swiftest into action, engaging the rearmost French ship and occupying her and two larger enemy ships until the main body of the British fleet could come up. After the battle Denis was entrusted with bringing back to England the news of Anson's victory; as the public acclaim that followed won Anson a peerage, this may well have further endeared Denis to Anson.

On 2 September 1750, he married Elizabeth Pappett at St Benet's, Paul's Wharf, London.[2] She died in 1765 without issue.

In 1754, Denis entered Parliament as member for Hedon, a Yorkshire borough where Anson was the "patron" with the power to select the MPs. He held the seat for fourteen years, throughout which time the other MP was another naval officer, Sir Charles Saunders, who later rose to become First Lord of the Admiralty.

Denis continued his naval career, commanding the 90-gun in Admiral Edward Hawke's unsuccessful expedition against Rochefort in September 1757. At the action of 29 April 1758, he was captain of the 70-gun which defeated and captured French ship of the line Raisonnable in the Bay of Biscay. Dorsetshire was with the fleet at the decisive victory of Quiberon Bay in 1759. In 1767 he was created a baronet, of St Mary's in the County of Kent, but as he left no male heir the title became extinct on his death.

Denis became Commander-in-Chief, The Nore, based on the River Medway in 1771 with his flag in the third-rate .[3]

He died in 1778, having reached the rank of Vice-Admiral of the Red. He was buried at St. George the Martyr Cemetery, Brunswick Square, beside his mother Martha (d.1746), his wife Elizabeth (d.1765), his brother Charles (d.1772), and his sisters Susanna (d.1776) and Ann (d.1793).[4]

External links

|-

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Inspirational Alumni Members. The King's School Chester. 2 December 2011. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20111215071558/http://www.kingschester.co.uk/extras/KingsAlumni/inspirationalAlumni.html. 15 December 2011.
  2. Boyd's Marriage Indexes, 1538-1850
  3. Peter Denis. 2004 . 10.1093/ref:odnb/7484 . 2 January 2015.
  4. The Monumental Inscriptions of Middlesex Vol II - Cansick 1872.