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Horatio Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson

Vice-Admiral Horatio Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson, 1st Duke of Bronte[a] KB (29 September 1758 – 21 October 1805) was a British flag officer in the Royal Navy. His inspirational leadership, grasp of strategy, and unconventional tactics brought about a number of decisive British naval victories during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest naval commanders in history.


The Viscount Nelson

Portrait of Nelson by L. F. Abbott (1799)
Born(1758-09-29)29 September 1758
Died21 October 1805(1805-10-21) (aged 47)
Burial placeSt Paul's Cathedral
Spouse
(m. 1787)
Parent(s)Edmund Nelson
Catherine Suckling
Military career
Service/branchRoyal Navy
Years of service1771–1805
RankVice-Admiral of the White
Commands heldMediterranean Fleet
Battles/wars
AwardsKnight of the Order of the Bath
Signature

Nelson was born into a moderately prosperous Norfolk family and joined the navy through the influence of his uncle, Maurice Suckling, a high-ranking naval officer. Nelson rose rapidly through the ranks and served with leading naval commanders of the period before obtaining his own command at the age of 20, in 1778. He developed a reputation for personal valour and a firm grasp of tactics, but suffered periods of illness and unemployment after the end of the American War of Independence. The outbreak of the French Revolutionary Wars allowed Nelson to return to service, where he was particularly active in the Mediterranean. He fought in several minor engagements off Toulon and was important in the capture of Corsica, where he was wounded and partially lost sight in one eye, and subsequent diplomatic duties with the Italian states. In 1797, he distinguished himself while in command of HMS Captain at the Battle of Cape St Vincent. Shortly after that battle, Nelson took part in the Battle of Santa Cruz de Tenerife, where the attack failed and he lost his right arm, forcing him to return to England to recuperate. The following year he won a decisive victory over the French at the Battle of the Nile and remained in the Mediterranean to support the Kingdom of Naples against a French invasion.

In 1801, Nelson was dispatched to the Baltic Sea and defeated neutral Denmark at the Battle of Copenhagen. He commanded the blockade of the French and Spanish fleets at Toulon and, after their escape, chased them to the West Indies and back but failed to bring them to battle. After a brief return to England, he took over the Cádiz blockade, in 1805. On 21 October 1805, the Franco-Spanish fleet came out of port, and Nelson's fleet engaged them at the Battle of Trafalgar. The battle became one of Britain's greatest naval victories, but Nelson, aboard HMS Victory, was fatally wounded by a French sharpshooter. His body was brought back to England, where he was accorded a state funeral.

Nelson's death at Trafalgar secured his position as one of Britain's most heroic figures. His signal just prior to the commencement of the battle, "England expects that every man will do his duty", is regularly quoted and paraphrased. Numerous monuments, including Nelson's Column in Trafalgar Square, London, and the Nelson Monument in Edinburgh, have been created in his memory.

Early life

 
The site of the rectory in Burnham Thorpe where Nelson was born in 1758

Horatio Nelson was born on 29 September 1758, at a rectory in Burnham Thorpe, Norfolk, England; the sixth of eleven children of the Reverend Edmund Nelson and his wife Catherine Suckling.[1] He was named "Horatio" after his godfather Horatio Walpole, 1st Earl of Orford (1723–1809),[2] the first cousin of his maternal great-grandmother Anne Turner (1691–1768). Horatio Walpole was a nephew of Robert Walpole, 1st Earl of Orford, the de facto first prime minister of Great Britain.[3] Nelson retained a strong Christian faith throughout his life.[4]

Nelson's uncle Maurice Suckling was a high-ranking naval officer, and is believed to have had a major impact on Nelson's life.[5] Nelson's peculiarly strong hatred for the French probably also came from Maurice - describing them as 'gobblers' in conversation with him as a child.[6]

Catherine Suckling lived in the village of Barsham, Suffolk, and married the Reverend Edmund Nelson at Beccles Church, Suffolk, in 1749. Nelson's aunt, Alice Nelson was the wife of Reverend Robert Rolfe, Rector of Hilborough, Norfolk, and grandmother of Sir Robert Monsey Rolfe.[7] Rolfe twice served as Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain.

Nelson attended Paston Grammar School, North Walsham, until he was 12 years old, and also attended King Edward VI's Grammar School in Norwich. His naval career began on 1 January 1771, when he reported to the newly commissioned third-rate HMS Raisonnable as an ordinary seaman and coxswain under his maternal uncle, Captain Maurice Suckling, who commanded the vessel. Shortly after reporting aboard, Nelson was appointed a midshipman, and began officer training. Early in his service, Nelson discovered that he experienced seasickness, a chronic complaint that he experienced for the rest of his life.[8]

East and West Indies, 1771–1780

HMS Raisonnable had been commissioned during a period of tension with Spain, but when this passed, Suckling was transferred to the Nore guardship HMS Triumph and Nelson was dispatched to serve aboard the West Indiaman Mary Ann of the merchant shipping firm of Hibbert, Purrier and Horton, in order to gain experience at sea.[9] He sailed from Medway, Kent, on 25 July 1771, heading to Jamaica and Tobago, and returning to Plymouth on 7 July 1772.[10] He twice crossed the Atlantic, before returning to serve under his uncle as the commander of Suckling's longboat, which carried men and dispatches, to and from shore. Nelson then learnt of a planned expedition, under the command of Constantine Phipps, intended to survey a passage in the Arctic by which it was hoped that India could be reached: the fabled North-East Passage.[11]

At his nephew's request, Suckling arranged for Nelson to join the expedition as coxswain[11] to Commander Lutwidge aboard the converted bomb vessel, HMS Carcass. The expedition reached within ten degrees of the North Pole, but, unable to find a way through the dense ice floes, was forced to turn back. By 1800, Lutwidge had begun to circulate a story that, while the ship had been trapped in the ice, Nelson had spotted and pursued a polar bear, before being ordered to return to the ship. Later, in 1809, Lutwidge had it that Nelson, and a companion, gave chase to the bear and upon being questioned as to why, replied: "I wished, Sir, to get the skin for my father."[12]

Nelson briefly returned to Triumph, after the expedition's return to Britain, in September 1773. Suckling then arranged for his transfer to HMS Seahorse; one of two ships about to sail for the East Indies.[13]

 
Captain Horatio Nelson, painted by John Francis Rigaud in 1781, with Fort San Juan – the scene of his most notable achievement up to that point – in the background. The painting itself was begun and nearly finished prior to the battle, when Nelson held the rank of lieutenant; when Nelson returned, the artist added the new captain's gold-braided sleeves.[14]

Nelson sailed for the East Indies on 19 November 1773, and arrived at the British outpost at Madras on 25 May 1774.[15] Nelson and Seahorse spent the rest of the year cruising off the coast and escorting merchantmen. With the outbreak of the First Anglo-Maratha War, the British fleet operated in support of the East India Company and in early 1775, Seahorse was dispatched to carry a cargo of the company's money to Bombay. On 19 February, two of Hyder Ali's ketches attacked Seahorse, which drove them off after a brief exchange of fire. This was Nelson's first experience of battle.[16]

He spent the rest of the year escorting convoys, during which he continued to develop his navigation and ship handling skills. In early 1776, Nelson contracted malaria and became seriously ill. He was discharged from Seahorse on 14 March and returned to England aboard HMS Dolphin.[17] Nelson spent the six-month voyage recuperating and had almost recovered by the time he arrived in Britain, in September 1776. His patron, Suckling, had risen to the post of Comptroller of the Navy in 1775, and used his influence to help Nelson gain further promotion.[3][18] Nelson was appointed acting lieutenant aboard HMS Worcester, which was about to sail to Gibraltar.[19]

Worcester, under the command of Captain Mark Robinson, sailed as a convoy escort on 3 December, and returned with another convoy in April 1777.[20] Nelson then travelled to London to take his lieutenant's examination on 9 April; his examining board consisted of Captains John Campbell, Abraham North, and his uncle, Maurice Suckling. Nelson passed the examination, and the next day received his commission, and an appointment to HMS Lowestoffe, which was preparing to sail to Jamaica, under Captain William Locker.[21] She sailed on 16 May, arrived on 19 July, and after reprovisioning, carried out several cruises in Caribbean waters. After the outbreak of the American War of Independence, Lowestoffe took several prizes, one of which was taken into Navy service as Little Lucy. Nelson asked for, and was given, command of her, and took her on two cruises of his own.[22]

As well as giving him his first taste of command, it gave Nelson the opportunity to explore his fledgling interest in science. During his first cruise in command of Little Lucy, Nelson led an expeditionary party to the Caicos Islands,[23] where he made detailed notes of the wildlife and in particular a bird – now believed to be the white-necked jacobin.[24] Locker, impressed by Nelson's abilities, recommended him to the new commander-in-chief at Jamaica, Sir Peter Parker. Parker duly took Nelson onto his flagship, HMS Bristol.[25] The entry of the French into the war, in support of the Americans, meant further targets for Parker's fleet. It took many prizes towards the end of 1778, which brought Nelson an estimated £400 (equivalent to £54,200 in 2021) in prize money. Parker appointed him as Master and Commander of the brig HMS Badger on 8 December.[26]

Nelson and Badger spent most of 1779 cruising off of the Central American coast, ranging as far as the British settlements at British Honduras (now Belize), and Nicaragua, but without much success at interception of enemy prizes.[27] On his return to Port Royal, he learnt that Parker had promoted him to post-captain on 11 June, and intended to give him another command. Nelson handed over the Badger to Cuthbert Collingwood, while he awaited the arrival of his new ship: the 28-gun frigate HMS Hinchinbrook,[b] newly captured from the French.[28] While Nelson waited, news reached Parker that a French fleet under the command of Charles Hector, comte d'Estaing, was approaching Jamaica. Parker hastily organized his defences and placed Nelson in command of Fort Charles, which covered the approaches to Kingston.[29] D'Estaing instead headed north, and the anticipated invasion never materialised.

Nelson took command of the Hinchinbrook on 1 September 1779.[30] Hinchinbrook sailed from Port Royal on 5 October and, in company with other British ships, proceeded to capture a number of American prizes.[31] On his return to Jamaica in December, Nelson began to be troubled by recurrent attacks of malaria. Nelson remained in the West Indies in order to take part in Major-General John Dalling's attempt to capture the Spanish colonies in Central America, including an assault on the Fortress of the Immaculate Conception on the San Juan River in Nicaragua.[32]

In February 1780, Hinchinbrook sailed from Jamaica as an escort for Dalling's invasion force. After sailing up the mouth of the San Juan River, Nelson’s expeditionary force obtained the surrender of the Fortress of the Immaculate Conception and its 160 Spanish defenders after a two-week siege.[33] Despite this initial success, the British forces never reached Lake Nicaragua and, decimated by yellow fever, were forced to return to Jamaica. The British destroyed the fortress when they evacuated in January 1781. The failed campaign cost the lives of more than 2,500 men, making it the costliest British disaster of the entire war.[34] Despite this, Nelson was praised for his efforts.[35]

Parker recalled Nelson and gave him command of the 44-gun frigate, HMS Janus.[36] In 1780, Nelson fell seriously ill with what seemed to be dysentery[37] and possibly yellow fever,[38] in the jungles of Costa Rica, and was unable to take command. He was taken to Kingston, Jamaica, to be nursed by "doctoress" Cubah Cornwallis, a rumored mistress of fellow captain William Cornwallis;[39] she ran a combination lodging-house and convalescence home for sailors.[40][38] He was discharged in August and returned to Britain aboard HMS Lion,[41] arriving in late November. Nelson gradually recovered over several months, and soon began agitating for a command. He was appointed to the frigate HMS Albemarle on 15 August 1781.[42]

Nelson's views on slavery

While Nelson served in the West Indies, he came into contact with several prominent white colonists residing there, forming friendships with many of them. These relationships led Nelson to imbibe their proslavery views, particularly the view that slavery was necessary to the islands' economic prosperity. According to Grindal, Nelson later used his social influence to counter the emerging abolitionist movement in Britain.[43] University of Southampton academic Christer Petley contextualises this view:

The debate over the future of slavery divided Britons. Wilberforce personified one type of British patriotism—arguing for an end to slave-trading on the basis that it was a blot on the reputation of a proud and Christian nation. Slaveholders offered their own patriotic arguments—maintaining that the trade was so instrumental to the imperial economy that Britain could ill-afford to stop it. Nelson had befriended several slaveholding colonists during his time in the Caribbean. Privately, he came to sympathise with their political outlook. It is clear that, by the time of his death at Trafalgar, he despised Wilberforce and stood in staunch opposition to the British abolitionist campaign.[44]

Over the course of his life, Nelson came into contact numerous times with aspects of slavery and the people who were involved in that institution. These included both his relationships with Caribbean plantation owners and his marriage to Fanny, a slaveowner who was born into a family which belonged to the Antiguan plantocracy. One of his friends in the West Indies was Simon Taylor, one of the richest plantation owners in Jamaica who owned hundreds of slaves. In 1805, Taylor wrote to Nelson, requesting that he publicly intervene in favour of the pro-slavery side in Britain's debate over abolition. Nelson wrote a letter back to Taylor, writing that "while [he had] ... a tongue", he would "launch [his] voice against the damnable and cursed (sic)[c] doctrine of Wilberforce and his hypocritical allies".[45] In the same latter, Nelson also wrote that he had always "[endeavoured] to serve the Public weal, of which the West India Colonies form so prominent and interesting a part. I have ever been, and shall die, a firm friend to our present Colonial system. I was bred, as you know, in the good old school, and taught to appreciate the value of our West India possessions."[46]

This letter was published in 1807, by the anti-abolitionist faction; some eighteen months after Nelson's death, and out of context, in an apparent attempt to bolster their cause prior to the parliamentary vote on the Abolition Bill. The wording of the letter as published in 1807—not in Nelson's handwriting, and with a poor facsimile of his signature—appears out of character for Nelson whose many other surviving letters never expressed racist or pro-slavery sentiments. Comparison with the "pressed copy" of the original letter—now part of the Bridport papers held in the British Library—shows that the published copy had 25 alterations,[47] distorting it to give it a more anti-Abolitionist slant. Many of Nelson's actions indicate his position on the matter of slavery, most notably:

 
Nelson's Column - Death of Nelson at Trafalgar panel, with George Ryan standing on the left-hand edge, holding a rifle
  • Any West Indian slave escaping to a navy ship, including Nelson's, were signed on, paid, and treated the same as other crew members. At the end of their service they were discharged as free men. In fact, the bronze relief at the base of Nelson's column clearly shows the black George Ryan, aged 23, with musket shooting the French alongside the dying Admiral.[48]
  • In 1799, Nelson intervened to secure the release of 24 slaves being held in Portuguese galleys off Palermo.[49][50]
  • In 1802, when it was proposed that West Indian plantation slaves should be replaced by free, paid industrious Chinese workers—Nelson supported the idea.[51]
  • In 1805, Nelson rescued the black Haitian General Joseph Chretien, and his servant, from the French. They asked if they could serve with Nelson, and Nelson recommended to the Admiralty that they be paid until they could be discharged and granted passage to Jamaica. The General's mission was to end slavery, a fact of which Nelson was well aware. The general and his servant were well treated and paid.[52]
  • The Nelson family used to have a free black servant called Price. Nelson said of him he was "as good a man as ever lived" and he suggested to Emma that she invite the elderly Price to live with them. In the event, Price declined.[53]

Command, 1781–1796

Captain of Albemarle

Nelson received orders on 23 October 1781, to take the newly refitted Albemarle to sea. He was instructed to collect an inbound convoy of the Russia Company at Elsinore, and escort them back to Britain. For this operation, the Admiralty placed the frigates HMS Argo and HMS Enterprise under his command.[54] Nelson successfully organised the convoy and escorted it into British waters. He then left the convoy to return to port, but severe storms hampered him.[55] Gales almost wrecked Albemarle, as she was a poorly designed ship and an earlier accident had left her damaged, but Nelson eventually brought her into Portsmouth, in February 1782.[56] There, the Admiralty ordered him to fit Albemarle for sea and join the escort for a convoy collecting at Cork, Ireland, to sail for Quebec, Canada.[57] Nelson arrived off Newfoundland with the convoy in late May, then detached on a cruise to hunt American privateers. Nelson was generally unsuccessful; he succeeded only in retaking several captured British merchant ships, and capturing a number of small fishing boats and assorted craft.[58]

In August 1782, Nelson had a narrow escape from a far superior French force under Louis-Philippe de Vaudreuil, only evading them after a prolonged chase.[59] Nelson arrived at Quebec on 18 September.[60] He sailed again as part of the escort for a convoy to New York. He arrived in mid-November and reported to Admiral Samuel Hood, commander of the New York station.[61] At Nelson's request, Hood transferred him to his fleet and Albemarle sailed in company with Hood, bound for the West Indies.[62] On their arrival, the British fleet took up position off Jamaica to await the arrival of de Vaudreuil's force. Nelson and the Albemarle were ordered to scout the numerous passages for signs of the enemy, but it became clear by early 1783 that the French had eluded Hood.[63]

During his scouting operations, Nelson had developed a plan to attack the French garrison of the Turks Islands. Commanding a small flotilla of frigates, and smaller vessels, he landed a force of 167 seamen and marines early on the morning of 8 March, under a supporting bombardment.[64] The French were found to be heavily entrenched and, after several hours, Nelson called off the assault. Several of the officers involved criticised Nelson, but Hood does not appear to have reprimanded him.[65] Nelson spent the rest of the war cruising in the West Indies, where he captured a number of French and Spanish prizes.[66] After news of the peace reached Hood, Nelson returned to Britain in late June 1783.[67]

Island of Nevis, marriage and peace

 
Nelson's wife, Lady Nelson, formerly Frances "Fanny" Nisbet of the island of Nevis, West Indies. A painting of the British school, circa 1800, formerly attributed to Richard Cosway, from an earlier copy.

