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Francis Beaufort

Rear-Admiral Sir Francis Beaufort KCB FRS FRGS FRAS MRIA (/ˈbfərt/; 27 May 1774 – 17 December 1857) was an Irish hydrographer, rear admiral of the Royal Navy, and creator of the Beaufort cipher and the Beaufort scale.

Francis Beaufort
Beaufort c. 1851
Hydrographer of the Navy
In office
19 May 1829 – 25 January 1855 (1829-05-19 – 1855-01-25)
Preceded bySir Edward Parry
Succeeded byJohn Washington
Personal details
Born(1774-05-27)27 May 1774
Navan, County Meath, Ireland
Died17 December 1857(1857-12-17) (aged 83)
Hove, Sussex, England
Resting placeSt John's Church Gardens
Spouses
  • Alicia Wilson (1815–1834)
  • Honora Edgeworth (1838–1857)
Children
Parent
Relatives
OccupationHydrographer, mariner
Known forBeaufort cipher, Beaufort scale
Awards
Military service
Branch Royal Navy
Service years1790–1855
RankRear admiral
Wars

Early life

Francis Beaufort was descended from French Protestant Huguenots, who fled the French Wars of Religion in the sixteenth century. His parents moved to Ireland from London. His father, Daniel Augustus Beaufort, was a Protestant clergyman from Navan, County Meath, Ireland, and a member of the learned Royal Irish Academy. His mother Mary was the daughter and co-heiress of William Waller, of Allenstown House. Francis was born in Navan on 27 May 1774.[1] He had an older brother, William Louis Beaufort and three sisters, Frances, Harriet, and Louisa. His father created and published a new map of Ireland in 1792.[2] Francis grew up in Wales and Ireland until age fourteen.[3][4] He left school and went to sea, but never stopped his education. By later in life, he had become sufficiently self-educated to associate with some of the greatest scientists and applied mathematicians of his time, including Mary Somerville, John Herschel, George Biddell Airy, and Charles Babbage.

Francis Beaufort had a lifelong keen awareness of the value of accurate charts for those risking the seas, as he was shipwrecked at the age of fifteen due to a faulty chart. His most significant accomplishments were in nautical charting.[citation needed]

Career

Early naval career

Beginning on a merchant ship of the British East India Company, Beaufort rose to midshipman during the Napoleonic Wars, to lieutenant on 10 May 1796, and commander on 13 November 1800. He served on the fifth rate frigate HMS Aquilon during the Battle of the Glorious First of June off Ushant in Brittany in 1794, when Aquilon rescued the dismasted HMS Defence and exchanged broadsides with the French ship-of-the line, Impétueux.

When serving on HMS Phaeton, Beaufort was badly wounded leading a cutting-out operation off Málaga in 1800; the action resulted in the capture of the 14-gun polacca Calpe. While recovering, during which he received a "paltry" pension of £45 per annum, he helped his brother-in-law, Richard Lovell Edgeworth, to construct a semaphore line from Dublin to Galway. He spent two years at this activity, for which he would accept no remuneration.[5]

Command

Beaufort returned to active service and was appointed a captain in the Royal Navy on 30 May 1810. Whereas other wartime officers sought leisurely pursuits, Beaufort spent his leisure time taking depth soundings and bearings, making astronomical observations to determine longitude and latitude, and measuring shorelines. His results were compiled in new charts.[citation needed]

The Admiralty gave Beaufort his first ship command, HMS Woolwich. He sailed her to the East Indies and escorted a convoy of East Indiamen back to Britain. The Admiralty then tasked him with conducting a hydrographic survey of the Rio de la Plata estuary in South America. Experts were very impressed by the survey Beaufort brought back. Notably, Alexander Dalrymple remarked in a note to the Admiralty in March 1808, that "we have few officers (indeed I do not know one) in our Service who have half his professional knowledge and ability, and in zeal and perseverance he cannot be excelled."[6]

Anatolia

After the Woolwich, Beaufort received his first post-captain commission, commanding Frederickstein.[7]

Throughout 1811–1812, Beaufort charted and explored southern Anatolia, a region he referred to as Karamania, locating many classical ruins, including Hadrian's Gate. An attack on the crew of his boat (at Ayas, near Adana), by Turks interrupted his work and he received a serious bullet wound in the hip. He returned to England and drew up his charts.

