Henry Lidgbird Ball
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Henry Lidgbird Ball (1756-1818)was a British Navy seaman, best known for discovering and exploring Lord Howe Island.
In 1788, having previously commanded the HMS Supply, Lieutenant Ball commanded the vessel entrusted with shipping the first group of settlers from Botany Bay to Norfolk Island.
Between 1788 and 1790, Ball explored the area around Port Jackson and took part in the capture of the Aborigine, Arabanoo, on 31 December 1788, in addition to revisiting Lord Howe's Island and Norfolk Island.
After falling ill in January 1791, Bell returned to England to convalesce. Leaving Australia in November 1791, he landed at Plymouth in April 1792 with the first kangaroo to be shipped to England on board his ship.
Bell returned to duty in December 1792 and was made a captain in 1795, in which position he served with distinction between 1795 and 1812, when he went onto half pay in semi-retirement. On 4 June 1814 Bell was promoted to rear admiral of the Blue.
Bell married on 17 June 1802 in London to Charlotte Foster. She died a year later and thus, on 19 July 1810 at Kingston-upon-Thames, he married for a second time, to Anne Georgianna Henrietta Johnston. Bell had one daughter, Ann Maria.
Bell died on 22 October 1818 in Surrey, England.
Ball's Pyramid, Mount Lidgbird, Ball's Bay and Ball's Point in Sydney Harbour are all named after him.
[edit] External links
- Vivienne Parsons, 'Ball, Henry Lidgbird (1756 - 1818)' in Australian Dictionary of Biography, Vol. 1, Melbourne University Press (1966)
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