Nelson visited France in late 1783 and stayed with acquaintances at Saint-Omer; briefly attempting to learn French during his stay. He returned to England in January 1784, and attended court as part of Lord Hood's entourage.[68] Influenced by the factional politics of the time, he contemplated standing for Parliament as a supporter of William Pitt, but was unable to find a seat.[69]

In 1784, Nelson received command of the frigate HMS Boreas, with the assignment to enforce the Navigation Acts in the vicinity of Antigua.[70] The Acts were unpopular with both the Americans and the colonies.[71] Nelson served on the station under Admiral Sir Richard Hughes, and often came into conflict with his superior officer over their differing interpretation of the Acts.[72] The captains of the American vessels Nelson had seized sued him for illegal seizure. Because the merchants of the nearby island of Nevis supported the American claim, Nelson was in peril of imprisonment; he remained sequestered on Boreas for eight months, until the courts ruled in his favour.[73]

In the interim, Nelson met Frances "Fanny" Nisbet, a young widow from a Nevis plantation family.[74] Nelson developed an affection for her. In response, her uncle, John Herbert, offered him a massive dowry. Both Herbert and Nisbet concealed the fact that their famed riches were a fiction, and Fanny did not disclose the fact that she was infertile due to a womb infection. Once they were engaged, Herbert offered Nelson nowhere near the dowry he had promised.[citation needed]

During the Georgian era, breaking a marital engagement was seen as quite dishonourable,[75] and so Nelson and Nisbet were married at Montpelier Estate, on the island of Nevis, on 11 March 1787, shortly before the end of his tour of duty in the Caribbean.[76] The marriage was registered at Fig Tree Church in St John's Parish on Nevis. Nelson returned to England in July, with Fanny following later.[77]

Nelson remained with Boreas until she was paid off in November 1787.[78] He and Fanny then divided their time between Bath and London, occasionally visiting Nelson's relations in Norfolk. In 1788, they settled at Nelson's childhood home at Burnham Thorpe.[79] Now in reserve and on half-pay, he attempted to persuade the Admiralty—and other senior figures he was acquainted with, such as Hood—to provide him with a command. He was unsuccessful, as there were too few ships in the peacetime navy, and Hood did not intercede on his behalf.[80]

Nelson spent his time trying to find employment for former crew members, attending to family affairs, and cajoling contacts in the navy for a posting. In 1792, the French revolutionary government annexed the Austrian Netherlands (modern Belgium), which were traditionally preserved as a buffer state. The Admiralty recalled Nelson to service and gave him command of the 64-gun HMS Agamemnon, in January 1793. On 1 February, France declared war.[81]

Mediterranean service

In May 1793, Nelson sailed as part of a division under the command of Vice Admiral William Hotham, joined later in the month by the rest of Lord Hood's fleet.[82] The force initially sailed to Gibraltar and—with the intention of establishing naval superiority in the Mediterranean—made their way to Toulon, anchoring off the port in July.[83] Toulon was largely under the control of moderate republicans and royalists, but was threatened by the forces of the National Convention, which were marching on the city. Short of supplies and doubting their ability to defend themselves, the city authorities requested that Hood take it under his protection. Hood readily acquiesced, and sent Nelson to carry dispatches to Sardinia and Naples, requesting reinforcements.[84]

After delivering the dispatches to Sardinia, Agamemnon arrived at Naples in early September. There, Nelson met King Ferdinand IV of Naples,[85] followed by the British ambassador to the kingdom, William Hamilton.[86] At some point during the negotiations for reinforcements, Nelson was introduced to Hamilton's new wife, Emma Hamilton, the former mistress of Hamilton's nephew, Charles Greville.[87]

The negotiations were successful, and 2,000 men and several ships were mustered by mid-September. Nelson put to sea in pursuit of a French frigate, but on failing to catch her, sailed for Leghorn, and then to Corsica.[88] He arrived at Toulon on 5 October, where he found that a large French army had occupied the hills surrounding the city and was bombarding it. Hood still hoped the city could be held if more reinforcements arrived, and sent Nelson to join a squadron operating off Cagliari.[89]

Corsica

Early on the morning of 22 October 1793, Agamemnon sighted five sails. Nelson closed with them and discovered that they were a French squadron. He promptly gave chase, firing on the 40-gun Melpomene.[90] During the action of 22 October 1793, he inflicted considerable damage, but the remaining French ships turned to join the battle. Realising he was outnumbered, Nelson withdrew and continued to Cagliari, arriving on 24 October.[90] After making repairs, Nelson and Agamemnon sailed for Tunis on 26 October with a squadron under Commodore Robert Linzee.[91]

On his arrival, Nelson was given command of a small squadron consisting of Agamemnon, three frigates, and a sloop, and ordered to blockade the French garrison on Corsica.[91] The fall of Toulon at the end of December 1793 severely damaged British fortunes in the Mediterranean. Hood had failed to make adequate provisions for a withdrawal and 18 French ships-of-the-line fell into republican hands.[92] Nelson's mission to Corsica took on an added significance, as it could provide the British with a naval base close to the French coast.[92] Hood therefore reinforced Nelson with extra ships during January 1794.[93]

A British assault force landed on the island on 7 February, after which, Nelson moved to intensify the blockade off Bastia. For the rest of the month, he carried out raids along the coast and intercepted enemy shipping. By late February, San Fiorenzo had fallen and British troops, under Lieutenant-General David Dundas, entered the outskirts of Bastia.[94] However, Dundas merely assessed the enemy positions and then withdrew, arguing that the French were too well entrenched to risk an assault. Nelson convinced Hood otherwise, but a protracted debate between the army and naval commanders meant that Nelson did not receive permission to proceed until late March. Nelson began to land guns from his ships and emplace them in the hills surrounding the town. On 11 April, the British squadron entered the harbour and opened fire, whilst Nelson took command of the land forces and commenced bombardment.[95] After 45 days, the town surrendered.[96] Nelson then prepared for an assault on Calvi, working in company with Lieutenant-General Charles Stuart.[97]

British forces landed at Calvi on 19 June, and immediately began moving guns ashore to occupy the heights surrounding the town. While Nelson directed a continuous bombardment of the enemy positions, Stuart's men began to advance. On the morning of 12 July, Nelson was at one of the forward batteries when a shot struck one of the nearby sandbags protecting the position, spraying stones and sand. Nelson was struck by debris in his right eye and forced to retire from the position. However, his wound was soon bandaged and he returned to action.[98] By 18 July, most of the enemy positions had been disabled and that night Stuart, supported by Nelson, stormed the main defensive position and captured it. Repositioning their guns, the British brought Calvi under constant bombardment, and the town surrendered on 10 August.[99] Nelson did regain partial sight in his damaged eye after the siege, but by his own account could only "...distinguish light from dark but no object.”

Genoa and the fight of the Ça Ira

 
The fight of the Ça Ira

After the occupation of Corsica, Hood ordered Nelson to open diplomatic relations with the city-state of Genoa—a strategically important potential ally.[100] Soon afterwards, Hood returned to England and was succeeded by Admiral William Hotham as commander-in-chief in the Mediterranean. Nelson put into Leghorn and, while Agamemnon underwent repairs, met with other naval officers at the port and entertained a brief affair with a local woman, Adelaide Correglia.[101] Hotham arrived with the rest of the fleet in December, whereupon Nelson and Agamemnon sailed on a number of cruises with them in late 1794 and early 1795.[102]

On 8 March, news reached Hotham that the French fleet was at sea and heading for Corsica. He immediately set out to intercept them, and Nelson eagerly anticipated his first fleet action. The French were reluctant to engage, and the two fleets shadowed each other on 12 March. The following day, two of the French ships collided, allowing Nelson to engage the much larger, 84-gun Ça Ira. This engagement went on for two and a half hours, until the arrival of two French ships forced Nelson to veer away, having inflicted heavy casualties and considerable damage.[103]

The fleets continued to shadow each other before making contact again on 14 March in the Battle of Genoa. Nelson joined the other British ships in attacking the battered Ça Ira, now under tow from Censeur. Heavily damaged, the two French ships were forced to surrender, and Nelson took possession of Censeur. Defeated at sea, the French abandoned their plan to invade Corsica and returned to port.[104]

Skirmishes and the retreat from Italy

Nelson and the fleet remained in the Mediterranean throughout the summer of 1795. On 4 July, Agamemnon sailed from San Fiorenzo, with a small force of frigates and sloops, bound for Genoa. On 6 July, Nelson ran into the French fleet and found himself pursued by several, much larger ships-of-the-line. He retreated to San Fiorenzo, arriving just ahead of the pursuing French, who broke off as Nelson's signal guns alerted the British fleet in the harbour.[105] Hotham pursued the French to the Hyères Islands, but failed to bring them to a decisive action. A number of small engagements were fought, but to Nelson's dismay, he saw little action.[105]

Nelson returned to operate out of Genoa, intercepting and inspecting merchantmen and cutting-out suspicious vessels, in both enemy and neutral harbours.[106] Nelson formulated ambitious plans for amphibious landings and naval assaults to frustrate the progress of the French Army of Italy, which was now advancing on Genoa, but could excite little interest in Hotham.[107] In November, Hotham was replaced by Sir Hyde Parker, but the situation in Italy was rapidly deteriorating: the French were raiding around Genoa and strong Jacobin sentiment was rife within the city itself.[108]

A large French assault at the end of November, broke the allied lines, forcing a general retreat towards Genoa. Nelson's forces were able to cover the withdrawing army and prevent them from being surrounded, but he had too few ships and men to materially alter the strategic situation. The British were forced to withdraw from the Italian ports. Nelson returned to Corsica on 30 November, angry and depressed with the British failure, and questioning his future in the navy.[109]

Jervis and the evacuation of the Mediterranean

In January 1796, the position of commander-in-chief of the fleet in the Mediterranean passed to Sir John Jervis, who appointed Nelson to exercise independent command over the ships blockading the French coast as a commodore.[110] Nelson spent the first half of the year conducting operations to frustrate French advances and bolster Britain's Italian allies. Despite some minor successes in intercepting small French warships—such as in the action of 31 May 1796, when Nelson's squadron captured a convoy of seven small vessels—he began to feel the British presence on the Italian peninsula was rapidly becoming useless.[111] In June, the Agamemnon was sent back to Britain for repairs, and Nelson was appointed to the 74-gun HMS Captain.[111]

In the same month, the French thrust towards Leghorn and were certain to capture the city. Nelson hurried there to oversee the evacuation of British nationals and transport them to Corsica. After which, Jervis ordered him to blockade the newly captured French port.[112] In July, he oversaw the occupation of Elba, but by September, the Genoese had broken their neutrality to declare in favour of the French.[113] By October, the Genoese position and continued French advances, led the British to decide that the Mediterranean fleet could no longer be supplied. They ordered it to be evacuated to Gibraltar. Nelson helped oversee the withdrawal from Corsica and, by December 1796, was aboard the frigate HMS Minerve, covering the evacuation of the garrison at Elba. He then sailed for Gibraltar.[114]

During the passage, Nelson captured the Spanish frigate Santa Sabina and placed Lieutenants Jonathan Culverhouse and Thomas Hardy in charge of the captured vessel; taking the frigate's Spanish captain on board Minerve. Santa Sabina was part of a larger Spanish force and, the following morning, two Spanish ships-of-the-line, and a frigate, were sighted closing fast. Unable to outrun them, Nelson was initially determined to fight, but Culverhouse and Hardy raised the British colours and sailed northeast, drawing the Spanish ships after them until being captured, giving Nelson the opportunity to escape.[115] Nelson went on to rendezvous with the British fleet at Elba, where he spent Christmas.[116] He sailed for Gibraltar in late January, and—after learning that the Spanish fleet had sailed from Cartagena—stopped just long enough to collect Hardy, Culverhouse, and the rest of the prize crew captured with Santa Sabina, before pressing on through the straits to join Sir John Jervis off Cadiz.[117]

Admiral, 1797–1801

Battle of Cape St Vincent

 
Nelson receives the surrender of the San Nicholas, an 1806 portrait by Richard Westall

Nelson joined Sir John Jervis' fleet off Cape St Vincent, and reported the Spanish movements.[118] Jervis decided to engage and the two fleets met on 14 February 1797. Nelson found himself towards the rear of the British line and realised that it would be a long time before he could bring Captain into action.[118] Instead of continuing to follow the line, Nelson disobeyed orders and wore ship, breaking from the line and heading to engage the Spanish van—consisting of the 112-gun San Josef, the 80-gun San Nicolas, and the 130-gun Santísima Trinidad. Captain engaged all three, assisted by HMS Culloden, which had come to Nelson's aid.[119]

After an hour of exchanging broadsides, which left both Captain and Culloden badly damaged, Nelson found himself alongside San Nicolas. He led a boarding party across, crying, "Westminster Abbey or glorious victory!" and forced her to surrender.[119] San Josef attempted to come to the San Nicolas' aid, but became entangled with her compatriot and was left immobile. Nelson led his party from the deck of San Nicolas onto San Josef and captured her as well.[118] As night fell, the Spanish fleet broke off and sailed for Cadiz. Four ships had surrendered to the British and two of them were Nelson's.[120]

Nelson was victorious, but had disobeyed direct orders. Jervis liked Nelson and so did not officially reprimand him,[120] but did not mention Nelson's actions in his official report of the battle.[121] He did write a private letter to First Lord of the Admiralty, George Spencer, in which he said that Nelson "contributed very much to the fortune of the day".[120] Nelson also wrote several letters about his victory, reporting that his action was being referred to amongst the fleet as "Nelson's Patent Bridge for boarding first rates".[119]

Nelson's account was later challenged by Rear Admiral William Parker, who had been aboard HMS Prince George. Parker claimed that Nelson had been supported by several more ships than he acknowledged, and that San Josef had already struck her colours by the time Nelson boarded her.[122] Nelson's account of his role prevailed, and the victory was well received in Britain; Jervis was made Earl St Vincent and Nelson, on 17 May,[123] was made a Knight of the Bath.[124][125] On 20 February, in a standard promotion according to his seniority and unrelated to the battle, Nelson was promoted to Rear Admiral of the Blue.[126]

Action off Cadiz

Nelson was given HMS Theseus as his flagship, and on 27 May 1797, was ordered to lie off Cadiz; monitoring the Spanish fleet and awaiting the arrival of Spanish treasure ships from the American colonies.[127] He carried out a bombardment, and personally led an amphibious assault, on 3 July. During the action, Nelson's barge collided with that of the Spanish commander, and a hand-to-hand struggle ensued between the two crews. Twice, Nelson was nearly cut down and—both times—his life was saved by a seaman named John Sykes, who took the blows himself and was badly wounded. The British raiding force captured the Spanish boat and towed her back to Theseus.[127][128] During this period, Nelson developed a scheme to capture Santa Cruz de Tenerife, aiming to seize a large quantity of specie from the treasure ship Principe de Asturias, which was reported to have recently arrived.[129]

Battle of Santa Cruz de Tenerife

 
Nelson wounded during the Battle of Santa Cruz de Tenerife; 1806 painting by Richard Westall

The battle plan called for a combination of naval bombardments and an amphibious landing. The initial attempt was called off after adverse currents hampered the assault and the element of surprise was lost.[130] Nelson immediately ordered another assault, but this was beaten back. He prepared for a third attempt, to take place during the night. Although he personally led one of the battalions, the operation ended in failure, as the Spanish were better prepared than had been expected and had secured strong defensive positions.[131]

Several of the boats failed to land at the correct positions in the confusion, while those that did were swept by gunfire and grapeshot. Nelson's boat reached its intended landing point, but as he stepped ashore, he was hit in the right arm by a musketball, which fractured his humerus in multiple places.[131] He was rowed back to Theseus to be attended to by its surgeon, Thomas Eshelby.[132] Upon arriving at his ship, he refused to be helped aboard, declaring:

"Let me alone! I have yet legs left and one arm. Tell the surgeon to make haste and get his instruments. I know I must lose my right arm and the sooner it is off, the better".[131][133]

Most of the right arm was amputated and, within half an hour, Nelson had returned to issuing orders to his captains.[134] Years later, he would excuse himself to Commodore John Thomas Duckworth for not writing longer letters due to not being naturally left-handed.[135] Later on, he developed the sensation of phantom limb in the area of his amputation and declared that he had "found the direct evidence of the existence of soul".[136]

Meanwhile, a force under Sir Thomas Troubridge had fought their way to the main square but could go no further. Unable to return to the fleet because their boats had been sunk, Troubridge was forced to enter into negotiations with the Spanish commander, and the British were allowed to withdraw.[137] The expedition had failed to achieve any of its objectives and had left a quarter of the landing force dead or wounded.[137][138]

The squadron remained off Tenerife for a further three days and, by 16 August, had rejoined Lord John Jervis' fleet off Cadiz. Despondently, Nelson wrote to Jervis:

"A left-handed Admiral will never again be considered as useful, therefore the sooner I get to a very humble cottage the better, and make room for a better man to serve the state".[139]

He returned to England, aboard HMS Seahorse, arriving at Spithead on 1 September. He was met with a hero's welcome; the British public had lionised Nelson after Cape St Vincent, and his wound earned him sympathy.[140] They refused to attribute the defeat at Tenerife to him, preferring instead to blame poor planning on the part of St Vincent, the Secretary at War, William Windham, or even Prime Minister William Pitt.[140]

Return to England

Nelson returned to Bath with Fanny, before moving to London in October 1797, to seek expert medical attention concerning his amputation wound. Whilst in London, news reached him that Admiral Duncan had defeated the Dutch fleet at the Battle of Camperdown.[141] Nelson exclaimed that he would have given his other arm to have been present.[141] He spent the last months of 1797 recuperating in London, during which time, he was awarded the Freedom of the City of London and a pension of £1,000 (equivalent to £110,200 in 2021) a year. He used this money to buy Round Wood Farm, near Ipswich, and intended to retire there with Fanny.[142] Despite his plans, Nelson was never to live there.[142]

Although surgeons had been unable to remove the central ligature from his amputation site, which had caused considerable inflammation and infection, it came out of its own accord in early December, and Nelson rapidly began to recover. Eager to return to sea, he began agitating for a command and was promised the 80-gun HMS Foudroyant. As she was not yet ready for sea, Nelson was instead given command of the 74-gun HMS Vanguard, to which he appointed Edward Berry as his flag captain.[143]

French activities in the Mediterranean theatre were raising concern among the Admiralty as Napoleon was gathering forces in Southern France, but the destination of his army was unknown. Nelson, and the Vanguard, were to be dispatched to Cadiz to reinforce the fleet. On 28 March 1798, Nelson hoisted his flag and sailed to join Earl St Vincent. St Vincent sent him on to Toulon with a small force to reconnoitre French activities.[144]

The Mediterranean

Hunting the French

Nelson passed through the Straits of Gibraltar, and took up position off Toulon, by 17 May, but his squadron was dispersed and blown southwards by a strong gale which struck the area, on 20 May.[145] While the British were battling the storm, Napoleon had sailed with his invasion fleet under the command of Vice Admiral François-Paul Brueys d'Aigalliers. Nelson, having been reinforced with a number of ships from St Vincent, went in pursuit.[146]

Nelson began searching the Italian coast for Napoleon's fleet, but was hampered by a lack of frigates that could operate as fast scouts. Napoleon had already arrived at Malta and, after a show of force, secured the island's surrender.[147] Nelson followed him there, but by the time he arrived, the French had already left. After a conference with his captains, he decided Napoleon's most likely destination now was Egypt and headed for Alexandria. However, upon Nelson's arrival, on 28 June, he found no sign of the French. Dismayed, he withdrew and began searching to the east of the port. During this time, on 1 July, Napoleon's fleet arrived in Alexandria and landed their forces unopposed.[148] Brueys anchored his fleet in Aboukir Bay, ready to support Napoleon, if required.[149]

Nelson, meanwhile, had crossed the Mediterranean again, in a fruitless attempt to locate the French, and returned to Naples to re-provision.[150] When he again set sail, his intentions were to search the seas off Cyprus, but he decided to pass Alexandria again for a final check. Along the way, his force found and captured a French merchant ship, which provided the first news of the French fleet: they had passed south-east of Crete a month prior—heading to Alexandria.[151] Nelson hurried to the port, but again found it empty of the French. Searching along the coast, he finally discovered the French fleet in Aboukir Bay, on 1 August 1798.[152]

The Battle of the Nile

 
Battle of the Nile, 1 August 1798 at 10 pm, painting by Thomas Luny, 1834

Nelson immediately prepared for battle, repeating a sentiment he had expressed at the battle of Cape St Vincent: "Before this time tomorrow, I shall have gained a peerage or Westminster Abbey."[153] It was late by the time the British arrived, and the French—having anchored in a strong position and possessing a combined firepower greater than that of Nelson's fleet—did not expect them to attack.[154] Nelson, however, immediately ordered his ships to advance. The French line was anchored close to a line of shoals, in the belief that this would secure their port side from attack; Brueys had assumed the British would follow convention and attack his centre from the starboard side. However, Captain Thomas Foley, aboard HMS Goliath, discovered a gap between the shoals and the French ships, and took Goliath into this channel. The unprepared French found themselves attacked on both sides; the British fleet splitting, with some following Foley and others passing down the starboard side of the French line.[155]

The British fleet was soon heavily engaged, passing down the French line and engaging their ships one by one. Nelson, on Vanguard, personally engaged Spartiate, while also coming under fire from Aquilon. At about eight o'clock, he was with Edward Berry on the quarter-deck, when a piece of French shot struck him in the forehead. He fell to the deck, with a flap of torn skin obscuring his good eye. Blinded and half-stunned, he felt sure he would die and cried out, "I am killed. Remember me to my wife." He was taken below to be seen by the surgeon.[156] After examining Nelson, the surgeon pronounced the wound non-threatening and applied a temporary bandage.[157]

The French van, pounded by British fire from both sides, had begun to surrender, and the victorious British ships continued to move down the line, bringing Brueys' 118-gun flagship Orient under constant, heavy fire. Orient caught fire under this bombardment, and later exploded. Nelson briefly came on deck to direct the battle, but returned to the surgeon after watching the destruction of Orient.[158]

The Battle of the Nile was a major blow to Napoleon's ambitions in the east. The fleet had been destroyed; Orient, another ship and two frigates had been burnt, while seven 74-gun ships and two 80-gun ships had been captured. Only two ships-of-the-line and two frigates escaped.[159] The forces Napoleon had brought to Egypt were stranded.[155] Napoleon attacked north along the Mediterranean coast, but Turkish defenders supported by Captain Sir Sidney Smith defeated his army at the Siege of Acre. Napoleon then left his army and sailed back to France, evading detection by British ships.