In 1817, he published his book Karamania; or a brief description of the South Coast of Asia Minor, and of the Remains of Antiquity.[8]

Hydrographer of the Navy

In 1829, Beaufort was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society,[9] and in the same year, at the age of 55 (retirement age for most administrative contemporaries), Beaufort was appointed as the British Admiralty Hydrographer of the Navy. He served in that post for 26 years, longer than any other Hydrographer. G.S. Ritchie, himself Hydrographer (1966–1971) described this period as the "High Noon" of Admiralty surveying.[10]: 189–199  The geographical scope of surveying was greatly increased, both in home waters and overseas. The production of new charts increased from 19 in 1830 to 1230 in 1855.[10]: 196 

In 1831, a Scientific Branch of the Admiralty was formed, which as well as the Hydrographic Department included the great astronomical observatories at Greenwich, England, and the Cape of Good Hope, Africa, and the Nautical Almanac and Chronometer Offices, and Beaufort was responsible for the administration.[10]: 195  Beaufort directed some of the major maritime explorations and experiments of that period. He played a leading role in the search for the explorer, Sir John Franklin, who was lost during his last polar voyage to search for the legendary Northwest Passage.[11]

Beaufort was interested in scientific affairs beyond the confines of navigation. As a council member of the Royal Society, the Royal Observatory, and the Royal Geographical Society (which he helped found), Beaufort used his position and prestige as a top administrator to act as a "middleman" for many scientists of his time. Beaufort represented the geographers, astronomers, oceanographers, geodesists, and meteorologists to that government agency, the Hydrographic Office, which could support their research. In 1849 he assisted in the publication of the Admiralty Manual of Scientific Enquiry, to assist both Navy personnel and general travellers in scientific investigations, ranging from astronomy to ethnography.[12][10]: 198 

Beaufort trained Robert FitzRoy, who was put in temporary command of the survey ship HMS Beagle after her previous captain committed suicide. When FitzRoy was reappointed as commander for what became the famous second voyage of the Beagle, he requested of Beaufort "that a well-educated and scientific gentleman be sought" as a companion on the voyage.[10]: 203  Beaufort's enquiries led to an invitation to Charles Darwin, who later drew on his discoveries in formulating the theory of evolution he presented in his book The Origin of Species. Later, when Beaufort persuaded the Board of Trade to set up a Meterorological Department, Fitzroy became its first Director[10]: 192 

Using his many connections, including the Royal Society, Beaufort helped to obtain funding for the Antarctic voyage of 1839–1843 by James Clark Ross for extensive measurements of terrestrial magnetism, coordinated with similar measurements in Europe and Asia.[3]: 303  (This is comparable to the International Geophysical Year of our time.)

Beaufort promoted the development of reliable tide tables around British shores, publishing the first edition of the Admiralty Tide Tables in 1833.[13][14] This inspired similar research for Europe and North America. Aiding his friend William Whewell, Beaufort gained the support of the Prime Minister, Duke of Wellington, in expanding record-keeping at 200 British Coastguard stations. Beaufort gave enthusiastic support to his friend, Sir George Airy, the Astronomer Royal and noted mathematician, in achieving a historic period of measurements by the Greenwich and Good Hope observatories.[citation needed]

By the time Beaufort retired the Admiralty Chart series was a truly worldwide resource with 2,000 charts covering every sea.[15]

Retirement

Beaufort retired from the Royal Navy with the rank of rear admiral on 1 October 1846, at the age of 72. He became "Sir Francis Beaufort" on being appointed KCB (Knight Commander of the Bath) on 29 April 1848, a relatively belated honorific considering the eminence of his position from 1829 onward. In 1840, he was elected to the American Philosophical Society.[16]

