Robert Cavendish Spencer | |||||||||||
Birth Date: | 24 October 1791 | ||||||||||
Birth Place: | England | ||||||||||
Death Place: | Off Alexandria, Egypt | ||||||||||
Father: | George Spencer | ||||||||||
Mother: | Lavinia Bingham | ||||||||||
Relatives: | John Spencer (brother) Frederick Spencer (brother) George Spencer (brother) Sarah Lyttelton (sister) | ||||||||||
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Sir Robert Cavendish Spencer (24 October 1791 – 4 November 1830) was an English officer of the Royal Navy. Well connected by birth, he made a naval career, which attracted the sons of the nobility and also of those from naval backgrounds, to serve under him and, despite liberal politics, worked as a reforming administrator with the future William IV of the United Kingdom.[1]
Born on 24 October 1791, he was the third son of George Spencer, 2nd Earl Spencer, and brother of John Spencer, 3rd Earl Spencer, Frederick Spencer, 4th Earl Spencer, George Spencer, and Sarah Lyttelton. In August 1804 he entered the navy on board with Captain Benjamin Hallowell, and served under him, in Tigre and afterwards in —being promoted to be lieutenant on 13 December 1810—till appointed to command the brig, in October 1812.[1] [2]
On 22 January 1813 Spencer was promoted to be commander of, from which he was moved into, one of the squadron off Marseille, under the command of Captain Thomas Ussher. He was later appointed to, stationed on the coast of North America; was engaged in operations against New Orleans; and was promoted to post rank by the commander-in-chief, Sir Alexander Forrester Inglis Cochrane, on 4 June 1814.[2]
In 1815 Spencer commanded on the home station, and in 1817–1819 the 26-gun frigate in the Mediterranean, where he conducted a negotiation with the Bey of Tunis. From 1819 to 1822 he commanded on the South American station, and from 1823 to 1826 the 46-gun frigate in the Mediterranean, where he took part in the operations against Algiers in the summer of 1824. He was then employed on the coast of Greece, during the Greek War of Independence.[2]
From August 1827 to September 1828 Spencer was private secretary and Groom of the Bedchamber to the Duke of Clarence, then Lord High Admiral. They worked on naval reform, in the areas of gunnery and steam power. In October 1828 he was nominated Knight Commander of the Royal Guelphic Order, and was knighted on 24 November. In September 1828 he was appointed to command, again serving in the Mediterranean.[2]
Spencer died, off Alexandria, on 4 November 1830; he had just been recalled to the United Kingdom as surveyor-general of the ordnance. He was unmarried.[2]
He was buried in Malta. A memorial to his memory was erected in Great Brington sculpted by Francis Chantrey.[3]