Given its strategic importance, historians such as Ernle Bradford, regard Nelson's achievement at the Nile as the most significant of his career, even greater than that at Trafalgar, seven years later.[160]

Rewards

 
Lady Hamilton as either a bacchante or Ariadne, by Élisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun, c. 1790; a painting owned by Nelson, which hung above his bed until his death

Nelson wrote dispatches to the Admiralty and oversaw temporary repairs to the Vanguard before sailing to Naples, where he was met with enthusiastic celebrations.[161] King Ferdinand IV of Naples, in company with the Hamiltons, greeted him in person when he arrived at port, and Sir William Hamilton invited Nelson to stay at his home.[162] Celebrations were held in honour of Nelson's birthday that September 1798, and he attended a banquet at the Hamiltons' house, where other officers had begun to notice his attentions to Emma, Lady Hamilton.

Lord Jervis himself had begun to grow concerned about reports of Nelson's behaviour, but in early October, word of Nelson's victory had reached London and overshadowed the matter. The First Lord of the Admiralty, George Spencer, fainted upon hearing the news.[163] Scenes of celebration erupted across the country; balls and victory feasts were held, and church bells were rung. The City of London awarded Nelson, and his captains, swords, whilst the King ordered they be presented with special medals. Emperor Paul I of Russia sent Nelson a gift, and Sultan Selim III of the Ottoman Empire awarded Nelson the Order of the Turkish Crescent, as well as the diamond chelengk from his own turban,[164] for Nelson's role in restoring Ottoman rule to Egypt.

Samuel Hood, after a conversation with the Prime Minister, told Nelson's wife, Fanny, that her husband would likely be given a viscountcy, similarly to Jervis' earldom after Cape St Vincent, and Adam Duncan's viscountcy after Camperdown.[165] Lord Spencer, however, demurred, arguing that as Nelson had only been detached in command of a squadron—rather than being the commander in chief of the fleet—such an award would create an unwelcome precedent. Instead, Nelson received the title of Baron Nelson of the Nile.[166][167]

Neapolitan campaign

Nelson was dismayed by Lord Spencer's decision, and declared that he would rather have received no title than that of a mere barony.[167] He was, however, cheered by the attention showered on him by the citizens of Naples, the prestige accorded him by the kingdom's elite, and the comforts he received at the Hamiltons' residence. He made frequent visits to their residence to attend functions in his honour, or tour nearby attractions with Emma, who was almost constantly at his side and with whom, by now, he had fallen deeply in love.[168]

Orders arrived from the Admiralty to blockade the French forces in Alexandria and Malta, a task Nelson delegated to his captains, Samuel Hood and Alexander Ball. Despite enjoying his lifestyle in Naples—even while judging it to be a "country of fiddlers and poets, whores and scoundrels", which he found less than desirable[164]—Nelson began to think of returning to England.[168] However, King Ferdinand IV, had just faced an extended period of pressure from his wife, Maria Carolina of Austria, who was advocating for an aggressive foreign policy towards France; a country which, five years earlier, had beheaded her sister, and its queen, Marie Antoinette.[164] Sir William Hamilton was joined in agreement with Queen Maria Carolina, and the King finally agreed to declare war on France.[169]

The Neapolitan Army, led by the Austrian General Mack, and supported by Nelson's fleet, retook Rome from the French in late November 1798. The French regrouped outside Rome and after being reinforced, routed the Neapolitans. In disarray, the Neapolitan army fled back to Naples, with the pursuing French close behind.[169] Nelson hastily organised the evacuation of the Royal Family, several nobles, and British nationals—including the Hamiltons. The evacuation got underway on 23 December and sailed through heavy gales before reaching the safety of Palermo, on 26 December.[170]

With the departure of the Royal Family, Naples descended into anarchy, and news reached Palermo, in January, that the French had entered the city under General Championnet and proclaimed the Parthenopaean Republic.[171] Nelson was promoted to Rear-Admiral of the Red on 14 February 1799,[172] and was occupied for several months in blockading Naples, while a popular counter-revolutionary force, under Cardinal Ruffo, known as the Sanfedisti, marched to retake the city. In late June, Ruffo's army entered Naples, forcing the French and their supporters to withdraw to the city's fortifications, as rioting and looting broke out amongst the ill-disciplined Neapolitan troops.[173]

Dismayed by the bloodshed, Ruffo agreed to a capitulation with the Jacobin forces, which allowed them safe conduct to France. Nelson arrived off Naples on 24 June, to find the treaty put into effect. His subsequent role is still controversial.[174] Nelson, aboard Foudroyant, was outraged, and backed by King Ferdinand IV, he insisted that the rebels must surrender unconditionally.[175] They refused. Nelson appears to have relented and the Jacobin forces marched out to the awaiting transports. Nelson then had the transports seized.[174]

He took those who had surrendered under the treaty under armed guard, as well as the former Admiral Francesco Caracciolo, who had commanded the Neapolitan navy, under King Ferdinand IV, but had changed sides during the brief Jacobin rule.[176] Nelson ordered his trial by court-martial and refused Caracciolo's request that it be held by British officers. Caracciolo was also not allowed to summon witnesses in his defence and was tried by royalist Neapolitan officers. He was sentenced to death. Caracciolo requested to be shot rather than hanged, but Nelson, following the wishes of Queen Maria Carolina, a close friend of Lady Hamilton, also denied this request, and even ignored the court's request to allow 24 hours for Caracciolo to prepare himself. Caracciolo was hanged aboard the Neapolitan frigate Minerva at 5 o'clock the same afternoon.[177]

Nelson kept the bulk of the Jacobins on the transports and began to hand hundreds over for trial and execution, refusing to intervene, despite pleas for clemency from both the Hamiltons and Queen Maria Carolina.[178] When the transports were finally allowed to carry the Jacobins to France, less than one-third were still alive.[179] On 13 August 1799, in reward for his support of the monarchy,[180] King Ferdinand IV gave Nelson the newly created title Duke of Bronte, in the peerage of the Kingdom of Sicily, as his perpetual property, as well as the estate of the former Benedictine abbey of Santa Maria di Maniace—which he later transformed into the Castello di Nelson—situated between the comunes of Bronte and Maniace, later known as the Duchy of Nelson.[181]

In 1799, Nelson opposed the mistreatment of slaves held in Portuguese galleys off Palermo and intervened to secure their release. Nelson petitioned the Portuguese commander Marquiz de Niza:

"As a friend, as an English admiral – as a favour to me, as a favour to my country – that you will give me the Slaves".

The marquis acquiesced to the unusual request, allowing twenty-four slaves to be transferred to HMS Bonne Citoyenne; their blessings to Nelson ringing out across the harbour, as their names were added to the sloop's already crowded muster book.[49][50]

 
The Battle of the Malta convoy

Siege of Malta

Nelson returned to Palermo in August, and in September, became the senior officer in the Mediterranean, after Lord John Jervis' successor, George Elphinstone, 1st Viscount Keith, left to chase the French and Spanish fleets into the Atlantic.[182] Nelson spent most of 1799 at the Neapolitan court, but put to sea again in February 1800, after Lord Keith's return. Keith ordered Nelson to assist in the siege of Malta - of which the Royal Navy was conducting a tight blockade. On 18 February, Généreux—a survivor of the Battle of the Nile—was sighted and Nelson gave chase, capturing her after a short battle, and winning Keith's approval.[183] Nelson and the Hamiltons sailed aboard the Foudroyant from Naples, on a brief cruise around Malta, in April 1800 and anchored at Marsa Sirocco. Here Nelson and Emma lived together openly, and were hosted by Thomas Troubridge and Thomas Graham.[184] It was during this time that Nelson and Lady Emma Hamilton's illegitimate daughter, Horatia Nelson, was likely conceived.[185]

Nelson had a difficult relationship with his superior officer; he was gaining a reputation for insubordination, having initially refused to send ships when Keith requested them, and on occasion, returning to Palermo without orders, pleading poor health.[186] Keith's reports, and rumours of Nelson's close relationship with Emma Hamilton, were now circulating around London, and Lord Spencer wrote a pointed letter suggesting that he return home:

You will be more likely to recover your health and strength in England than in any inactive situation at a foreign Court, however pleasing the respect and gratitude shown to you for your services may be.[187]

Return to England

 
Emma Hamilton in an 1800 portrait owned by Nelson
 
An antique photograph of a portrait of Horatia Ward (née Nelson) from the Style/Ward Family collection; Horatia was the daughter of Admiral Lord Horatio Nelson and Lady Emma Hamilton.

The recall of Sir William Hamilton to Britain was a further incentive for Nelson to return. In June Nelson left Malta and conveyed Queen Maria Carolina, and her suite, to Leghorn. Upon his arrival, Nelson shifted his flag to HMS Alexander, but again disobeyed Lord Keith's orders by refusing to join the main fleet. Keith travelled to Leghorn to demand, in person, an explanation, and refused to be moved by the Queen's pleas to allow her to be conveyed in a British ship.[188] In the face of Keith's demands, Nelson reluctantly struck his flag and bowed to Lady Hamilton's request to return to England over land.[189]

Nelson, the Hamiltons, and several other British travellers, left Leghorn for Florence, on 13 July. They made stops at Trieste and Vienna, spending three weeks in the latter, where they were entertained by the local nobility and heard the Missa in Angustiis by Haydn, which now bears Nelson's name. Haydn would meet them that August when they visited Eisenstaedt.[190] By September, they were in Prague, and later called at Dresden, Dessau and Hamburg; from there, they caught a packet ship to Great Yarmouth, arriving on 6 November.[191] Nelson was given a hero's welcome, and after being sworn in as a freeman of the borough, received the amassed crowd's applause. He then made his way to London, arriving on 9 November.[192]

He attended court and was guest of honour at a number of banquets and balls. During this period, Fanny Nelson and Lady Emma Hamilton met for the first time; Nelson was reported as being cold and distant to his wife, while his attentions to Lady Hamilton and her obesity became the subject of gossip.[192] With the marriage breaking down, Nelson began to hate even being in the same room as Fanny. Events came to a head around Christmas, when according to Nelson's solicitor, Fanny issued an ultimatum on whether he was to choose her or Lady Hamilton. Nelson replied:

I love you sincerely but I cannot forget my obligations to Lady Hamilton or speak of her otherwise than with affection and admiration.[193]

The two never lived together again.[193]

The Baltic

Shortly after his arrival in England, Nelson was appointed to be second-in-command of the Channel Fleet, under Lord John Jervis.[194] He was promoted to Vice-Admiral of the Blue on 1 January 1801,[195] and travelled to Plymouth, where on 22 January, he was granted the freedom of the city. On 29 January 1801, Lady Emma Hamilton gave birth to their daughter, Horatia.[196] Nelson was delighted, but subsequently disappointed, when he was instructed to move his flag from HMS San Josef to HMS St George, in preparation for a planned expedition to the Baltic.[197]

Tired of British ships imposing a blockade against French trade and stopping and searching their merchantmen, the Russian, Prussian, Danish and Swedish governments had formed an alliance to break the blockade. Nelson joined Admiral Sir Hyde Parker's fleet at Yarmouth, from where they sailed for the Danish coast in March. On their arrival, Parker was inclined to blockade Denmark and control the entrance to the Baltic, but Nelson urged a pre-emptive attack on the Danish fleet in the harbour of Copenhagen.[198] He convinced Parker to allow him to make an assault and was given significant reinforcements. Parker himself would wait in the Kattegat, covering Nelson's fleet in case of the arrival of the Swedish or Russian fleets.[199]

Battle of Copenhagen

 
The Battle of Copenhagen, 2 April 1801, by Nicholas Pocock (National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London). Nelson's fleet exchanges fire with the Danes, with the city of Copenhagen in the background
 
This glass was one of a set commissioned by Lord Nelson to commemorate his victory at the Battle of Copenhagen

On the morning of 2 April 1801, Nelson began to advance into Copenhagen harbour. The battle began badly for the British, with HMS Agamemnon, Bellona and Russell running aground, and the rest of the fleet encountering heavier fire from the Danish shore batteries than had been anticipated. Sir Hyde Parker sent the signal for Nelson to withdraw, reasoning:

I will make the signal for recall for Nelson's sake. If he is in a condition to continue the action he will disregard it; if he is not, it will be an excuse for his retreat and no blame can be attached to him.[200]

Nelson, directing action aboard HMS Elephant, was informed of the signal by the signal lieutenant, Frederick Langford, but angrily responded: "I told you to look out on the Danish commodore and let me know when he surrendered. Keep your eyes fixed on him."[201] He then turned to his flag captain, Thomas Foley, and said "You know, Foley, I have only one eye. I have a right to be blind sometimes." He raised the telescope to his blind eye, and said "I really do not see the signal."[d][201][203]

The battle lasted three hours, leaving both Danish and British fleets heavily damaged. At length, Nelson dispatched a letter to the Danish commander, Crown Prince Frederick, calling for a truce, which the Prince accepted.[204] Parker approved of Nelson's actions in retrospect, and Nelson was given the honour of going into Copenhagen the next day to open formal negotiations.[205][206] At a banquet that evening, he told Prince Frederick that the battle had been the most severe he had ever participated in.[207] The outcome of the battle—and several weeks of ensuing negotiations—was a fourteen-week armistice, with Nelson becoming commander-in-chief in the Baltic Sea, upon Parker's recall in May.[208]

As a reward for the victory, he was created Viscount Nelson of the Nile and of Burnham Thorpe in the County of Norfolk, on 19 May 1801.[209] In addition, on 4 August 1801, he was created Baron Nelson of the Nile and of Hilborough in the County of Norfolk, with a special remainder to his father and sisters.[210][211] Nelson sailed to the Russian naval base at Reval in May, and there learnt that the pact of armed neutrality was to be disbanded. Satisfied with the outcome of the expedition, he returned to England, arriving on 1 July.[212]

Leave in England, 1801–1803

In France, Napoleon was amassing forces to invade Great Britain. After a brief spell in London, where he again visited the Hamiltons, Nelson was placed in charge of defending the English Channel to prevent the invasion.[213] He spent the summer of 1801 reconnoitring the French coast, but apart from a failed attack on Boulogne in August, saw little action.[214] On 1 October, the Peace of Amiens was signed between the British and the French,[164] and Nelson—in poor health again—retired once more to Britain, where he stayed with Sir William and Lady Hamilton. On 30 October, Nelson spoke in support of the Addington government in the House of Lords, and afterwards, made regular visits to attend sessions.[215]

Grand tour

In the summer of 1802, Nelson, and the Hamiltons, embarked on a tour of England and Wales,[164] visiting Oxford (Star Inn), Woodstock, Oxfordshire 4th Duke of Marlborough - Blenheim Palace, Gloucester, Forest of Dean, Ross-on-Wye, then by river to Monmouth, Abergavenny, Brecon, Carmarthen, Milford Haven (New Inn), Tenby, Swansea, Carmarthen, Merthyr Tydfil (Star Inn) visited Cyfartha Ironworks to see the place were the 104 guns had been made for his flagship, HMS Victory, Ffos y Gerddinen coaching inn, now both village and inn renamed Nelson, Caerphilly, Monmouth (Beaufort Arms), Hereford, Ludlow, Worcester (Hop Pole Inn), Birmingham (Styles hotel), Warwick, Althorp (Lord Spencer) and returning to Merton Place Sunday 5 September [216] passing through numerous other towns and villages along the way. Nelson often found himself received as a hero, (except at Woodstock) and was the centre of celebrations and events held in his honour.[214]

In September, Lady Hamilton purchased Merton Place, a country estate in Merton, Surrey (now within the borders of south-west London) for Nelson, where he lived with the Hamiltons until William's death, on 6 April 1803.[217][164] The following month, war broke out once again, and Nelson prepared to return to sea.[218]

Witness at the treason trial of Edward Despard

In January 1803, Nelson appeared as a character witness in the treason trial of a former comrade in arms, Colonel Edward Despard. Despard, who had been moving in radical circles in London—a member both of the London Corresponding Society and the United Irishmen—was the alleged ringleader of a conspiracy to assassinate King George III and seize the Tower of London; the so-called Despard Plot. In court, Nelson recollected his service with Despard in the Caribbean, during the American War:

"We went on the Spanish Main together; we slept many nights together in our clothes upon the ground; we have measured the height of the enemies walls together. In all that period of time, no man could have shewn more zealous attachment to his Sovereign and his Country".