Personal life

Beaufort's extant correspondence of more than 200 letters and journals contained portions written in personal cipher. Beaufort altered the Vigenère cipher, by reversing the cipher alphabet, and the resulting variant is called the Beaufort cipher. The deciphered writings have revealed family and personal problems, including some of a sexual nature. It appears that between 1835 and his marriage to Honora Edgeworth in November 1838, he had incestuous relations with his sister Harriet. His diary entries, in cipher, show that he was tortured by guilt over this.[3][page needed]

 
The Beaufort family tomb in St John's Church Gardens, London

He died on 17 December 1857, at age 83 in Hove, Sussex, England. He is buried in the church gardens of St John at Hackney, London, where his tomb may still be seen. His home in London, No. 51 Manchester Street, Westminster, is marked by an historic blue plaque noting his residency and achievements.[17]

Family

Beaufort married, firstly, Alicia Magdalena Wilson, daughter of Lestock Wilson R.N. under whom he had first served; she died in 1834.[18] Of their children, three daughters and three sons were living in 1859.[19] They included:

Beaufort married again in 1838, to Honora Edgeworth, the daughter of his brother-in-law Richard Lovell Edgeworth and his second wife. (Francis' sister Frances Beaufort had married Edgeworth as his fourth wife years earlier in the 1810s.)

Legacy

Wind force scale

During these early years of command, Beaufort developed the first versions of his Wind Force Scale and Weather Notation coding, which he was to use in his journals for the remainder of his life. From the circle representing a weather station, a staff (rather like the stem of a note in musical notation) extends, with one or more half or whole barbs. For example, a stave with 312 barbs represents Beaufort seven on the scale, decoded as 32–38 mph, or a "moderate Gale".

Geographical legacy

Beaufort, like other patrons of exploration, has had his name given to many geographical places. Among these:

Cryptographic legacy

Beaufort created the Beaufort cipher. It is a substitution cipher similar to the Vigenère cipher.

References

  1. ^ Mollan, R Charles (2002). Irish Innovators. Royal Irish Academy. p. 49. ISBN 978-1-874045-88-5.
  2. ^ "A new map of Ireland : civil and ecclesiastical". Library of Congress. Retrieved 7 July 2017.
  3. ^ a b c Alfred Friendly, Beaufort of the Admiralty, Hutchinson, 1977
  4. ^ File:BeaufortTomb.JPG
  5. ^ Marshall, John (1828). Royal naval biography; or, Memoirs of the services of all the flag-officers, superannuated Rear-Admirals, Retired Captains, Post Captains and Commanders whose names appeared on the Admiralty list of Sea-Officers of the year 1823, or who have since been promoted. Supplement Part II. London: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown and Geen. pp. 82–94.
  6. ^ John de Courcy Ireland. "Francis Beaufort (Wind Scale)". On-line Journal of Research on Irish Maritime History. Retrieved 29 November 2014.
  7. ^ Courtenay, Nicholas (2002). "8". Gale Force 10 – The life and legacy of Admiral Beaufort. Review.
  8. ^ Beaufort, Francis (1817). Karamania, Or A Brief Description Of The South Coast Of Asia Minor. London: R. Hunter.
  9. ^ Hume, Robert (17 March 2014). "Why wind guru Beaufort had to hide a stormy personal life". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 16 March 2016.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Ritchie, G.S. (1967). The Admiralty Chart. London: Hollis & Carter.
  11. ^ Ross, W.Gillies (2004). "The Admiralty and the Franklin search". The Polar Record. 40 (4): 289–301. doi:10.1017/S003224740400378X. S2CID 130055829.
  12. ^ John Frederick William Herschel (1849). A Manual of Scientific Enquiry: Prepared for the Use of Her Majesty's Navy : and Adapted for Travellers in General. J. Murray.
  13. ^ Doodson, Arthur Thomas; Warburg, Harold Dreyer (1941). Admiralty Manual of Tides. H.M. Stationery Office. pp. 137–138. ISBN 978-0-7077-2124-8.
  14. ^ Warburg, H.D. (1919). "The Admiralty Tide Tables and North Sea Tidal Predictions". The Geographical Journal. 63 (5): 308–326. doi:10.2307/1779472. JSTOR 1779472.
  15. ^ Morris, Roger (November 1996). "Two hundred years of Admiralty charts and surveys". The Mariner's Mirror. 82 (4): 426. doi:10.1080/00253359.1996.10656616.
  16. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  17. ^ "Francis Beaufort Blue Plaque". openplaques.org. Retrieved 13 May 2013.
  18. ^ Rodger, N. A. M. "Beaufort, Sir Francis". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/1857. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  19. ^ Royal Society (1857). Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Taylor & Francis. p. 526.
  20. ^ "Beaufort, Daniel Augustus (BFRT831DA)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  21. ^ Lodge's Peerage and Baronetage (knightage & Companionage) of the British Empire. Hurst & Blackett. 1861. p. 685.
  22. ^ "Beaufort, Francis Lestock (BFRT831FL)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  23. ^ Walford, Edward (1869). The County Families of the United Kingdom Or, Royal Manual of the Titled and Untitled Aristocracy of Great Britain and Ireland. R. Hardwicke. p. 752.
  24. ^ Baigent, Elizabeth. "Smythe, Emily Anne, Viscountess Strangford (bap. 1826, d. 1887)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/25963. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)

