William Carnegie, 7th Earl of Northesk

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William Carnegie, 7th Earl of Northesk

William Carnegie, 7th Earl of Northesk
Born 10 April 1756(1756-04-10)
Hampshire, England
Died April 2, 1845 (aged 88)
London, England
Occupation Royal Navy Admiral
Spouse Mary Ricketts

Admiral William Carnegie GCB, 7th Earl of Northesk (10 April 1756 - 28 May 1831) was born in Hampshire to Admiral George Carnegie, 6th Earl of Northesk and Anne Melville.

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[edit] Naval career

Following his father into the navy in 1771, Carnegie served in the American War of Independence [1] on the frigate HMS Beaulieu and the ship of the line HMS Sandwich, being involved in the Battle of Martinique in 1780 under Admiral Rodney. His good conduct during the engagement was recognised by Rodney, who promoted Carnegie to commander[2] and then aided his rise to Post captain in 1782, whereupon he was given command of the frigate HMS Enterprise.

Ten years later at the outbreak of the French Revolutionary War, Carnegie had acceded to the earldom and became the Earl of Northesk, being given the new ship of the line HMS Monmouth to command in 1796 and having as his first lieutenant Charles Bullen, the start of an excellent professional partnership and close personal friendship. The following year he was caught up in the Nore mutiny but was released by the mutineers to take their demands to London. Like many in the fleet, Northesk had some sympathy with the initial stages of the mutiny, and so when the demands were refused, he resigned his position as untenable following his failure to restore order on his ship or gain concessions from the government.

William Carnegie as a Post Captain of 3 year seniority
William Carnegie as a Post Captain
of 3 year seniority

Reinstated by the Admiralty in 1803[3] with full seniority as a rear-admiral, Northesk was given the 100 gun first rate HMS Britannia as his flagship, and after a brief period in the Channel Fleet, was sent south with Sir Robert Calder to join the blakading squadrons off Spain. With him went Captain Bullen. He missed the Calder's action in 1805, and joined Nelson's fleet off Cadiz that same year. As the inevitable Battle off Cape Trafalgar came closer, Northesk was largely left out of the planning of the encounter, partly because he was the third most senior admiral present behind Nelson and Collingwood and partly because unlike most of the captains at the battle, Northesk had never worked with Nelson before and was not a member of the famous Band of Brothers.

Nonetheless, when battle came Northesk was ready and although his slow ship took sometime to reach the fighting, he was heavily engaged with the enormous Spanish 130 gun ship Santissima Trinidad, the Britannia suffering 52 casualties [4] in the battle. He was greatly rewarded for his service in action, but like many Trafalgar captains, never served at sea again as sufficiently senior posts could not be found abroad. He was however initiated into the Order of the Bath, eventually reaching the position of Knight Grand Cross. He also reached the rank of full admiral, the ceremonial post of Rear-Admiral of Great Britain and was made commander in chief of Plymouth[5] later in his career. He died in 1831 in London[6] and was buried alongside Nelson and Collingwood in the crypt at St Paul's Cathedral, where his tomb can still be seen.

[edit] Legacy

He married Mary Ricketts, daughter of William Henry Ricketts, on 9 December 1788 and had nine children:

Honorary titles
Preceded by
Sir James Saumarez, Bt
Rear-Admiral of the United Kingdom
1821–1831
Succeeded by
Sir Thomas Foley
Peerage of Scotland
Preceded by
George Carnegie
Earl of Northesk
1792–1831
Succeeded by
William Carnegie

[edit] References

  1. ^ Promoted Lieutenant in 1777
  2. ^ 1781
  3. ^ 23 April 1803
  4. ^ 10 killed 42 wounded
  5. ^ 1827- 1830
  6. ^ Albemarle Street, Piccadilly, London.

[edit] Further reading

  • The Trafalgar Captains, Colin White and the 1805 Club, Chatham Publishing, London, 2005, ISBN 1-86176-247-X

[edit] External links