Under cross-examination, however, Nelson had to concede to having "lost sight of Despard for the last twenty years".[219][220]

Nelson directed a further plea for clemency to Prime Minister Henry Addington, who was later to tell Nelson that "he and his family had sat up after supper, weeping over the letter".[221] Following Despard's execution in February, Lady Fanny Nelson is reported to have taken the Colonel's Jamaican wife, Catherine Despard, under her "protection".[222]

Return to sea, 1803

Nelson was appointed commander-in-chief of the Mediterranean Fleet and given the first-rate HMS Victory as his flagship. He joined her at Portsmouth, where he received orders to sail to Malta and take command of a squadron there, before joining the blockade of Toulon.[223] Nelson arrived off Toulon in July 1803, and spent the next year and a half enforcing the blockade. He was promoted to Vice-Admiral of the White while still at sea, on 23 April 1804.[224] In January 1805, the French fleet, under the command of Admiral Pierre-Charles Villeneuve, escaped Toulon and eluded the blockading British. Nelson set off in pursuit, but after searching the eastern Mediterranean, learnt the French had been blown back into Toulon.[225] Villeneuve managed to break out a second time in April, and this time, succeeded in passing through the Strait of Gibraltar, and into the Atlantic—bound for the West Indies.[225]

 
Admiral Sir Robert Calder's action off Cape Finisterre, 23 July 1805, by William Anderson (National Maritime Museum, Greenwich)

Nelson gave chase, but after arriving in the Caribbean, spent June in a fruitless search for the fleet. Villeneuve had briefly cruised around the islands, before heading back to Europe, in contravention of Napoleon's orders.[226] The returning French fleet was intercepted by a British fleet, under Sir Robert Calder, and engaged in the Battle of Cape Finisterre, but managed to reach Ferrol with only minor losses.[227] Nelson returned to Gibraltar at the end of July, and travelled from there to England, dismayed at his failure to bring the French to battle and expecting to be censured.[228]

To his surprise, he was given a rapturous reception from crowds who had gathered to view his arrival. Senior British officials congratulated him for sustaining the close pursuit, crediting him with saving the West Indies from a French invasion.[228] Nelson briefly stayed in London, where he was cheered wherever he went, before visiting Merton Place to see Lady Hamilton, arriving in late August. He entertained a number of his friends and relations there over the coming month, and began plans for a grand engagement with the enemy fleet, one that would surprise his foes by forcing a pell-mell battle on them.[229]

Captain Henry Blackwood arrived at Merton early on 2 September, bringing news that the French and Spanish fleets had combined and were currently at anchor in Cádiz. Nelson hurried to London, where he met with cabinet ministers and was given command of the fleet blockading Cádiz. It was while awaiting one of these meetings, on 24 September, with Lord Castlereagh, the Secretary of State for War and the Colonies, that Nelson and Major General Arthur Wellesley—the future Duke of Wellington—met briefly in a waiting area. Wellington was waiting to be debriefed on his Indian operations, and Nelson on his chase and future plans.[230] Wellington later recalled, "[Nelson] entered at once into conversation with me, if I can call it conversation, for it was almost all on his side and all about himself and, in reality, a style so vain and so silly as to surprise and almost disgust me".[230] After a few minutes, Nelson left the room, but having then been informed who his companion had been, returned and entered into a more earnest and intelligent discussion with the young Wellesley. This lasted for a quarter of an hour, and encompassed topics such as the war, the state of the colonies, and the geopolitical situation. On this second discussion, Wellesley recalled, "I don't know that I ever had a conversation that interested me more". This was the only meeting between the two men.[231]

Nelson returned briefly to Merton to set his affairs in order, and bid farewell to Emma, before travelling back to London and then on to Portsmouth; arriving there early on the morning of 14 September. He breakfasted at the George Inn with his friends George Rose, the Vice-President of the Board of Trade, and George Canning, the Treasurer of the Navy. During the breakfast, word spread of Nelson's presence at the inn and a large crowd of well-wishers gathered. They accompanied Nelson to his barge and cheered him off, which Nelson acknowledged by raising his hat. He was recorded as having turned to his colleague and stated: "I had their huzzas before; I have their hearts now."[232][233][234] Robert Southey reported on the onlookers for Nelson's walk to the dock: "Many were in tears and many knelt down before him and blessed him as he passed."[235]

Victory joined the British fleet off Cádiz, on 27 September, and Nelson took over from Vice Admiral Cuthbert Collingwood.[236] Nelson spent the following weeks preparing and refining his tactics for the anticipated battle, and dining with his captains to ensure they understood his intentions.[237] He had devised a plan of attack that anticipated the allied fleet would form up in a traditional line of battle. Drawing on his own experience from the Nile and Copenhagen, and the examples of Duncan at Camperdown and Rodney at the Saintes, Nelson decided to split his fleet into squadrons rather than forming it into a similar line parallel to the enemy.[238] These squadrons would then cut the enemy's line in a number of places, allowing a pell-mell battle to develop. The British ships could overwhelm and destroy parts of their opponents' formation, before unengaged enemy ships could come to their aid.[238]

Battle of Trafalgar, 1805

Preparation

The combined French and Spanish fleet under Villeneuve's command numbered thirty-three ships of the line. Napoleon had intended for Villeneuve to sail into the English Channel and cover a planned invasion of Britain. However, the entry of Austria and Russia into the war forced Napoleon to call off this invasion, and transfer troops to Germany. Villeneuve had been reluctant to risk engagement with the British and this reluctance led Napoleon to send Vice-Admiral François Rosily to Cádiz, in order to take command of the fleet. Rosily was then to sail it into the Mediterranean and land troops at Naples, before making port at Toulon.[236] Villeneuve decided to sail the fleet out before his successor could arrive.[236] On 20 October 1805, the fleet was sighted making its way out of harbour, by patrolling British frigates, and Nelson was informed that they appeared to be heading to the west.[239]

 
The Battle of Trafalgar by J. M. W. Turner (oil on canvas, 1822–1824) shows the last three letters of the signal, "England expects that every man will do his duty" flying from Victory

At four o'clock in the morning of 21 October, Nelson ordered the Victory to turn towards the approaching enemy fleet, and signalled the rest of his force to battle stations. He then went below and made out his will, before returning to the quarterdeck to carry out an inspection.[240] Despite having twenty-seven ships to Villeneuve's thirty-three, Nelson was confident of success, declaring that he would not be satisfied with taking fewer than twenty prizes.[240] He returned briefly to his cabin to write a final prayer, after which he joined Victory's signal lieutenant, John Pasco.

Mr Pasco, I wish to say to the fleet "England confides that every man will do his duty". You must be quick, for I have one more signal to make, which is for close action.[241]

Pasco suggested changing confides to expects which, being in the Signal Book, could be signalled by the use of a single code (three flags), whereas confides would have to be spelt out letter by letter. Nelson agreed, and the signal was hoisted.[241]

As the fleets converged, Victory's Captain Thomas Hardy, suggested that Nelson remove the decorations on his coat, so that he would not be so easily identified by enemy sharpshooters. Nelson replied that it was too late "to be shifting a coat", adding that they were "military orders and he did not fear to show them to the enemy".[e][243] Captain Henry Blackwood, of the frigate HMS Euryalus, suggested Nelson come aboard his ship to better observe the battle. Nelson refused, and also turned down Hardy's suggestion to let Admiral Sir Eliab Harvey's HMS Temeraire come ahead of Victory and lead the line into battle.[243]

Battle is joined

Victory came under fire, initially passing wide, but then with greater accuracy as the distances decreased. A cannonball struck and killed Nelson's secretary, John Scott, nearly cutting him in two. Hardy's clerk then took over, but he too, was almost immediately killed. Victory's wheel was shot away; another cannonball cut down eight marines. Standing next to Nelson on the quarterdeck, Hardy's shoe buckle was suddenly dented by a splinter. Nelson observed, "This is too warm work to last long."[244]

Victory had, by now, reached the enemy line and Hardy asked Nelson which ship to engage first. Nelson told him to take his pick, whereupon Hardy moved Victory across the stern of the 80-gun French flagship, Bucentaure.[244] Victory then came under fire from the 74-gun Redoutable, which was lying off Bucentaure's stern, as well as the 130-gun Santísima Trinidad. As sharpshooters from the enemy ships fired onto Victory's deck from their rigging, Nelson and Hardy continued directing and giving orders.[244]

Wounding and death

 
Nelson is shot on the quarterdeck, painted by Denis Dighton, c. 1825

At a quarter-past one in the afternoon,[164] Hardy realised that Nelson was not by his side. He turned to see Nelson kneeling on the deck, supporting himself with his hand, before falling onto his side. Hardy rushed to him, at which point, Nelson smiled:

Hardy, I do believe they have done it at last .... my backbone is shot through.[244]

He had been hit by a musket ball, fired from the mizzen-top of Redoutable, at a range of 50 feet (15 m). The ball entered his left shoulder, passed through a lung,[164] then his spine at the sixth and seventh thoracic vertebrae, and lodged two inches (5 cm) below his right shoulder blade, in the muscles of his back. Nelson was carried below to the cockpit, by sergeant major of marines Robert Adair, and two seamen. As he was being carried down, he asked them to pause while he gave advice to a midshipman on the handling of the tiller.[245] He then draped a handkerchief over his face to avoid causing alarm amongst the crew. He was taken to ship surgeon William Beatty, telling him:

You can do nothing for me. I have but a short time to live. My back is shot through.[246]

Nelson was made comfortable, fanned, and brought lemonade and watered wine to drink, after he complained of feeling hot and thirsty. He asked several times to see Hardy, who was on deck supervising the battle, and asked Beatty to remember him to Emma, his daughter, and his friends.[246]

Hardy came belowdecks to see Nelson, just after half-past two, and informed him that a number of enemy ships had surrendered. Nelson told him that he was sure to die, and begged him to pass his possessions on to Emma.[247] Those with Nelson, at this point, were the chaplain Alexander Scott, the purser Walter Burke, Nelson's steward, Chevalier, and Beatty. Nelson, fearing that a gale was blowing up, instructed Hardy to be sure to anchor. After reminding him to "take care of poor Lady Hamilton", Nelson said: "Kiss me, Hardy".[247] Beatty recorded that Hardy knelt and kissed Nelson on the cheek. He then stood for a minute or two, before kissing Nelson on the forehead. Nelson asked, "Who is that?" On hearing that it was Hardy, he replied, "God bless you, Hardy."[247]

By now very weak, Nelson continued to murmur instructions to Burke and Scott, "fan, fan ... rub, rub ... drink, drink." Beatty had heard Nelson murmur, "Thank God I have done my duty", and when he returned, Nelson's voice had faded and his pulse was very weak.[247] Nelson looked up, as Beatty took his pulse, then closed his eyes. Scott, who remained by Nelson as he died, recorded his last words as, "God and my country".[248] Nelson died at half-past four in the afternoon, three hours after he had been shot.[247] He was 47 years old.

 
The Death of Nelson by Daniel Maclise (Houses of Parliament, London)

Return to England

Nelson's body was placed in a cask of brandy mixed with camphor and myrrh, which was then lashed to the Victory's mainmast and placed under guard.[249] Victory was towed to Gibraltar after the battle, and on arrival the body was transferred to a lead-lined coffin filled with spirits of wine.[249] Collingwood's dispatches about the battle were carried to England aboard HMS Pickle, and when the news arrived in London, a messenger was sent to Merton Place to bring the news of Nelson's death to Emma Hamilton. She later recalled,

They brought me word, Mr Whitby from the Admiralty. "Show him in directly", I said. He came in, and with a pale countenance and faint voice, said, "We have gained a great Victory." – "Never mind your Victory", I said. "My letters – give me my letters" – Captain Whitby was unable to speak – tears in his eyes and a deathly paleness over his face made me comprehend him. I believe I gave a scream and fell back, and for ten hours I could neither speak nor shed a tear.[250]

King George III, on receiving the news, is alleged to have said, in tears, "We have lost more than we have gained."[251] The Times reported:

We do not know whether we should mourn or rejoice. The country has gained the most splendid and decisive Victory that has ever graced the naval annals of England; but it has been dearly purchased.[251]

Funeral

 
Print of the royal barge carrying Nelson's body
 
Nelson's coffin in the crossing of St Paul's, during the funeral service; the dome hung with captured French and Spanish flags
 
The sarcophagus of Nelson in the crypt of St Paul's

Nelson's body was unloaded from the Victory at the Nore. It was conveyed upriver, in Commander Sir George Grey's yacht Chatham, to Greenwich and placed inside a lead coffin. The lead coffin was then placed inside a wooden one, made from the mast of L'Orient, which had been salvaged after the Battle of the Nile.

He lay in state for three days in the Painted Hall of Greenwich Hospital, where the surrounding arrangements all but disintegrated, under the crush of crowds far greater than authorities had anticipated.[164] His body was then taken upriver, aboard a barge originally used as King Charles II's state barge; accompanied by Lord Samuel Hood, chief mourner Sir Peter Parker, and the Prince of Wales.[252] The Prince of Wales, at first, announced his intention of attending the funeral as chief mourner. However, he ultimately attended in a private capacity, along with his brothers, when his father, King George III, reminded him that it was against protocol for the heir to the throne to attend the funerals of anyone except members of the royal family.[253]

On 8 January 1806, the coffin was taken into the Admiralty for the night, attended by Nelson's chaplain, Alexander Scott.[252] The following day, 9 January, a funeral procession consisting of 32 admirals, over a hundred captains, and an escort of 10,000 soldiers took the coffin from the Admiralty to St Paul's Cathedral.[254] After a four-hour service, he was interred within a crypt, in a sarcophagus originally carved for Cardinal Wolsey;[5] the sarcophagus and its base had been previously taken over for the tomb of Henry VIII, which was never completed.[255] The sailors charged with folding the flag, which they were to then place on Nelson's coffin after it had been lowered through the floor of the nave, instead tore it into fragments, each taking a piece as a memorial of their fallen commander.[256][164]

Assessment

 
Pierre-Nicolas Legrand de Lérant's Apotheosis of Nelson, c. 1805–18. Nelson ascends into immortality as the Battle of Trafalgar rages in the background. He is supported by Neptune, whilst Fame holds a crown of stars as a symbol of immortality over Nelson's head. A grieving Britannia holds out her arms, whilst Hercules, Mars, Minerva and Jupiter look on.

Nelson was regarded as a highly effective leader, and someone who was able to sympathise with the needs of his men. He based his command on love, rather than authority, inspiring both his superiors and his subordinates with his considerable courage, commitment and charisma—dubbed "the Nelson touch".[257][258] Nelson combined this talent with an adept grasp of strategy and politics, making him a highly successful naval commander. Admiral Togo, himself often called "the Nelson of the East", placed Nelson as among the greatest naval commanders in history—second only to Admiral Yi Sun-sin.[259] The memorandum Nelson wrote before Trafalgar expresses his attitude well: "No captain can do very wrong if he places his ship alongside that of the enemy."[260]

Nelson's personality was complex, often characterised by a desire to be noticed—both by his superiors and the public. He was easily flattered by praise, and dismayed when he felt he was not given sufficient credit for his actions.[261] This led him to take risks, and to enthusiastically publicise his resultant successes,[262] which was not always considered acceptable at the time.[263] Nelson was also highly confident in his abilities, determined and able to make important decisions.[264] His active career meant that he was considerably experienced in combat and was a shrewd judge of his opponents, able to identify and exploit his enemies' weaknesses.[257]

He was often prone to insecurities, however, as well as violent mood swings,[265] and was extremely vain; he loved to receive decorations and tributes.[266] Despite his personality, he remained a highly professional leader and was driven all his life by a strong sense of duty.[265] Nelson's fame reached new heights after his death, and he came to be regarded as one of Britain's greatest military heroes, ranked alongside the Duke of Marlborough and Duke of Wellington.[267] In the BBC's 100 Greatest Britons programme in 2002, Nelson was voted the ninth greatest Briton of all time.[268]

Aspects of Nelson's life and career were controversial, both during his lifetime and after his death. His affair with Emma Hamilton was widely remarked upon, and disapproved of, to the extent that Emma was denied permission to attend his funeral. She and their daughter, Horatia, were also subsequently ignored by the government, which awarded Nelson's money and titles only to legitimate family.[269] Nelson's actions during the reoccupation of Naples have also been the subject of debate. His approval of the wave of reprisals against the Jacobins, who had surrendered under the terms agreed by Cardinal Ruffo, as well as his personal intervention in securing the execution of Francesco Caracciolo, are considered by some biographers, such as Robert Southey, to have been a shameful breach of honour. A prominent contemporary, politician Charles James Fox, was among those who attacked Nelson for his actions at Naples, declaring in the House of Commons:

I wish that the atrocities of which we hear so much and which I abhor as much as any man, were indeed unexampled. I fear that they do not belong exclusively to the French – Naples for instance has been what is called "delivered", and yet, if I am rightly informed, it has been stained and polluted by murders so ferocious, and by cruelties of every kind so abhorrent, that the heart shudders at the recital ... [The besieged rebels] demanded that a British officer should be brought forward, and to him they capitulated. They made terms with him under the sanction of the British name. Before they sailed their property was confiscated, numbers were thrown into dungeons, and some of them, I understand, notwithstanding the British guarantee, were actually executed.[270]

Other pro-republican writers produced books and pamphlets decrying the events in Naples as atrocities.[271] Later assessments, including one by Andrew Lambert, have stressed that the armistice had not been authorised by the King of Naples, and that the retribution meted out by the Neapolitans was not unusual for the time. Lambert also suggests that Nelson, in fact, acted to put an end to the bloodshed; using his ships and men to restore order in the city.[271]

Legacy

Nelson's influence continued long after his death, and saw periodic revivals of interest, especially during times of crisis in Britain. In the 1860s, Poet Laureate Alfred Tennyson appealed to the image and tradition of Nelson, in order to oppose the defence cuts being made by Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone.[272] First Sea Lord Jackie Fisher was a keen exponent of Nelson during the early years of the twentieth century, and often emphasised his legacy during his period of naval reform.[273] Winston Churchill also found Nelson to be a source of inspiration during the Second World War.[274]

Nelson has been frequently depicted in art and literature; appearing in paintings by Benjamin West and Arthur William Devis, and in books and biographies by John McArthur, James Stanier Clarke and Robert Southey.[275] Nelson is also celebrated and commemorated in numerous songs, written both during his life and following his death. Nelson's victory in the Battle of the Nile is commemorated in "The Battle of the Nile: a favourite patriotic song".[276] Thomas Attwood's "Nelson's Tomb: A Favourite Song" commemorates Nelson's death in the Battle of Trafalgar.[277] In 1797, the famous composer Haydn wrote a mass to commemorate Nelson’s stunning defeat over Napoleon and the French. In 1800, Nelson visited Eisenstadt for four days and most certainly saw Haydn’s new mass and in response he met and gave the elderly Haydn a watch he wore during the battle.