Further reading

External links

francis, beaufort, admiral, beaufort, redirects, here, other, uses, admiral, beaufort, disambiguation, other, people, with, similar, names, disambiguation, rear, admiral, frgs, fras, mria, 1774, december, 1857, irish, hydrographer, rear, admiral, royal, navy, . Admiral Beaufort redirects here For other uses see Admiral Beaufort disambiguation For other people with similar names see Francis Beaufort disambiguation Rear Admiral Sir Francis Beaufort KCB FRS FRGS FRAS MRIA ˈ b oʊ f er t 27 May 1774 17 December 1857 was an Irish hydrographer rear admiral of the Royal Navy and creator of the Beaufort cipher and the Beaufort scale SirFrancis BeaufortKCB FRS FRGS FRAS MRIABeaufort c 1851Hydrographer of the NavyIn office 19 May 1829 25 January 1855 1829 05 19 1855 01 25 Preceded bySir Edward ParrySucceeded byJohn WashingtonPersonal detailsBorn 1774 05 27 27 May 1774Navan County Meath IrelandDied17 December 1857 1857 12 17 aged 83 Hove Sussex EnglandResting placeSt John s Church GardensSpousesAlicia Wilson 1815 1834 Honora Edgeworth 1838 1857 ChildrenFrancis Lestock Beaufort Emily Anne BeaufortParentDaniel Augustus Beaufort father RelativesFrances Beaufort sister Henrietta Beaufort sister Daniel de Beaufort grandfather OccupationHydrographer marinerKnown forBeaufort cipher Beaufort scaleAwardsKnight Commander of the Order of the Bath 1848 Military serviceBranch Royal NavyService years1790 1855RankRear admiralWarsFrench Revolutionary Wars Napoleonic Wars Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Early naval career 2 2 Command 2 3 Anatolia 2 4 Hydrographer of the Navy 2 5 Retirement 3 Personal life 4 Family 5 Legacy 5 1 Wind force scale 5 2 Geographical legacy 5 3 Cryptographic legacy 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life EditFrancis Beaufort was descended from French Protestant Huguenots who fled the French Wars of Religion in the sixteenth century His parents moved to Ireland from London His father Daniel Augustus Beaufort was a Protestant clergyman from Navan County Meath Ireland and a member of the learned Royal Irish Academy His mother Mary was the daughter and co heiress of William Waller of Allenstown House Francis was born in Navan on 27 May 1774 1 He had an older brother William Louis Beaufort and three sisters Frances Harriet and Louisa His father created and published a new map of Ireland in 1792 2 Francis grew up in Wales and Ireland until age fourteen 3 4 He left school and went to sea but never stopped his education By later in life he had become sufficiently self educated to associate with some of the greatest scientists and applied mathematicians of his time including Mary Somerville John Herschel George Biddell Airy and Charles Babbage Francis Beaufort had a lifelong keen awareness of the value of accurate charts for those risking the seas as he was shipwrecked at the age of fifteen due to a faulty chart His most significant accomplishments were in nautical charting citation needed Career EditEarly naval career Edit Beginning on a merchant ship of the British East India Company Beaufort rose to midshipman during the Napoleonic Wars to lieutenant on 10 May 1796 and commander on 13 November 1800 He served on the fifth rate frigate HMS Aquilon during the Battle of the Glorious First of June off Ushant in Brittany in 1794 when Aquilon rescued the dismasted HMS Defence and exchanged broadsides with the French ship of the line Impetueux When serving on HMS Phaeton Beaufort was badly wounded leading a cutting out operation off Malaga in 1800 the action resulted in the capture of the 14 gun polacca Calpe While recovering during which he received a paltry pension of 45 per annum he helped his brother in law Richard Lovell Edgeworth to construct a semaphore line from Dublin to Galway He spent two years at this activity for which he would accept no remuneration 5 Command Edit Beaufort returned to active service and was appointed a captain in the Royal Navy on 30 May 1810 Whereas other wartime officers