James Hanway Plumridge

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

James Hanway Plumridge born c.1788, died 1863, was a British naval officer whose career extended from Trafalgar to the Crimean War.

Plumridge was born in London and entered the navy in 1799. As a Midshipman on board Defence (74) he took part in the Battle of Trafalgar on 21 October 1805. His first command was Crocus in 1814 and he was master of several ships thereafter but though he became a Post Captain in 1822, he did not go to sea again for nine years, when he commanded Magicienne on the East Indies Station 1831-35. In 1841 he became Superintendent of the Packet service at Falmouth as well as the town’s M.P., in which capacity he served until 1847, when he returned to the East Indies, with the rank of Commodore. He was raised to the rank of Rear-Admiral in 1852. In 1854, in the Crimean War, he was assigned to the fleet headed by Vice-Admiral Sir Charles Napier for operations in the Baltic to command a detached ‘flying squadron’ of steamships. Flying his flag in the frigate HMS Leopard, Plumridge operated in the Gulf of Bothnia, 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. On 21 June his force bombarded the fortress of Bomarsund on the Aland Islands, 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 awarded the K.C.B. He became a Vice-Admiral in 1857 and Admiral in April 1863, but died in November of the same year.