The city of Nelson in New Zealand is named after him.[278]

A number of monuments and memorials were constructed across the country, and abroad, to honour his memory and achievements. Dublin's monument to Nelson, Nelson's Pillar, completed in 1809, was destroyed by Irish republicans in 1966.[279] In Montreal, a statue was started in 1808 and completed in 1809.[280] In Great Yarmouth, on the coast in his home county of Norfolk, the Britannia Monument (aka the Norfolk Naval Pillar) to Nelson was erected in 1819, with dedications at the base to his four main naval victories. Others followed around the world, with London's Trafalgar Square being created in his memory in 1835 and the centrepiece, Nelson's Column, finished in 1843.[281] A Royal Society of Arts blue plaque was unveiled in 1876, to commemorate Nelson, at 147 New Bond Street.[282] The architect of the Britannia Royal Naval College, Dartmouth, Sir Aston Webb placed a window high in the chapel such that annually, on 21 October at the time of Nelson's death, the light from it falls on the statue of Christ behind the altar.[283]

Nelson and his monuments are seen more critically in countries that felt the negative aspects of colonialism, and who may seek to revise their public history. Major public memorials in primary locations in some cities have been subject to protest and removal as conscious acts. In 1966, the Nelson Pillar in Dublin was blown up by Irish Republicans: a novelty folk song, "Up went Nelson", topped the Irish pop charts in the wake of the explosion, while a newspaper article marking the 55th anniversary noted: "For many, the biggest surprise about the blowing up of Nelson’s Pillar...is why it took 157 years. The resentment had run deep. Almost fifty years after the 1916 Rising an Englishman still towered over every other notable in the city, many groused."[284] Across the Atlantic, in the Caribbean in 2020, after years of campaigning, the Nelson Statue in National Heroes Square, Bridgetown, Barbados, was removed and placed in a museum. It had stood since 1813, in a central public space of the capital known until 1999 as Trafalgar Square. The Barbadian Prime Minister Mia Mottley said at the ceremony marking the statue's removal:

"National Heroes Square must reflect our heroes. And ... while we accept that the statue of the vice admiral Lord Horatio Nelson is an important historic relic, it is not a relic to be placed in the National Heroes Square of a nation that has had to fight for too long to shape its destiny and to forge a positive future for its citizens."[285]

Titles

Nelson's titles, as inscribed on his coffin and read out at the funeral by the Garter King at Arms, Sir Isaac Heard, were:

The Most Noble Lord Horatio Nelson, Viscount and Baron Nelson, of the Nile and of Burnham Thorpe in the County of Norfolk, Baron Nelson of the Nile and of Hilborough in the said County, Knight of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath, Vice Admiral of the White Squadron of the Fleet, Commander in Chief of his Majesty's Ships and Vessels in the Mediterranean, Duke of Bronte in the Kingdom of Sicily, Knight Grand Cross of the Sicilian Order of St Ferdinand and of Merit, Member of the Ottoman Order of the Crescent, Knight Grand Commander of the Order of Saint Joachim.[286]

Nelson received large Naval Gold Medals for the battles of St Vincent, the Nile and, posthumously, Trafalgar, one of very few recipients of three such medals.[287] Nelson was granted a royal license in 1802 to receive and wear the foreign Order of Saint Joachim.[288]

He was a Colonel of Marines from 1795 to 1797[289] and voted a Freeman of the cities and boroughs of London (10 March 1797), Bath, Salisbury, Exeter (15 January 1801),[290] Plymouth, Monmouth, Sandwich, Oxford (22 July 1802),[291] Hereford, Haverfordwest (in 1802)[292][293] and Worcester (30 August 1802).[294][295] The University of Oxford, in full Congregation, bestowed the honorary degree of Doctor of Civil Law upon Nelson on 30 July 1802.[296][123]

In 1799, Nelson was created Duke of Bronte (Italian: Duca di Bronte), of the Kingdom of Sicily (after 1816, existing in the nobility of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies), by King Ferdinand III of Sicily, and after briefly experimenting with the signature "Brontë Nelson of the Nile", he signed himself "Nelson & Brontë" for the rest of his life.[297] Nelson had no legitimate children; his daughter, Horatia, married the Reverend Philip Ward, with whom she had ten children before her death in 1881.[298]

Since Nelson died without legitimate issue, his viscountcy and his barony created in 1798, both "of the Nile and of Burnham Thorpe in the County of Norfolk", became extinct upon his death.[299] However, the barony created in 1801, "of the Nile and of Hilborough in the County of Norfolk", passed by a special remainder, which included Nelson's father and sisters and their male issue, to William Nelson, who was Nelson's older brother. In November 1805, William Nelson was created Earl Nelson and Viscount Merton, of Trafalgar and of Merton in the County of Surrey, in recognition of his late brother's services, and he also inherited the dukedom of Bronte.[300]

Armorial bearings

 
Paternal arms of Nelson: Or, a cross flory sable surmounted by a bendlet gules.
 
Augmented arms of Nelson: Or, a cross flory sable surmounted by a bend gules thereon another bend engrailed of the field charged with three hand-grenades of the second fired proper a chief of augmentation wavy argent thereon waves of the sea from which issuant in the centre a palm tree between a disabled ship on the dexter and a battery in ruins on the sinister all proper.[301] Deemed an example of debased heraldry.[302]
 
Contemporary drawing of Nelson's heraldic achievement before the Battle of Trafalgar.[303]

Arms were granted and confirmed on 20 October 1797. Nelson's paternal arms (Or, a cross flory sable over all a bendlet gules) were augmented to honour his naval victories. After the Battle of Cape St Vincent (14 February 1797), Nelson was created a Knight of the Bath and was granted heraldic supporters (appropriate for peers) of a sailor and a lion.[304]

In honour of the Battle of the Nile in 1798, the Crown granted him an augmentation of honour blazoned On a chief wavy argent a palm tree between a disabled ship and a ruinous battery all issuant from waves of the sea all proper (deemed a notorious example of debased heraldry),[302] the Latin motto Palmam qui meruit ferat ("let him who has earned it bear the palm"), and added to his supporters a palm branch in the hand of the sailor and in the paw of the lion, and a "tri-colored flag and staff in the mouth of the latter".[305]

After Nelson's death, his elder brother and heir William Nelson, 1st Earl Nelson, was granted a further augmentation: On a fess wavy overall azure the word TRAFALGAR or.[306] This additional augmentation was not used by those who succeeded him in the earldom, including the present Earl Nelson.[301]

The Garter King of Arms wrote the following explanation of the arms to Nelson's wife:

In the Chief of the Arms a Palm Tree (emblematic of Victory) between a disabled Ship and a ruinous Battery, form striking memorials of the glorious event of 1 August (1798), in the Bay of Aboukir, near the Mouth of the Nile. In the Crest, the Chelengk (a more minute description of which I had the pleasure of delivering to your Ladyship) is an indication of the distinctions rendered to his Lordship's merits by the Grand Signior; and the Naval Crown may bear a striking allusion to his Lordship's victory in those Seas, where the Corona Navalis was first conferred by the Romans on persons who had eminently distinguished themselves in Naval combats. The Palm Branch in the hand of the Sailor, and in the paw of the Lion, is a continuation of the emblem in the Chief of the Arms, as well as allusive to the Motto, "Palmam qui meruit ferat" ("let he who earns the palm bear it"). The tri-coloured Flag of the subdued Enemy was added to, and involved with, the Colours in the mouth of the Lion, which had been granted to his Lordship in commemoration of his distinguished gallantry and services, on 14 February 1797. With regard to your Ladyship's question—whether Lord Nelson is, in consequence of the Royal Warrant, precluded from the use of his Crest of the San Josef (a ship he won in battle from the Spaniards), I have no hesitation in giving my decided opinion, that he may bear it, with his new Crest, at his own pleasure.[citation needed]

The herald Wilfrid Scott-Giles (d.1982) wrote a jocular verse describing the successive augmentations to the Nelson arms, ending with the line "But where, alas! is Nelson's ancient cross?"[307]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Title in the nobility of Sicily.
  2. ^ The spelling of the name was widely varied, and numerous versions exist even in current literature. Variations include Hinchinbroke, Hinchinbrooke, Hinchingbroke, Hinchingbrook and Hinchingbrooke.
  3. ^ The pressed copy in the British Library states "cruel" not "cursed", which Nelson artefacts specialist, Martyn Downer, argues alters the author's intended meaning significantly.
  4. ^ Biographer, Roger Knight, disputes the veracity of this story, calling it a "myth".[202]
  5. ^ Historian, Nicholas A. M. Rodger, disputes this claim, calling it a "myth" and saying that "[Nelson] was wearing an old uniform coat with inconspicuous cloth replicas of his decorations. There is no evidence that he deliberately sought or recklessly courted death, though he was certainly well enough aware of the risks of action".[242]

References

  1. ^ Sugden, 2004, p. 36
  2. ^ Pettigrew 1849, p. 1
  3. ^ a b Britannica 11th edition, p. 352
  4. ^ "Nelson the man | Royal Museums Greenwich". Rmg.co.uk. Retrieved 6 May 2022.
  5. ^ a b Hibbert 1994, p. 394
  6. ^ Nelson, or about: Horatio. "Horatio Nelson - Wikiquote". en.wikiquote.org. Retrieved 8 September 2022.
  7. ^ Nicolas, The Despatches and Letters of Lord Nelson, Vol, I p. 18
  8. ^ Sugden, 2004, p. 56
  9. ^ Hibbert 1994, p. 13
  10. ^ "Joining the Royal Navy". Nelson, Trafalgar and those who served. National Archives. Retrieved 28 July 2015.
  11. ^ a b Pettigrew 1849, p. 4
  12. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 75.
  13. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 81
  14. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 464
  15. ^ Sugden 2004, pp. 92–93
  16. ^ Sugden 2004, pp. 95–97
  17. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 103
  18. ^ "No. 11550". The London Gazette. 4 April 1775. p. 2.
  19. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 106
  20. ^ Sugden 2004, pp. 109–111
  21. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 113
  22. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 126
  23. ^ White 2006, p. 87
  24. ^ Nelson. Nelson: The New Letters (2008). p. 166.
  25. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 128
  26. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 131
  27. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 135
  28. ^ Goodwin 2002, p. 81
  29. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 143
  30. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 145
  31. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 147
  32. ^ Oman 1987, p. 30
  33. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 163
  34. ^ Cite error: The named reference Sudgen was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  35. ^ Report from Colonel Polson on the capture of the fort at San Juan. "No. 12101". The London Gazette. 18 July 1780. p. 3.
  36. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 168
  37. ^ White, Colin (2002). The Nelson Encyclopedia. Royal Naval Museum. Stackpole Books. p. 106. ISBN 978-0811700139.
  38. ^ a b Coleman, Terry (2004). The Nelson Touch: The Life and Legend of Horatio Nelson. Oxford University Press, USA. ISBN 978-0199924059.
  39. ^ Hill, Richard (1855). A week at Port Royal. Cornwall Chronicle Office. pp. 2–5. Retrieved 4 October 2010.
  40. ^ Robinson, Jane (2019). Mary Seacole: The Charismatic Black Nurse Who Became a Heroine of the Crimea. Little, Brown Book Group. ISBN 978-1472144904.
  41. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 182
  42. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 187
  43. ^ Grindal 2016 p. 14
  44. ^ Petley, Christer. 2018. ''Reflections on "Nelson's dark side"''. University of Southampton Slavery and Revolution project.
  45. ^ Cobbett's weekly political register, Volume 11 January to June. London: R. Bagshaw. 1807. pp. 295–296 [1].
  46. ^ letter of 10 June 1805; see Dane 1942, p. 261. Note that the more disputed material from this letter has been edited out of this wartime volume.
  47. ^ The Nelson Dispatch, Journal of the Nelson Society, vol. 3, pt. 12, Autumn 2020, pp. 724–743
  48. ^ Olusoga, David, 2016, Black and British: A Forgotten History, Chapter: Introduction, Macmillan, 2016, ISBN 978-1447299745
  49. ^ a b Downer, Martyn, 2017, Nelson's Lost Jewel: The Extraordinary Story of the Lost Diamond Chelengk, p. 77
  50. ^ a b Nicolas, The Despatches and Letters of Lord Nelson, Vol, 3 p. 231
  51. ^ Sugden 2013, p. 684
  52. ^ Nicolas, The Despatches and Letters of Lord Nelson, Vol, 6 p. 412
  53. ^ Pettigrew 1849, vol 2, p. 81
  54. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 190
  55. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 195
  56. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 197
  57. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 202
  58. ^ Sugden 2004, pp. 204–205
  59. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 206
  60. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 209
  61. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 215
  62. ^ Sugden 2004, p. 219
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Bibliography

  • Adkin, Mark (2007). The Trafalgar Companion: A Guide to History's Most Famous Sea Battle and the Life of Admiral Lord Nelson. London: Aurum Press. ISBN 978-1-84513-018-3.
  • Bradford, Ernle (2005). Nelson: The Essential Hero. Wordsworth Military Library. ISBN 1-84022-202-6.
  • Bryant, Arthur (1970). Nelson. London: Collins.
  • Coleman, Terry (2001). Nelson: The man and the legend. Bloomsbury. ISBN 0-7475-5900-7.
  • Dane, Clemence (1942). The Nelson Touch: An Anthology of Lord Nelson's Letters. London: Heinemann.
  • Goodwin, Peter (2002). Nelson's Ships: A History Of The Vessels In Which He Served: 1771–1805. London: Conway Maritime Press. ISBN 0-8117-1007-6.
  • Grindal, Peter (2016). Opposing the Slavers: The Royal Navy's Campaign against the Atlantic Slave Trade. London: I.B. Tauris & Co. ISBN 978-1-78831-286-8.
  • Haydn, Joseph (1851). The Book of Dignities. Longmans, Brown, Green, and Longmans.
  • Hayward, Joel S. A. (2003). For God and Glory: Lord Nelson and His Way of War. ISBN 1-59114-351-9.
  • Hibbert, Christopher (1994). Nelson. A Personal History. Basic Books. ISBN 0-201-40800-7.
  • Howarth, David (1969). Trafalgar. The Nelson Touch. London: Collins.
  • Howarth, David & Stephen (1988). Nelson. The Immortal Memory. London: J. M. Dent & Sons.
  • Joslin, E.C.; Litherland, E.C.; Simpkin, B.T. (1988). British Battles and Medals. Spink. ISBN 0907605257.
  • Knight, Roger (2005). The Pursuit of Victory: The Life and Achievement of Horatio Nelson. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 0-465-03764-X.
  • Lambert, Andrew (2004). Nelson: Britannia's God of War. London: Faber and Faber. ISBN 0-571-21222-0.
  • Lavery, Brian (2003). Nelson and the Nile. London: Caxton Editions. ISBN 1-84067-5225.
  • Lee, Christopher (2005). Nelson and Napoleon, The Long Haul to Trafalgar. headline books. p. 560. ISBN 0-7553-1041-1.
  • Naish, George P. B. (1958). Nelson's Letters to his Wife and other documents 1785–1831. London: Navy Records Society.
  • Nelson, Horatio, Lord Viscount, The Dispatches and Letters of Vice Admiral Lord Viscount Nelson: With Notes by Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas G.C.M.G., The First Volume, 1777 to August 1794, Henry Colburn, London, 1844
  • Nelson, Horatio, Lord Viscount, The Dispatches and Letters of Vice Admiral Lord Viscount Nelson: With Notes by Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas G.C.M.G., The Third Volume, January 1798 to August 1799, Henry Colburn, London, 1845
  • Oman, Carola (1987). Nelson. London: Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 0-340-40672-0.
  • Pettigrew, Thomas (1849). Memoirs of the Life of Vice-Admiral, Lord Viscount Nelson, K. B., Duke of Bronte. London: T. & W. Boone.
  • Pocock, Tom (1987). Horatio Nelson. London: The Bodley Head. ISBN 0-370-31124-8.
  • Sugden, John (2004). Nelson: A Dream of Glory. London: Jonathan Cape. ISBN 0-224-06097-X.
  • Sugden, John (2013). Nelson: The Sword of Albion. New York: Henry Holt and Co. ISBN 978-080507807-7.
  • von Pivka, Otto (1980). Navies of the Napoleonic Era. Hippocrene Books. ISBN 0-88254-505-1.
  • Warner, Oliver (1958). A Portrait of Lord Nelson. London: Chatto & Windus.
  • White, Colin (2005). Nelson, The New Letters. Boydell Press. ISBN 1-84383-130-9.
  • Wilkinson, Clennell (1931). Nelson. London: George G. Harrap.

Further reading

External links

  • Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by the Viscount Nelson
  • Works by Horatio Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Horatio Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson at Internet Archive
  • Works by Horatio Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Collections related to Nelson held by the National Maritime Museum
  • The Nelson Society
  • Norfolk Nelson Museum
  • Original Letters Written by Horatio Nelson 25 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine Shapell Manuscript Foundation
  • Nelson, history
  • Review of A. T. Mahan's biography 4 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
Military offices
Preceded by Commander-in-Chief, Mediterranean Fleet
1803–1805
Succeeded by
Peerage of the United Kingdom
New title Baron Nelson
(of the Nile and of Hillborough)

1801–1805
Succeeded by
Titles of nobility
New creation Duke of Bronte
(in the Kingdom of Sicily)