sought leisurely pursuits Beaufort spent his leisure time taking depth soundings and bearings making astronomical observations to determine longitude and latitude and measuring shorelines His results were compiled in new charts citation needed The Admiralty gave Beaufort his first ship command HMS Woolwich He sailed her to the East Indies and escorted a convoy of East Indiamen back to Britain The Admiralty then tasked him with conducting a hydrographic survey of the Rio de la Plata estuary in South America Experts were very impressed by the survey Beaufort brought back Notably Alexander Dalrymple remarked in a note to the Admiralty in March 1808 that we have few officers indeed I do not know one in our Service who have half his professional knowledge and ability and in zeal and perseverance he cannot be excelled 6 Anatolia Edit After the Woolwich Beaufort received his first post captain commission commanding Frederickstein 7 Throughout 1811 1812 Beaufort charted and explored southern Anatolia a region he referred to as Karamania locating many classical ruins including Hadrian s Gate An attack on the crew of his boat at Ayas near Adana by Turks interrupted his work and he received a serious bullet wound in the hip He returned to England and drew up his charts In 1817 he published his book Karamania or a brief description of the South Coast of Asia Minor and of the Remains of Antiquity 8 Hydrographer of the Navy Edit In 1829 Beaufort was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society 9 and in the same year at the age of 55 retirement age for most administrative contemporaries Beaufort was appointed as the British Admiralty Hydrographer of the Navy He served in that post for 26 years longer than any other Hydrographer G S Ritchie himself Hydrographer 1966 1971 described this period as the High Noon of Admiralty surveying 10 189 199 The geographical scope of surveying was greatly increased both in home waters and overseas The production of new charts increased from 19 in 1830 to 1230 in 1855 10 196 In 1831 a Scientific Branch of the Admiralty was formed which as well as the Hydrographic Department included the great astronomical observatories at Greenwich England and the Cape of Good Hope Africa and the Nautical Almanac and Chronometer Offices and Beaufort was responsible for the administration 10 195 Beaufort directed some of the major maritime explorations and experiments of that period He played a leading role in the search for the explorer Sir John Franklin who was lost during his last polar voyage to search for the legendary Northwest Passage 11 Beaufort was interested in scientific affairs beyond the confines of navigation As a council member of the Royal Society the Royal Observatory and the Royal Geographical Society which he helped found Beaufort used his position and prestige as a top administrator to act as a middleman for many scientists of his time Beaufort represented the geographers astronomers oceanographers geodesists and meteorologists to that government agency the Hydrographic Office which could support their research In 1849 he assisted in the publication of the Admiralty Manual of Scientific Enquiry to assist both Navy personnel and general travellers in scientific investigations ranging from astronomy to ethnography 12 10 198 Beaufort trained Robert FitzRoy who was put in temporary command of the survey ship HMS Beagle after her previous captain committed suicide When FitzRoy was reappointed as commander for what became the famous second voyage of the Beagle he requested of Beaufort that a well educated and scientific gentleman be sought as a companion on the voyage 10 203 Beaufort s enquiries led to an invitation to Charles Darwin who later drew on his discoveries in formulating the theory of evolution he presented in his book The Origin of Species Later when Beaufort persuaded the Board of Trade to set up a Meterorological Department Fitzroy became its first Director 10 192 Using his many connections including the Royal Society