1799–1805
Succeeded by

horatio, nelson, viscount, nelson, horatio, nelson, lord, nelson, admiral, nelson, redirect, here, other, uses, horatio, nelson, disambiguation, lord, nelson, disambiguation, admiral, nelson, disambiguation, vice, admiral, duke, bronte, september, 1758, octobe. Horatio Nelson Lord Nelson and Admiral Nelson redirect here For other uses see Horatio Nelson disambiguation Lord Nelson disambiguation and Admiral Nelson disambiguation Vice Admiral Horatio Nelson 1st Viscount Nelson 1st Duke of Bronte a KB 29 September 1758 21 October 1805 was a British flag officer in the Royal Navy His inspirational leadership grasp of strategy and unconventional tactics brought about a number of decisive British naval victories during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars He is widely regarded as one of the greatest naval commanders in history Vice Admiral The Right HonourableThe Viscount NelsonKBPortrait of Nelson by L F Abbott 1799 Born 1758 09 29 29 September 1758Burnham Thorpe EnglandDied21 October 1805 1805 10 21 aged 47 HMS Victory off Cape Trafalgar SpainBurial placeSt Paul s CathedralSpouseFrances Nisbet m 1787 wbr Parent s Edmund NelsonCatherine SucklingMilitary careerService wbr branchRoyal NavyYears of service1771 1805RankVice Admiral of the WhiteCommands heldMediterranean FleetBattles warsAmerican War of Independence Battle of Fort San Juan Battle of Grand Turk War of the First Coalition Siege of Calvi WIA Battle of Genoa Battle of Hyeres Islands Battle of Cape St Vincent WIA Assault on Cadiz Battle of Santa Cruz de Tenerife WIA Battle of the Nile WIA War of the Second Coalition Siege of Malta Battle of Copenhagen Raid on Boulogne War of the Third Coalition Battle of Trafalgar AwardsKnight of the Order of the Bath Several others see below SignatureNelson was born into a moderately prosperous Norfolk family and joined the navy through the influence of his uncle Maurice Suckling a high ranking naval officer Nelson rose rapidly through the ranks and served with leading naval commanders of the period before obtaining his own command at the age of 20 in 1778 He developed a reputation for personal valour and a firm grasp of tactics but suffered periods of illness and unemployment after the end of the American War of Independence The outbreak of the French Revolutionary Wars allowed Nelson to return to service where he was particularly active in the Mediterranean He fought in several minor engagements off Toulon and was important in the capture of Corsica where he was wounded and partially lost sight in one eye and subsequent diplomatic duties with the Italian states In 1797 he distinguished himself while in command of HMS Captain at the Battle of Cape St Vincent Shortly after that battle Nelson took part in the Battle of Santa Cruz de Tenerife where the attack failed and he lost his right arm forcing him to return to England to recuperate The following year he won a decisive victory over the French at the Battle of the Nile and remained in the Mediterranean to support the Kingdom of Naples against a French invasion In 1801 Nelson was dispatched to the Baltic Sea and defeated neutral Denmark at the Battle of Copenhagen He commanded the blockade of the French and Spanish fleets at Toulon and after their escape chased them to the West Indies and back but failed to bring them to battle After a brief return to England he took over the Cadiz blockade in 1805 On 21 October 1805 the Franco Spanish fleet came out of port and Nelson s fleet engaged them at the Battle of Trafalgar The battle became one of Britain s greatest naval victories but Nelson aboard HMS Victory was fatally wounded by a French sharpshooter His body was brought back to England where he was accorded a state funeral Nelson s death at Trafalgar secured his position as one of Britain s most heroic figures His signal just prior to the commencement of the battle England expects that every man will do his duty is regularly quoted and paraphrased Numerous monuments including Nelson s Column in Trafalgar Square London and the Nelson Monument in Edinburgh have been created in his memory Contents 1 Early life 2 East and West Indies 1771 1780 2 1 Nelson s views on slavery 3 Command 1781 1796 3 1 Captain of Albemarle 3 2 Island of Nevis marriage and peace 4 Mediterranean service 4 1 Corsica 4 2 Genoa and the fight of the Ca Ira 4 3 Skirmishes and the retreat from Italy 4 4 Jervis and the evacuation of the Mediterranean 5 Admiral 1797 1801 5 1 Battle of Cape St Vincent 5 2 Action off Cadiz 5 3 Battle of Santa Cruz de Tenerife 5 4 Return to England 6 The Mediterranean 6 1 Hunting the French 6 2 The Battle of the Nile 6 3 Rewards 6 4 Neapolitan campaign 6 5 Siege of Malta 6 6 Return to England 7 The Baltic 7 1 Battle of Copenhagen 8 Leave in England 1801 1803 8 1 Grand tour 8 2 Witness at the treason trial of Edward Despard 9 Return to sea 1803 10 Battle of Trafalgar 1805 10 1 Preparation 10 2 Battle is joined 10 3 Wounding and death 11 Return to England 12 Funeral 13 Assessment 13 1 Legacy 14 Titles 14 1 Armorial bearings 15 See also 16 Notes 17 References 18 Bibliography 19 Further reading 20 External linksEarly life Edit The site of the rectory in Burnham Thorpe where Nelson was born in 1758 Horatio Nelson was born on 29 September 1758 at a rectory in Burnham Thorpe Norfolk England the sixth of eleven children of the Reverend Edmund Nelson and his wife Catherine Suckling 1 He was named Horatio after his godfather Horatio Walpole 1st Earl of Orford 1723 1809 2 the first cousin of his maternal great grandmother Anne Turner 1691 1768 Horatio Walpole was a nephew of Robert Walpole 1st Earl of Orford the de facto first prime minister of Great Britain 3 Nelson retained a strong Christian faith throughout his life 4 Nelson s uncle Maurice Suckling was a high ranking naval officer and is believed to have had a major impact on Nelson s life 5 Nelson s peculiarly strong hatred for the French probably also came from Maurice describing them as gobblers in conversation with him as a child 6 Catherine Suckling lived in the village of Barsham Suffolk and married the Reverend Edmund Nelson at Beccles Church Suffolk in 1749 Nelson s aunt Alice Nelson was the wife of Reverend Robert Rolfe Rector of Hilborough Norfolk and grandmother of Sir Robert Monsey Rolfe 7 Rolfe twice served as Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain Nelson attended Paston Grammar School North Walsham until he was 12 years old and also attended King Edward VI s Grammar School in Norwich His naval career began on 1 January 1771 when he reported to the newly commissioned third rate HMS Raisonnable as an ordinary seaman and coxswain under his maternal uncle Captain Maurice Suckling who commanded the vessel Shortly after reporting aboard Nelson was appointed a midshipman and began officer training Early in his service Nelson discovered that he experienced seasickness a chronic complaint that he experienced for the rest of his life 8 East and West Indies 1771 1780 EditHMS Raisonnable had been commissioned during a period of tension with Spain but when this passed Suckling was transferred to the Nore guardship HMS Triumph and Nelson was dispatched to serve aboard the West Indiaman Mary Ann of the merchant shipping firm of Hibbert Purrier and Horton in order to gain experience at sea 9 He sailed from Medway Kent on 25 July 1771 heading to Jamaica and Tobago and returning to Plymouth on 7 July 1772 10 He twice crossed the Atlantic before returning to serve under his uncle as the commander of Suckling s longboat which carried men and dispatches to and from shore Nelson then learnt of a planned expedition under the command of Constantine Phipps intended to survey a passage in the Arctic by which it was hoped that India could be reached the fabled North East Passage 11 At his nephew s request Suckling arranged for Nelson to join the expedition as coxswain 11 to Commander Lutwidge aboard the converted bomb vessel HMS Carcass The expedition reached within ten degrees of the North Pole but unable to find a way through the dense ice floes was forced to turn back By 1800 Lutwidge had begun to circulate a story that while the ship had been trapped in the ice Nelson had spotted and pursued a polar bear before being ordered to return to the ship Later in 1809 Lutwidge had it that Nelson and a companion gave chase to the bear and upon being questioned as to why replied I wished Sir to get the skin for my father 12 Nelson briefly returned to Triumph after the expedition s return to Britain in September 1773 Suckling then arranged for his transfer to HMS Seahorse one of two ships about to sail for the East Indies 13 Captain Horatio Nelson painted by John Francis Rigaud in 1781 with Fort San Juan the scene of his most notable achievement up to that point in the background The painting itself was begun and nearly finished prior to the battle when Nelson held the rank of lieutenant when Nelson returned the artist added the new captain s gold braided sleeves 14 Nelson sailed for the East Indies on 19 November 1773 and arrived at the British outpost at Madras on 25 May 1774 15 Nelson and Seahorse spent the rest of the year cruising off the coast and escorting merchantmen With the outbreak of the First Anglo Maratha War the British fleet operated in support of the East India Company and in early 1775 Seahorse was dispatched to carry a cargo of the company s money to Bombay On 19 February two of Hyder Ali s ketches attacked Seahorse which drove them off after a brief exchange of fire This was Nelson s first experience of battle 16 He spent the rest of the year escorting convoys during which he continued to develop his navigation and ship handling skills In early 1776 Nelson contracted malaria and became seriously ill He was discharged from Seahorse on 14 March and returned to England aboard HMS Dolphin 17 Nelson spent the six month voyage recuperating and had almost recovered by the time he arrived in Britain in September 1776 His patron Suckling had risen to the post of Comptroller of the Navy in 1775 and used his influence to help Nelson gain further promotion 3 18 Nelson was appointed acting lieutenant aboard HMS Worcester which was about to sail to Gibraltar 19 Worcester under the command of Captain Mark Robinson sailed as a convoy escort on 3 December and returned with another convoy in April 1777 20 Nelson then travelled to London to take his lieutenant s examination on 9 April his examining board consisted of Captains John Campbell Abraham North and his uncle Maurice Suckling Nelson passed the examination and the next day received his commission and an appointment to HMS Lowestoffe which was preparing to sail to Jamaica under Captain William Locker 21 She sailed on 16 May arrived on 19 July and after reprovisioning carried out several cruises in Caribbean waters After the outbreak of the American War of Independence Lowestoffe took several prizes one of which was taken into Navy service as Little Lucy Nelson asked for and was given command of her and took her on two cruises of his own 22 As well as giving him his first taste of command it gave Nelson the opportunity to explore his fledgling interest in science During his first cruise in command of Little Lucy Nelson led an expeditionary party to the Caicos Islands 23 where he made detailed notes of the wildlife and in particular a bird now believed to be the white necked jacobin 24 Locker impressed by Nelson s abilities recommended him to the new commander in chief at Jamaica Sir Peter Parker Parker duly took Nelson onto his flagship HMS Bristol 25 The entry of the French into the war in support of the Americans meant further targets for Parker s fleet It took many prizes towards the end of 1778 which brought Nelson an estimated 400 equivalent to 54 200 in 2021 in prize money Parker appointed him as Master and Commander of the brig HMS Badger on 8 December 26 Nelson and Badger spent most of 1779 cruising off of the Central American coast ranging as far as the British settlements at British Honduras now Belize and Nicaragua but without much success at interception of enemy prizes 27 On his return to Port Royal he learnt that Parker had promoted him to post captain on 11 June and intended to give him another command Nelson handed over the Badger to Cuthbert Collingwood while he awaited the arrival of his new ship the 28 gun frigate HMS Hinchinbrook b newly captured from the French 28 While Nelson waited news reached Parker that a French fleet under the command of Charles Hector comte d Estaing was approaching Jamaica Parker hastily organized his defences and placed Nelson in command of Fort Charles which covered the approaches to Kingston 29 D Estaing instead headed north and the anticipated invasion never materialised Nelson took command of the Hinchinbrook on 1 September 1779 30 Hinchinbrook sailed from Port Royal on 5 October and in company with other British ships proceeded to capture a number of American prizes 31 On his return to Jamaica in December Nelson began to be troubled by recurrent attacks of malaria Nelson remained in the West Indies in order to take part in Major General John Dalling s attempt to capture the Spanish colonies in Central America including an assault on the Fortress of the Immaculate Conception on the San Juan River in Nicaragua 32 In February 1780 Hinchinbrook sailed from Jamaica as an escort for Dalling s invasion force After sailing up the mouth of the San Juan River Nelson s expeditionary force obtained the surrender of the Fortress of the Immaculate Conception and its 160 Spanish defenders after a two week siege 33 Despite this initial success the British forces never reached Lake Nicaragua and decimated by yellow fever were forced to return to Jamaica The British destroyed the fortress when they evacuated in January 1781 The failed campaign cost the lives of more than 2 500 men making it the costliest British disaster of the entire war 34 Despite this Nelson was praised for his efforts 35 Parker recalled Nelson and gave him command of the 44 gun frigate HMS Janus 36 In 1780 Nelson fell seriously ill with what seemed to be dysentery 37 and possibly yellow fever 38 in the jungles of Costa Rica and was unable to take command He was taken to Kingston Jamaica to be nursed by doctoress Cubah Cornwallis a rumored mistress of fellow captain William Cornwallis 39 she ran a combination lodging house and convalescence home for sailors 40 38 He was discharged in August and returned to Britain aboard HMS Lion 41 arriving in late November Nelson gradually recovered over several months and soon began agitating for a command He was appointed to the frigate HMS Albemarle on 15 August 1781 42 Nelson s views on slavery Edit While Nelson served in the West Indies he came into contact with several prominent white colonists residing there forming friendships with many of them These relationships led Nelson to imbibe their proslavery views particularly the view that slavery was necessary to the islands economic prosperity According to Grindal Nelson later used his social influence to counter the emerging abolitionist movement in Britain 43 University of Southampton academic Christer Petley contextualises this view The debate over the future of slavery divided Britons Wilberforce personified one type of British patriotism arguing for an end to slave trading on the basis that it was a blot on the reputation of a proud and Christian nation Slaveholders offered their own patriotic arguments maintaining that the trade was so instrumental to the imperial economy that Britain could ill afford to stop it Nelson had befriended several slaveholding colonists during his time in the Caribbean Privately he came to sympathise with their political outlook It is clear that by the time of his death at Trafalgar he despised Wilberforce and stood in staunch opposition to the British abolitionist campaign 44 Over the course of his life Nelson came into contact numerous times with aspects of slavery and the people who were involved in that institution These included both his relationships with Caribbean plantation owners and his marriage to Fanny a slaveowner who was born into a family which belonged to the Antiguan plantocracy One of his friends in the West Indies was Simon Taylor one of the richest plantation owners in Jamaica who owned hundreds of slaves In 1805 Taylor wrote to Nelson requesting that he publicly intervene in favour of the pro slavery side in Britain s debate over abolition Nelson wrote a letter back to Taylor writing that while he had a tongue he would launch his voice against the damnable and cursed sic c doctrine of Wilberforce and his hypocritical allies 45 In the same latter Nelson also wrote that he had always endeavoured to serve the Public weal of which the West India Colonies form so prominent and interesting a part I have ever been and shall die a firm friend to our present Colonial system I was bred as you know in the good old school and taught to appreciate the value of our West India possessions 46 This letter was published in 1807 by the anti abolitionist faction some eighteen months after Nelson s death and out of context in an apparent attempt to bolster their cause prior to the parliamentary vote on the Abolition Bill The wording of the letter as published in 1807 not in Nelson s handwriting and with a poor facsimile of his signature appears out of character for Nelson whose many other surviving letters never expressed racist or pro slavery sentiments Comparison with the pressed copy of the original letter now part of the Bridport papers held in the British Library shows that the published copy had 25 alterations 47 distorting it to give it a more anti Abolitionist slant Many of Nelson s actions indicate his position on the matter of slavery most notably Nelson s Column Death of Nelson at Trafalgar panel with George Ryan standing on the left hand edge holding a rifle Any West Indian slave escaping to a navy ship including Nelson s were signed on paid and treated the same as other crew members At the end of their service they were discharged as free men In fact the bronze relief at the base of Nelson s column clearly shows the black George Ryan aged 23 with musket shooting the French alongside the dying Admiral 48 In 1799 Nelson intervened to secure the release of 24 slaves being held in Portuguese galleys off Palermo 49 50 In 1802 when it was proposed that West Indian plantation slaves should be replaced by free paid industrious Chinese workers Nelson supported the idea 51 In 1805 Nelson rescued the black Haitian General Joseph Chretien and his servant from the French They asked if they could serve with Nelson and Nelson recommended to the Admiralty that they be paid until they could be discharged and granted passage to Jamaica The General s mission was to end slavery a fact of which Nelson was well aware The general and his servant were well treated and paid 52 The Nelson family used to have a free black servant called Price Nelson said of him he was as good a man as ever lived and he suggested to Emma that she invite the elderly Price to live with them In the event Price declined 53 Command 1781 1796 EditCaptain of Albemarle Edit Nelson received orders on 23 October 1781 to take the newly refitted Albemarle to sea He was instructed to collect an inbound convoy of the Russia Company at Elsinore and escort them back to Britain For this operation the Admiralty placed the frigates HMS Argo and HMS Enterprise under his command 54 Nelson successfully organised the convoy and escorted it into British waters He then left the convoy to return to port but severe storms hampered him 55 Gales almost wrecked Albemarle as she was a poorly designed ship and an earlier accident had left her damaged but Nelson eventually brought her into Portsmouth in February 1782 56 There the Admiralty ordered him to fit Albemarle for sea and join the escort for a convoy collecting at Cork Ireland to sail for Quebec Canada 57 Nelson arrived off Newfoundland with the convoy in late May then detached on a cruise to hunt American privateers Nelson was generally unsuccessful he succeeded only in retaking several captured British merchant ships and capturing a number of small fishing boats and assorted craft 58 In August 1782 Nelson had a narrow escape from a far superior French force under Louis Philippe de Vaudreuil only evading them after a prolonged chase 59 Nelson arrived at Quebec on 18 September 60 He sailed again as part of the escort for a convoy to New York He arrived in mid November and reported to Admiral Samuel Hood commander of the New York station 61 At Nelson s request Hood transferred him to his fleet and Albemarle sailed in company with Hood bound for the West Indies 62 On their arrival the British fleet took up position off Jamaica to await the arrival of de Vaudreuil s force Nelson and the Albemarle were ordered to scout the numerous passages for signs of the enemy but it became clear by early 1783 that the French had eluded Hood 63 During his scouting operations Nelson had developed a plan to attack the French garrison of the Turks Islands Commanding a small flotilla of frigates and smaller vessels he landed a force of 167 seamen and marines early on the morning of 8 March under a supporting bombardment 64 The French were found to be heavily entrenched and after several hours Nelson called off the assault Several of the officers involved criticised Nelson but Hood does not appear to have reprimanded him 65 Nelson spent the rest of the war cruising in the West Indies where he captured a number of French and Spanish prizes 66 After news of the peace reached Hood Nelson returned to Britain in late June 1783 67 Island of Nevis marriage and peace Edit Nelson s wife Lady Nelson formerly Frances Fanny Nisbet of the island of Nevis West Indies A painting of the British school circa 1800 formerly attributed to Richard Cosway from an earlier copy Nelson visited France in late 1783 and stayed with acquaintances at Saint Omer briefly attempting to learn French during his stay He returned to England in January 1784 and attended court as part of Lord Hood s entourage 68 Influenced by the factional politics of the time he contemplated standing for Parliament as a supporter of William Pitt but was unable to find a seat 69 In 1784 Nelson received command of the frigate HMS Boreas with the assignment to enforce the Navigation Acts in the vicinity of Antigua 70 The Acts were unpopular with both the Americans and the colonies 71 Nelson served on the station under Admiral Sir Richard Hughes and often came into conflict with his superior officer over their differing interpretation of the Acts 72 The captains of the American vessels Nelson had seized sued him for illegal seizure Because the merchants of the nearby island of Nevis supported the American claim Nelson was in peril of imprisonment he remained sequestered on Boreas for eight months until the courts ruled in his favour 73 In the interim Nelson met Frances Fanny Nisbet a young widow from a Nevis plantation family 74 Nelson developed an affection for her In response her uncle John Herbert offered him a massive dowry Both Herbert and Nisbet concealed the fact that their famed riches were a fiction and Fanny did not disclose the fact that she was infertile due to a womb infection Once they were engaged Herbert offered Nelson nowhere near the dowry he had promised citation needed During the Georgian era breaking a marital engagement was seen as quite dishonourable 75 and so Nelson and Nisbet were married at Montpelier Estate on the island of Nevis on 11 March 1787 shortly before the end of his tour of duty in the Caribbean 76 The marriage was registered at Fig Tree Church in St John s Parish on Nevis Nelson returned to England in July with Fanny following later 77 Nelson remained with Boreas until she was paid off in November 1787 78 He and Fanny then divided their time between Bath and London occasionally visiting Nelson s relations in Norfolk In 1788 they settled at Nelson s childhood home at Burnham Thorpe 79 Now in reserve and on half pay he attempted to persuade the Admiralty and other senior figures he was acquainted with such as Hood to provide him with a command He was unsuccessful as there were too few ships in the peacetime navy and Hood did not intercede on his behalf 80 Nelson spent his time trying to find employment for former crew members attending to family affairs and cajoling contacts in the navy for a posting In 1792 the French revolutionary government annexed the Austrian Netherlands modern Belgium which were traditionally preserved as a buffer state The Admiralty recalled Nelson to service and gave him command of the 64 gun HMS Agamemnon in January 1793 On 1 February France declared war 81 Mediterranean service EditIn May 1793 Nelson sailed as part of a division under the command of Vice Admiral William Hotham joined later in the month by the rest of Lord Hood s fleet 82 The force initially sailed to Gibraltar and with the intention of establishing naval superiority in the Mediterranean made their way to Toulon anchoring off the port in July 83 Toulon was largely under the control of moderate republicans and royalists but was threatened by the forces of the National Convention which were marching on the city Short of supplies and doubting their ability to defend themselves the city authorities requested that Hood take it under his protection Hood readily acquiesced and sent Nelson to carry dispatches to Sardinia and Naples requesting reinforcements 84 After delivering the dispatches to Sardinia Agamemnon arrived at Naples in early September There Nelson met King Ferdinand IV of Naples 85 followed by the British ambassador to the kingdom William Hamilton 86 At some point during the negotiations for reinforcements Nelson was introduced to Hamilton s new wife Emma Hamilton the former mistress of Hamilton s nephew Charles Greville 87 The negotiations were successful and 2 000 men and several ships were mustered by mid September Nelson put to sea in pursuit of a French frigate but on failing to catch her sailed for Leghorn and then to Corsica 88 He arrived at Toulon on 5 October where he found that a large French army had occupied the hills surrounding the city and was bombarding it Hood still hoped the city could be held if more reinforcements arrived and sent Nelson to join a squadron operating off Cagliari 89 Corsica Edit See also Invasion of Corsica 1794 Early on the morning of 22 October 1793 Agamemnon sighted five sails Nelson closed with them and discovered that they were a French squadron He promptly gave chase firing on the 40 gun Melpomene 90 During the action of 22 October 1793 he inflicted considerable damage but the remaining French ships turned to join the battle Realising he was outnumbered Nelson withdrew and continued to Cagliari arriving on 24 October 90 After making repairs Nelson and Agamemnon sailed for Tunis on 26 October with a squadron under Commodore Robert Linzee 91 On his arrival Nelson was given command of a small squadron consisting of Agamemnon three frigates and a sloop and ordered to blockade the French garrison on Corsica 91 The fall of Toulon at the end of December 1793 severely damaged British fortunes in the Mediterranean Hood had failed to make adequate provisions for a withdrawal and 18 French ships of the line fell into republican hands 92 Nelson s mission to Corsica took on an added significance as it could provide the British with a naval base close to the French coast 92 Hood therefore reinforced Nelson with extra ships during January 1794 93 A British assault force landed on the island on 7 February after which Nelson moved to intensify the blockade off Bastia For the rest of the month he carried out raids along the coast and intercepted enemy shipping By late February San Fiorenzo had fallen and British troops under Lieutenant General David Dundas entered the outskirts of Bastia 94 However Dundas merely assessed the enemy positions and then withdrew arguing that the French were too well entrenched to risk an assault Nelson convinced Hood otherwise but a protracted debate between the army and naval commanders meant that Nelson did not receive permission to proceed until late March Nelson began to land guns from his ships and emplace them in the hills surrounding the town On 11 April the British squadron entered the harbour and opened fire whilst Nelson took command of the land forces and commenced bombardment 95 After 45 days the town surrendered 96 Nelson then prepared for an assault on Calvi working in company with Lieutenant General Charles Stuart 97 British forces landed at Calvi on 19 June and immediately began moving guns ashore to occupy the heights surrounding the town While Nelson directed a continuous bombardment of the enemy positions Stuart s men began to advance On the morning of 12 July Nelson was at one of the forward batteries when a shot struck one of the nearby sandbags protecting the position spraying stones and sand Nelson was struck by debris in his right eye and forced to retire from the position However his wound was soon bandaged and he returned to action 98 By 18 July most of the enemy positions had been disabled and that night Stuart supported by Nelson stormed the main defensive position and captured it Repositioning their guns the British brought Calvi under constant bombardment and the town surrendered on 10 August 99 Nelson did regain partial sight in his damaged eye after the siege but by his own account could only distinguish light from dark but no object Genoa and the fight of the Ca Ira Edit Main article Battle of Genoa 1795 The fight of the Ca Ira After the occupation of Corsica Hood ordered Nelson to open diplomatic relations with the city state of Genoa a strategically important potential ally 100 Soon afterwards Hood returned to England and was succeeded by Admiral William Hotham as commander in chief in the Mediterranean Nelson put into Leghorn and while Agamemnon underwent repairs met with other naval officers at the port and entertained a brief affair with a local woman Adelaide Correglia 101 Hotham arrived with the rest of the fleet in December whereupon Nelson and Agamemnon sailed on a number of cruises with them in late 1794 and early 1795 102 On 8 March news reached Hotham that the French fleet was at sea and heading for Corsica He immediately set out to intercept them and Nelson eagerly anticipated his first fleet action The French were reluctant to engage and the two fleets shadowed each other on 12 March The following day two of the French ships collided allowing Nelson to engage the much larger 84 gun Ca Ira This engagement went on for two and a half hours until the arrival of two French ships forced Nelson to veer away having inflicted heavy casualties and considerable damage 103 The fleets continued to shadow each other before making contact again on 14 March in the Battle of Genoa Nelson joined the other British ships in attacking the battered Ca Ira now under tow from Censeur Heavily damaged the two French ships were forced to surrender and Nelson took possession of Censeur Defeated at sea the French abandoned their plan to invade Corsica and returned to port 104 Skirmishes and the retreat from Italy Edit Nelson and the fleet remained in the Mediterranean throughout the summer of 1795 On 4 July Agamemnon sailed from San Fiorenzo with a small force of frigates and sloops bound for Genoa On 6 July Nelson ran into the French fleet and found himself pursued by several much larger ships of the line He retreated to San Fiorenzo arriving just ahead of the pursuing French who broke off as Nelson s signal guns alerted the British fleet in the harbour 105 Hotham pursued the French to the Hyeres Islands but failed to bring them to a decisive action A number of small engagements were fought but to Nelson s dismay he saw little action 105 Nelson returned to operate out of Genoa intercepting and inspecting merchantmen and cutting out suspicious vessels in both enemy and neutral harbours 106 Nelson formulated ambitious plans for amphibious landings and naval assaults to frustrate the progress of the French Army of Italy which was now advancing on Genoa but could excite little interest in Hotham 107 In November Hotham was replaced by Sir Hyde Parker but the situation in Italy was rapidly deteriorating the French were raiding around Genoa and strong Jacobin sentiment was rife within the city itself 108 A large French assault at the end of November broke the allied lines forcing a general retreat towards Genoa Nelson s forces were able to cover the withdrawing army and prevent them from being surrounded but he had too few ships and men to materially alter the strategic situation The British were forced to withdraw from the Italian ports Nelson returned to Corsica on 30 November angry and depressed with the British failure and questioning his future in the navy 109 Jervis and the evacuation of the Mediterranean Edit In January 1796 the position of commander in chief of the fleet in the Mediterranean passed to Sir John Jervis who appointed Nelson to exercise independent command over the ships blockading the French coast as a commodore 110 Nelson spent the first half of the year conducting operations to frustrate French advances and bolster Britain s Italian allies Despite some minor successes in intercepting small French warships such as in the action of 31 May 1796 when Nelson s squadron captured a convoy of seven small vessels he began to feel the British presence on the Italian peninsula was rapidly becoming useless 111 In June the Agamemnon was sent back to Britain for repairs and Nelson was appointed to the 74 gun HMS Captain 111 In the same month the French thrust towards Leghorn and were certain to capture the city Nelson hurried there to oversee the evacuation of British nationals and transport them to Corsica After which Jervis ordered him to blockade the newly captured French port 112 In July he oversaw the occupation of Elba but by September the Genoese had broken their neutrality to declare in favour of the French 113 By October the Genoese position and continued French advances led the British to decide that the Mediterranean fleet could no longer be supplied They ordered it to be evacuated to Gibraltar Nelson helped oversee the withdrawal from Corsica and by December 1796 was aboard the frigate HMS Minerve covering the evacuation of the garrison at Elba He then sailed for Gibraltar 114 During the passage Nelson captured the Spanish frigate Santa Sabina and placed Lieutenants Jonathan Culverhouse and Thomas Hardy in charge of the captured vessel taking the frigate s Spanish captain on board Minerve Santa Sabina was part of a larger Spanish force and the following morning two Spanish ships of the line and a frigate were sighted closing fast Unable to outrun them Nelson was initially determined to fight but Culverhouse and Hardy raised the British colours and sailed northeast drawing the Spanish ships after them until being captured giving Nelson the opportunity to escape 115 Nelson went on to rendezvous with the British fleet at Elba where he spent Christmas 116 He sailed for Gibraltar in late January and after learning that the Spanish fleet had sailed from Cartagena stopped just long enough to collect Hardy Culverhouse and the rest of the prize crew captured with Santa Sabina before pressing on through the straits to join Sir John Jervis off Cadiz 117 Admiral 1797 1801 EditBattle of Cape St Vincent Edit Main article Battle of Cape St Vincent 1797 Nelson receives the surrender of the San Nicholas an 1806 portrait by Richard Westall Nelson joined Sir John Jervis fleet off Cape St Vincent and reported the Spanish movements 118 Jervis decided to engage and the two fleets met on 14 February 1797 Nelson found himself towards the rear of the British line and realised that it would be a long time before he could bring Captain into action 118 Instead of continuing to follow the line Nelson disobeyed orders and wore ship breaking from the line and heading to engage the Spanish van consisting of the 112 gun San Josef the 80 gun San Nicolas and the 130 gun Santisima Trinidad Captain engaged all three assisted by HMS Culloden which had come to Nelson s aid 119 After an hour of exchanging broadsides which left both Captain and Culloden badly damaged Nelson found himself alongside San Nicolas He led a boarding party across crying Westminster Abbey or glorious victory and forced her to surrender 119 San Josef attempted to come to the San Nicolas aid but became entangled with her compatriot and was left immobile Nelson led his party from the deck of San Nicolas onto San Josef and captured her as well 118 As night fell the Spanish fleet broke off and sailed for Cadiz Four ships had surrendered to the British and two of them were Nelson s 120 Nelson was victorious but had disobeyed direct orders Jervis liked Nelson and so did not officially reprimand him 120 but did not mention Nelson s actions in his official report of the battle 121 He did write a private letter to First Lord of the Admiralty George Spencer in which he said that Nelson contributed very much to the fortune of the day 120 Nelson also wrote several letters about his victory reporting that his action was being referred to amongst the fleet as Nelson s Patent Bridge for boarding first rates 119 Nelson s account was later challenged by Rear Admiral William Parker who had been aboard HMS Prince George Parker claimed that Nelson had been supported by several more ships than he acknowledged and that San Josef had already struck her colours by the time Nelson boarded her 122 Nelson s account of his role prevailed and the victory was well received in Britain Jervis was made Earl St Vincent and Nelson on 17 May 123 was made a Knight of the Bath 124 125 On 20 February in a standard promotion according to his seniority and unrelated to the battle Nelson was promoted to Rear Admiral of the Blue 126 Action off Cadiz Edit Main article Blockade of Cadiz 1797 Nelson was given HMS Theseus as his flagship and on 27 May 1797 was ordered to lie off Cadiz monitoring the Spanish fleet and awaiting the arrival of Spanish treasure ships from the American colonies 127 He carried out a bombardment and personally led an amphibious assault on 3 July During the action Nelson s barge collided with that of the Spanish commander and a hand to hand struggle ensued between the two crews Twice Nelson was nearly cut down and both times his life was saved by a seaman named John Sykes who took the blows himself and was badly wounded The British raiding force captured the Spanish boat and towed her back to Theseus 127 128 During this period Nelson developed a scheme to capture Santa Cruz de Tenerife aiming to seize a large quantity of specie from the treasure ship Principe de Asturias which was reported to have recently arrived 129 Battle of Santa Cruz de Tenerife Edit Main article Battle of Santa Cruz de Tenerife 1797 Nelson wounded during the Battle of Santa Cruz de Tenerife 1806 painting by Richard Westall The battle plan called for a combination of naval bombardments and an amphibious landing The initial attempt was called off after adverse currents hampered the assault and the element of surprise was lost 130 Nelson immediately ordered another assault but this was beaten back He prepared for a third attempt to take place during the night Although he personally led one of the battalions the operation ended in failure as the Spanish were better prepared than had been expected and had secured strong defensive positions 131 Several of the boats failed to land at the correct positions in the confusion while those that did were swept by gunfire and grapeshot Nelson s boat reached its intended landing point but as he stepped ashore he was hit in the right arm by a musketball which fractured his humerus in multiple places 131 He was rowed back to Theseus to be attended to by its surgeon Thomas Eshelby 132 Upon arriving at his ship he refused to be helped aboard declaring Let me alone I have yet legs left and one arm Tell the surgeon to make haste and get his instruments I know I must lose my right arm and the sooner it is off the better 131 133 Most of the right arm was amputated and within half an hour Nelson had returned to issuing orders to his captains 134 Years later he would excuse himself to Commodore John Thomas Duckworth for not writing longer letters due to not being naturally left handed 135 Later on he developed the sensation of phantom limb in the area of his amputation and declared that he had found the direct evidence of the existence of soul 136 Meanwhile a force under Sir Thomas Troubridge had fought their way to the main square but could go no further Unable to return to the fleet because their boats had been sunk Troubridge was forced to enter into negotiations with the Spanish commander and the British were allowed to withdraw 137 The expedition had failed to achieve any of its objectives and had left a quarter of the landing force dead or wounded 137 138 The squadron remained off Tenerife for a further three days and by 16 August had rejoined Lord John Jervis fleet off Cadiz Despondently Nelson wrote to Jervis A left handed Admiral will never again be considered as useful therefore the sooner I get to a very humble cottage the better and make room for a better man to serve the state 139 He returned to England aboard HMS Seahorse arriving at Spithead on 1 September He was met with a hero s welcome the British public had lionised Nelson after Cape St Vincent and his wound earned him sympathy 140 They refused to attribute the defeat at Tenerife to him preferring instead to blame poor planning on the part of St Vincent the Secretary at War William Windham or even Prime Minister William Pitt 140 Return to England Edit Nelson returned to Bath with Fanny before moving to London in October 1797 to seek expert medical attention concerning his amputation wound Whilst in London news reached him that Admiral Duncan had defeated the Dutch fleet at the Battle of Camperdown 141 Nelson exclaimed that he would have given his other arm to have been present 141 He spent the last months of 1797 recuperating in London during which time he was awarded the Freedom of the City of London and a pension of 1 000 equivalent to 110 200 in 2021 a year He used this money to buy Round Wood Farm near Ipswich and intended to retire there with Fanny 142 Despite his plans Nelson was never to live there 142 Although surgeons had been unable to remove the central ligature from his amputation site which had caused considerable inflammation and infection it came out of its own accord in early December and Nelson rapidly began to recover Eager to return to sea he began agitating for a command and was promised the 80 gun HMS Foudroyant As she was not yet ready for sea Nelson was instead given command of the 74 gun HMS Vanguard to which he appointed Edward Berry as his flag captain 143 French activities in the Mediterranean theatre were raising concern among the Admiralty as Napoleon was gathering forces in Southern France but the destination of his army was unknown Nelson and the Vanguard were to be dispatched to Cadiz to reinforce the fleet On 28 March 1798 Nelson hoisted his flag and sailed to join Earl St Vincent St Vincent sent him on to Toulon with a small force to reconnoitre French activities 144 The Mediterranean EditHunting the French Edit Main article Mediterranean campaign of 1798 Nelson passed through the Straits of Gibraltar and took up position off Toulon by 17 May but his squadron was dispersed and blown southwards by a strong gale which struck the area on 20 May 145 While the British were battling the storm Napoleon had sailed with his invasion fleet under the command of Vice Admiral Francois Paul Brueys d Aigalliers Nelson having been reinforced with a number of ships from St Vincent went in pursuit 146 Nelson began searching the Italian coast for Napoleon s fleet but was hampered by a lack of frigates that could operate as fast scouts Napoleon had already arrived at Malta and after a show of force secured the island s surrender 147 Nelson followed him there but by the time he arrived the French had already left After a conference with his captains he decided Napoleon s most likely destination now was Egypt and headed for Alexandria However upon Nelson s arrival on 28 June he found no sign of the French Dismayed he withdrew and began searching to the east of the port During this time on 1 July Napoleon s fleet arrived in Alexandria and landed their forces unopposed 148 Brueys anchored his fleet in Aboukir Bay ready to support Napoleon if required 149 Nelson meanwhile had crossed the Mediterranean again in a fruitless attempt to locate the French and returned to Naples to re provision 150 When he again set sail his intentions were to search the seas off Cyprus but he decided to pass Alexandria again for a final check Along the way his force found and captured a French merchant ship which provided the first news of the French fleet they had passed south east of Crete a month prior heading to Alexandria 151 Nelson hurried to the port but again found it empty of the French Searching along the coast he finally discovered the French fleet in Aboukir Bay on 1 August 1798 152 The Battle of the Nile Edit Main article Battle of the Nile Battle of the Nile 1 August 1798 at 10 pm painting by Thomas Luny 1834 Nelson immediately prepared for battle repeating a sentiment he had expressed at the battle of Cape St Vincent Before this time tomorrow I shall have gained a peerage or Westminster Abbey 153 It was late by the time the British arrived and the French having anchored in a strong position and possessing a combined firepower greater than that of Nelson s fleet did not expect them to attack 154 Nelson however immediately ordered his ships to advance The French line was anchored close to a line of shoals in the belief that this would secure their port side from attack Brueys had assumed the British would follow convention and attack his centre from the starboard side However Captain Thomas Foley aboard HMS Goliath discovered a gap between the shoals and the French ships and took Goliath into this channel The unprepared French found themselves attacked on both sides the British fleet splitting with some following Foley and others passing down the starboard side of the French line 155 The British fleet was soon heavily engaged passing down the French line and engaging their ships one by one Nelson on Vanguard personally engaged Spartiate while also coming under fire from Aquilon At about eight o clock he was with Edward Berry on the quarter deck when a piece of French shot struck him in the forehead He fell to the deck with a flap of torn skin obscuring his good eye Blinded and half stunned he felt sure he would die and cried out I am killed Remember me to my wife He was taken below to be seen by the surgeon 156 After examining Nelson the surgeon pronounced the wound non threatening and applied a temporary bandage 157 The French van pounded by British fire from both sides had begun to surrender and the victorious British ships continued to move down the line bringing Brueys 118 gun flagship Orient under constant heavy fire Orient caught fire under this bombardment and later exploded Nelson briefly came on deck to direct the battle but returned to the surgeon after watching the destruction of Orient 158 The Battle of