Beaufort helped to obtain funding for the Antarctic voyage of 1839 1843 by James Clark Ross for extensive measurements of terrestrial magnetism coordinated with similar measurements in Europe and Asia 3 303 This is comparable to the International Geophysical Year of our time Beaufort promoted the development of reliable tide tables around British shores publishing the first edition of the Admiralty Tide Tables in 1833 13 14 This inspired similar research for Europe and North America Aiding his friend William Whewell Beaufort gained the support of the Prime Minister Duke of Wellington in expanding record keeping at 200 British Coastguard stations Beaufort gave enthusiastic support to his friend Sir George Airy the Astronomer Royal and noted mathematician in achieving a historic period of measurements by the Greenwich and Good Hope observatories citation needed By the time Beaufort retired the Admiralty Chart series was a truly worldwide resource with 2 000 charts covering every sea 15 Retirement Edit Beaufort retired from the Royal Navy with the rank of rear admiral on 1 October 1846 at the age of 72 He became Sir Francis Beaufort on being appointed KCB Knight Commander of the Bath on 29 April 1848 a relatively belated honorific considering the eminence of his position from 1829 onward In 1840 he was elected to the American Philosophical Society 16 Personal life EditBeaufort s extant correspondence of more than 200 letters and journals contained portions written in personal cipher Beaufort altered the Vigenere cipher by reversing the cipher alphabet and the resulting variant is called the Beaufort cipher The deciphered writings have revealed family and personal problems including some of a sexual nature It appears that between 1835 and his marriage to Honora Edgeworth in November 1838 he had incestuous relations with his sister Harriet His diary entries in cipher show that he was tortured by guilt over this 3 page needed The Beaufort family tomb in St John s Church Gardens London He died on 17 December 1857 at age 83 in Hove Sussex England He is buried in the church gardens of St John at Hackney London where his tomb may still be seen His home in London No 51 Manchester Street Westminster is marked by an historic blue plaque noting his residency and achievements 17 Family EditBeaufort married firstly Alicia Magdalena Wilson daughter of Lestock Wilson R N under whom he had first served she died in 1834 18 Of their children three daughters and three sons were living in 1859 19 They included Daniel Augustus Beaufort 1813 4 1898 cleric married in 1851 Emily Nowell Davis daughter of Sir John Francis Davis 1st Baronet 20 21 Francis Lestock Beaufort 1815 1879 served in the Bengal civil service from 1837 to 1876 22 Sophia Mary Bonne married the Rev William Palmer in 1838 23 Emily Anne Smythe 1826 1887 was a hero of Bulgaria a writer illustrator and advocate of change in the training of nurses 24 Beaufort married again in 1838 to Honora Edgeworth the daughter of his brother in law Richard Lovell Edgeworth and his second wife Francis sister Frances Beaufort had married Edgeworth as his fourth wife years earlier in the 1810s Legacy EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Wind force scale Edit Main article Beaufort scale During these early years of command Beaufort developed the first versions of his Wind Force Scale and Weather Notation coding which he was to use in his journals for the remainder of his life From the circle representing a weather station a staff rather like the stem of a note in musical notation extends with one or more half or whole barbs For example a stave with 31 2 barbs represents Beaufort seven on the scale decoded as 32 38 mph or a moderate Gale Geographical legacy Edit Beaufort like other patrons of exploration has had his name given to many geographical places Among these Beaufort Sea arm of Arctic Ocean Beaufort Island AntarcticCryptographic legacy Edit Beaufort created the Beaufort cipher It is a substitution cipher similar to the Vigenere cipher References Edit Mollan R Charles 2002 Irish Innovators Royal Irish Academy p 49 ISBN 978 1 874045 88 5 A new map of Ireland civil and ecclesiastical Library of Congress Retrieved 7 July 2017 a b c Alfred Friendly Beaufort of the Admiralty Hutchinson 1977 File BeaufortTomb JPG Marshall John 1828 Royal naval biography or Memoirs of the services of all the flag officers superannuated Rear Admirals Retired Captains Post Captains and Commanders whose names appeared on the Admiralty list of Sea Officers of the year 1823 or who have since been promoted Supplement Part II London Longman Rees Orme Brown and Geen pp 82 94 John de Courcy Ireland Francis Beaufort Wind Scale On line Journal of Research on Irish Maritime History Retrieved 29 November 2014 Courtenay Nicholas 2002 8 Gale Force 10 The life and legacy of Admiral Beaufort Review Beaufort Francis 1817 Karamania Or A Brief Description Of The South Coast Of Asia Minor London R Hunter Hume Robert 17 March 2014 Why wind guru Beaufort had to hide a stormy personal life Irish Examiner Retrieved 16 March 2016 a b c d e f Ritchie G S 1967 The Admiralty Chart London Hollis amp Carter Ross W Gillies 2004 The Admiralty and the Franklin search The Polar Record 40 4 289 301 doi 10 1017 S003224740400378X S2CID 130055829 John Frederick William Herschel 1849 A Manual of Scientific Enquiry Prepared for the Use of Her Majesty s Navy and Adapted for Travellers in General J Murray Doodson Arthur Thomas Warburg Harold Dreyer 1941 Admiralty Manual of Tides H M Stationery Office pp 137 138 ISBN 978 0 7077 2124 8 Warburg H D 1919 The Admiralty Tide Tables and North Sea Tidal Predictions The Geographical Journal 63 5 308 326 doi 10 2307 1779472 JSTOR 1779472 Morris Roger November 1996 Two hundred years of Admiralty charts and surveys The Mariner s Mirror 82 4 426 doi 10 1080 00253359 1996 10656616 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 9 April 2021 Francis Beaufort Blue Plaque openplaques org Retrieved 13 May 2013 Rodger N A M Beaufort Sir Francis Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 1857 Subscription or UK public library membership required Royal Society 1857 Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Taylor amp Francis p 526 Beaufort Daniel Augustus BFRT831DA A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Lodge s Peerage and Baronetage knightage amp Companionage of the British Empire Hurst amp Blackett 1861 p 685 Beaufort Francis Lestock BFRT831FL A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Walford Edward 1869 The County Families of the United Kingdom Or Royal Manual of the Titled and Untitled Aristocracy of Great Britain and Ireland R Hardwicke p 752 Baigent Elizabeth Smythe Emily Anne Viscountess Strangford bap 1826 d 1887 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 25963 Subscription or UK public library membership required Further reading EditWebb Alfred 1878 Beaufort Sir Francis A Compendium of Irish Biography Dublin M H Gill amp son Alfred Friendly Beaufort of the Admiralty Random House New York 1973 Nicholas Courtney Gale Force 10 the life and legacy of Admiral Beaufort London Review 2002 Huler Scott 2004 Defining the Wind The Beaufort Scale and How a 19th Century Admiral Turned Science into Poetry Crown ISBN 1 4000 4884 2 Laughton John Knox 1885 Beaufort Francis In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 04 London Smith Elder amp Co Laughton John Knox Rodger Nicholas 2008 2004 Beaufort Francis Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 1857 Subscription or UK public library membership required External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Francis Beaufort Works by Francis Beaufort at Open Library Works by or about Francis Beaufort at Internet Archive Works by or about Francis Beaufort in libraries WorldCat catalog Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Francis Beaufort amp oldid 1127185702, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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