the Nile was a major blow to Napoleon s ambitions in the east The fleet had been destroyed Orient another ship and two frigates had been burnt while seven 74 gun ships and two 80 gun ships had been captured Only two ships of the line and two frigates escaped 159 The forces Napoleon had brought to Egypt were stranded 155 Napoleon attacked north along the Mediterranean coast but Turkish defenders supported by Captain Sir Sidney Smith defeated his army at the Siege of Acre Napoleon then left his army and sailed back to France evading detection by British ships Given its strategic importance historians such as Ernle Bradford regard Nelson s achievement at the Nile as the most significant of his career even greater than that at Trafalgar seven years later 160 Rewards Edit Lady Hamilton as either a bacchante or Ariadne by Elisabeth Louise Vigee Le Brun c 1790 a painting owned by Nelson which hung above his bed until his death Nelson wrote dispatches to the Admiralty and oversaw temporary repairs to the Vanguard before sailing to Naples where he was met with enthusiastic celebrations 161 King Ferdinand IV of Naples in company with the Hamiltons greeted him in person when he arrived at port and Sir William Hamilton invited Nelson to stay at his home 162 Celebrations were held in honour of Nelson s birthday that September 1798 and he attended a banquet at the Hamiltons house where other officers had begun to notice his attentions to Emma Lady Hamilton Lord Jervis himself had begun to grow concerned about reports of Nelson s behaviour but in early October word of Nelson s victory had reached London and overshadowed the matter The First Lord of the Admiralty George Spencer fainted upon hearing the news 163 Scenes of celebration erupted across the country balls and victory feasts were held and church bells were rung The City of London awarded Nelson and his captains swords whilst the King ordered they be presented with special medals Emperor Paul I of Russia sent Nelson a gift and Sultan Selim III of the Ottoman Empire awarded Nelson the Order of the Turkish Crescent as well as the diamond chelengk from his own turban 164 for Nelson s role in restoring Ottoman rule to Egypt Samuel Hood after a conversation with the Prime Minister told Nelson s wife Fanny that her husband would likely be given a viscountcy similarly to Jervis earldom after Cape St Vincent and Adam Duncan s viscountcy after Camperdown 165 Lord Spencer however demurred arguing that as Nelson had only been detached in command of a squadron rather than being the commander in chief of the fleet such an award would create an unwelcome precedent Instead Nelson received the title of Baron Nelson of the Nile 166 167 Neapolitan campaign Edit Nelson was dismayed by Lord Spencer s decision and declared that he would rather have received no title than that of a mere barony 167 He was however cheered by the attention showered on him by the citizens of Naples the prestige accorded him by the kingdom s elite and the comforts he received at the Hamiltons residence He made frequent visits to their residence to attend functions in his honour or tour nearby attractions with Emma who was almost constantly at his side and with whom by now he had fallen deeply in love 168 Orders arrived from the Admiralty to blockade the French forces in Alexandria and Malta a task Nelson delegated to his captains Samuel Hood and Alexander Ball Despite enjoying his lifestyle in Naples even while judging it to be a country of fiddlers and poets whores and scoundrels which he found less than desirable 164 Nelson began to think of returning to England 168 However King Ferdinand IV had just faced an extended period of pressure from his wife Maria Carolina of Austria who was advocating for an aggressive foreign policy towards France a country which five years earlier had beheaded her sister and its queen Marie Antoinette 164 Sir William Hamilton was joined in agreement with Queen Maria Carolina and the King finally agreed to declare war on France 169 The Neapolitan Army led by the Austrian General Mack and supported by Nelson s fleet retook Rome from the French in late November 1798 The French regrouped outside Rome and after being reinforced routed the Neapolitans In disarray the Neapolitan army fled back to Naples with the pursuing French close behind 169 Nelson hastily organised the evacuation of the Royal Family several nobles and British nationals including the Hamiltons The evacuation got underway on 23 December and sailed through heavy gales before reaching the safety of Palermo on 26 December 170 With the departure of the Royal Family Naples descended into anarchy and news reached Palermo in January that the French had entered the city under General Championnet and proclaimed the Parthenopaean Republic 171 Nelson was promoted to Rear Admiral of the Red on 14 February 1799 172 and was occupied for several months in blockading Naples while a popular counter revolutionary force under Cardinal Ruffo known as the Sanfedisti marched to retake the city In late June Ruffo s army entered Naples forcing the French and their supporters to withdraw to the city s fortifications as rioting and looting broke out amongst the ill disciplined Neapolitan troops 173 Dismayed by the bloodshed Ruffo agreed to a capitulation with the Jacobin forces which allowed them safe conduct to France Nelson arrived off Naples on 24 June to find the treaty put into effect His subsequent role is still controversial 174 Nelson aboard Foudroyant was outraged and backed by King Ferdinand IV he insisted that the rebels must surrender unconditionally 175 They refused Nelson appears to have relented and the Jacobin forces marched out to the awaiting transports Nelson then had the transports seized 174 He took those who had surrendered under the treaty under armed guard as well as the former Admiral Francesco Caracciolo who had commanded the Neapolitan navy under King Ferdinand IV but had changed sides during the brief Jacobin rule 176 Nelson ordered his trial by court martial and refused Caracciolo s request that it be held by British officers Caracciolo was also not allowed to summon witnesses in his defence and was tried by royalist Neapolitan officers He was sentenced to death Caracciolo requested to be shot rather than hanged but Nelson following the wishes of Queen Maria Carolina a close friend of Lady Hamilton also denied this request and even ignored the court s request to allow 24 hours for Caracciolo to prepare himself Caracciolo was hanged aboard the Neapolitan frigate Minerva at 5 o clock the same afternoon 177 Nelson kept the bulk of the Jacobins on the transports and began to hand hundreds over for trial and execution refusing to intervene despite pleas for clemency from both the Hamiltons and Queen Maria Carolina 178 When the transports were finally allowed to carry the Jacobins to France less than one third were still alive 179 On 13 August 1799 in reward for his support of the monarchy 180 King Ferdinand IV gave Nelson the newly created title Duke of Bronte in the peerage of the Kingdom of Sicily as his perpetual property as well as the estate of the former Benedictine abbey of Santa Maria di Maniace which he later transformed into the Castello di Nelson situated between the comunes of Bronte and Maniace later known as the Duchy of Nelson 181 In 1799 Nelson opposed the mistreatment of slaves held in Portuguese galleys off Palermo and intervened to secure their release Nelson petitioned the Portuguese commander Marquiz de Niza As a friend as an English admiral as a favour to me as a favour to my country that you will give me the Slaves The marquis acquiesced to the unusual request allowing twenty four slaves to be transferred to HMS Bonne Citoyenne their blessings to Nelson ringing out across the harbour as their names were added to the sloop s already crowded muster book 49 50 The Battle of the Malta convoy Siege of Malta Edit Further information Siege of Malta 1798 1800 Nelson returned to Palermo in August and in September became the senior officer in the Mediterranean after Lord John Jervis successor George Elphinstone 1st Viscount Keith left to chase the French and Spanish fleets into the Atlantic 182 Nelson spent most of 1799 at the Neapolitan court but put to sea again in February 1800 after Lord Keith s return Keith ordered Nelson to assist in the siege of Malta of which the Royal Navy was conducting a tight blockade On 18 February Genereux a survivor of the Battle of the Nile was sighted and Nelson gave chase capturing her after a short battle and winning Keith s approval 183 Nelson and the Hamiltons sailed aboard the Foudroyant from Naples on a brief cruise around Malta in April 1800 and anchored at Marsa Sirocco Here Nelson and Emma lived together openly and were hosted by Thomas Troubridge and Thomas Graham 184 It was during this time that Nelson and Lady Emma Hamilton s illegitimate daughter Horatia Nelson was likely conceived 185 Nelson had a difficult relationship with his superior officer he was gaining a reputation for insubordination having initially refused to send ships when Keith requested them and on occasion returning to Palermo without orders pleading poor health 186 Keith s reports and rumours of Nelson s close relationship with Emma Hamilton were now circulating around London and Lord Spencer wrote a pointed letter suggesting that he return home You will be more likely to recover your health and strength in England than in any inactive situation at a foreign Court however pleasing the respect and gratitude shown to you for your services may be 187 Return to England Edit Emma Hamilton in an 1800 portrait owned by Nelson An antique photograph of a portrait of Horatia Ward nee Nelson from the Style Ward Family collection Horatia was the daughter of Admiral Lord Horatio Nelson and Lady Emma Hamilton The recall of Sir William Hamilton to Britain was a further incentive for Nelson to return In June Nelson left Malta and conveyed Queen Maria Carolina and her suite to Leghorn Upon his arrival Nelson shifted his flag to HMS Alexander but again disobeyed Lord Keith s orders by refusing to join the main fleet Keith travelled to Leghorn to demand in person an explanation and refused to be moved by the Queen s pleas to allow her to be conveyed in a British ship 188 In the face of Keith s demands Nelson reluctantly struck his flag and bowed to Lady Hamilton s request to return to England over land 189 Nelson the Hamiltons and several other British travellers left Leghorn for Florence on 13 July They made stops at Trieste and Vienna spending three weeks in the latter where they were entertained by the local nobility and heard the Missa in Angustiis by Haydn which now bears Nelson s name Haydn would meet them that August when they visited Eisenstaedt 190 By September they were in Prague and later called at Dresden Dessau and Hamburg from there they caught a packet ship to Great Yarmouth arriving on 6 November 191 Nelson was given a hero s welcome and after being sworn in as a freeman of the borough received the amassed crowd s applause He then made his way to London arriving on 9 November 192 He attended court and was guest of honour at a number of banquets and balls During this period Fanny Nelson and Lady Emma Hamilton met for the first time Nelson was reported as being cold and distant to his wife while his attentions to Lady Hamilton and her obesity became the subject of gossip 192 With the marriage breaking down Nelson began to hate even being in the same room as Fanny Events came to a head around Christmas when according to Nelson s solicitor Fanny issued an ultimatum on whether he was to choose her or Lady Hamilton Nelson replied I love you sincerely but I cannot forget my obligations to Lady Hamilton or speak of her otherwise than with affection and admiration 193 The two never lived together again 193 The Baltic EditShortly after his arrival in England Nelson was appointed to be second in command of the Channel Fleet under Lord John Jervis 194 He was promoted to Vice Admiral of the Blue on 1 January 1801 195 and travelled to Plymouth where on 22 January he was granted the freedom of the city On 29 January 1801 Lady Emma Hamilton gave birth to their daughter Horatia 196 Nelson was delighted but subsequently disappointed when he was instructed to move his flag from HMS San Josef to HMS St George in preparation for a planned expedition to the Baltic 197 Tired of British ships imposing a blockade against French trade and stopping and searching their merchantmen the Russian Prussian Danish and Swedish governments had formed an alliance to break the blockade Nelson joined Admiral Sir Hyde Parker s fleet at Yarmouth from where they sailed for the Danish coast in March On their arrival Parker was inclined to blockade Denmark and control the entrance to the Baltic but Nelson urged a pre emptive attack on the Danish fleet in the harbour of Copenhagen 198 He convinced Parker to allow him to make an assault and was given significant reinforcements Parker himself would wait in the Kattegat covering Nelson s fleet in case of the arrival of the Swedish or Russian fleets 199 Battle of Copenhagen Edit Main article Battle of Copenhagen 1801 The Battle of Copenhagen 2 April 1801 by Nicholas Pocock National Maritime Museum Greenwich London Nelson s fleet exchanges fire with the Danes with the city of Copenhagen in the background This glass was one of a set commissioned by Lord Nelson to commemorate his victory at the Battle of CopenhagenOn the morning of 2 April 1801 Nelson began to advance into Copenhagen harbour The battle began badly for the British with HMS Agamemnon Bellona and Russell running aground and the rest of the fleet encountering heavier fire from the Danish shore batteries than had been anticipated Sir Hyde Parker sent the signal for Nelson to withdraw reasoning I will make the signal for recall for Nelson s sake If he is in a condition to continue the action he will disregard it if he is not it will be an excuse for his retreat and no blame can be attached to him 200 Nelson directing action aboard HMS Elephant was informed of the signal by the signal lieutenant Frederick Langford but angrily responded I told you to look out on the Danish commodore and let me know when he surrendered Keep your eyes fixed on him 201 He then turned to his flag captain Thomas Foley and said You know Foley I have only one eye I have a right to be blind sometimes He raised the telescope to his blind eye and said I really do not see the signal d 201 203 The battle lasted three hours leaving both Danish and British fleets heavily damaged At length Nelson dispatched a letter to the Danish commander Crown Prince Frederick calling for a truce which the Prince accepted 204 Parker approved of Nelson s actions in retrospect and Nelson was given the honour of going into Copenhagen the next day to open formal negotiations 205 206 At a banquet that evening he told Prince Frederick that the battle had been the most severe he had ever participated in 207 The outcome of the battle and several weeks of ensuing negotiations was a fourteen week armistice with Nelson becoming commander in chief in the Baltic Sea upon Parker s recall in May 208 As a reward for the victory he was created Viscount Nelson of the Nile and of Burnham Thorpe in the County of Norfolk on 19 May 1801 209 In addition on 4 August 1801 he was created Baron Nelson of the Nile and of Hilborough in the County of Norfolk with a special remainder to his father and sisters 210 211 Nelson sailed to the Russian naval base at Reval in May and there learnt that the pact of armed neutrality was to be disbanded Satisfied with the outcome of the expedition he returned to England arriving on 1 July 212 Leave in England 1801 1803 EditIn France Napoleon was amassing forces to invade Great Britain After a brief spell in London where he again visited the Hamiltons Nelson was placed in charge of defending the English Channel to prevent the invasion 213 He spent the summer of 1801 reconnoitring the French coast but apart from a failed attack on Boulogne in August saw little action 214 On 1 October the Peace of Amiens was signed between the British and the French 164 and Nelson in poor health again retired once more to Britain where he stayed with Sir William and Lady Hamilton On 30 October Nelson spoke in support of the Addington government in the House of Lords and afterwards made regular visits to attend sessions 215 Grand tour Edit In the summer of 1802 Nelson and the Hamiltons embarked on a tour of England and Wales 164 visiting Oxford Star Inn Woodstock Oxfordshire 4th Duke of Marlborough Blenheim Palace Gloucester Forest of Dean Ross on Wye then by river to Monmouth Abergavenny Brecon Carmarthen Milford Haven New Inn Tenby Swansea Carmarthen Merthyr Tydfil Star Inn visited Cyfartha Ironworks to see the place were the 104 guns had been made for his flagship HMS Victory Ffos y Gerddinen coaching inn now both village and inn renamed Nelson Caerphilly Monmouth Beaufort Arms Hereford Ludlow Worcester Hop Pole Inn Birmingham Styles hotel Warwick Althorp Lord Spencer and returning to Merton Place Sunday 5 September 216 passing through numerous other towns and villages along the way Nelson often found himself received as a hero except at Woodstock and was the centre of celebrations and events held in his honour 214 In September Lady Hamilton purchased Merton Place a country estate in Merton Surrey now within the borders of south west London for Nelson where he lived with the Hamiltons until William s death on 6 April 1803 217 164 The following month war broke out once again and Nelson prepared to return to sea 218 Witness at the treason trial of Edward Despard Edit In January 1803 Nelson appeared as a character witness in the treason trial of a former comrade in arms Colonel Edward Despard Despard who had been moving in radical circles in London a member both of the London Corresponding Society and the United Irishmen was the alleged ringleader of a conspiracy to assassinate King George III and seize the Tower of London the so called Despard Plot In court Nelson recollected his service with Despard in the Caribbean during the American War We went on the Spanish Main together we slept many nights together in our clothes upon the ground we have measured the height of the enemies walls together In all that period of time no man could have shewn more zealous attachment to his Sovereign and his Country Under cross examination however Nelson had to concede to having lost sight of Despard for the last twenty years 219 220 Nelson directed a further plea for clemency to Prime Minister Henry Addington who was later to tell Nelson that he and his family had sat up after supper weeping over the letter 221 Following Despard s execution in February Lady Fanny Nelson is reported to have taken the Colonel s Jamaican wife Catherine Despard under her protection 222 Return to sea 1803 EditMain article Trafalgar Campaign Nelson was appointed commander in chief of the Mediterranean Fleet and given the first rate HMS Victory as his flagship He joined her at Portsmouth where he received orders to sail to Malta and take command of a squadron there before joining the blockade of Toulon 223 Nelson arrived off Toulon in July 1803 and spent the next year and a half enforcing the blockade He was promoted to Vice Admiral of the White while still at sea on 23 April 1804 224 In January 1805 the French fleet under the command of Admiral Pierre Charles Villeneuve escaped Toulon and eluded the blockading British Nelson set off in pursuit but after searching the eastern Mediterranean learnt the French had been blown back into Toulon 225 Villeneuve managed to break out a second time in April and this time succeeded in passing through the Strait of Gibraltar and into the Atlantic bound for the West Indies 225 Admiral Sir Robert Calder s action off Cape Finisterre 23 July 1805 by William Anderson National Maritime Museum Greenwich Nelson gave chase but after arriving in the Caribbean spent June in a fruitless search for the fleet Villeneuve had briefly cruised around the islands before heading back to Europe in contravention of Napoleon s orders 226 The returning French fleet was intercepted by a British fleet under Sir Robert Calder and engaged in the Battle of Cape Finisterre but managed to reach Ferrol with only minor losses 227 Nelson returned to Gibraltar at the end of July and travelled from there to England dismayed at his failure to bring the French to battle and expecting to be censured 228 To his surprise he was given a rapturous reception from crowds who had gathered to view his arrival Senior British officials congratulated him for sustaining the close pursuit crediting him with saving the West Indies from a French invasion 228 Nelson briefly stayed in London where he was cheered wherever he went before visiting Merton Place to see Lady Hamilton arriving in late August He entertained a number of his friends and relations there over the coming month and began plans for a grand engagement with the enemy fleet one that would surprise his foes by forcing a pell mell battle on them 229 Captain Henry Blackwood arrived at Merton early on 2 September bringing news that the French and Spanish fleets had combined and were currently at anchor in Cadiz Nelson hurried to London where he met with cabinet ministers and was given command of the fleet blockading Cadiz It was while awaiting one of these meetings on 24 September with Lord Castlereagh the Secretary of State for War and the Colonies that Nelson and Major General Arthur Wellesley the future Duke of Wellington met briefly in a waiting area Wellington was waiting to be debriefed on his Indian operations and Nelson on his chase and future plans 230 Wellington later recalled Nelson entered at once into conversation with me if I can call it conversation for it was almost all on his side and all about himself and in reality a style so vain and so silly as to surprise and almost disgust me 230 After a few minutes Nelson left the room but having then been informed who his companion had been returned and entered into a more earnest and intelligent discussion with the young Wellesley This lasted for a quarter of an hour and encompassed topics such as the war the state of the colonies and the geopolitical situation On this second discussion Wellesley recalled I don t know that I ever had a conversation that interested me more This was the only meeting between the two men 231 Nelson returned briefly to Merton to set his affairs in order and bid farewell to Emma before travelling back to London and then on to Portsmouth arriving there early on the morning of 14 September He breakfasted at the George Inn with his friends George Rose the Vice President of the Board of Trade and George Canning the Treasurer of the Navy During the breakfast word spread of Nelson s presence at the inn and a large crowd of well wishers gathered They accompanied Nelson to his barge and cheered him off which Nelson acknowledged by raising his hat He was recorded as having turned to his colleague and stated I had their huzzas before I have their hearts now 232 233 234 Robert Southey reported on the onlookers for Nelson s walk to the dock Many were in tears and many knelt down before him and blessed him as he passed 235 Victory joined the British fleet off Cadiz on 27 September and Nelson took over from Vice Admiral Cuthbert Collingwood 236 Nelson spent the following weeks preparing and refining his tactics for the anticipated battle and dining with his captains to ensure they understood his intentions 237 He had devised a plan of attack that anticipated the allied fleet would form up in a traditional line of battle Drawing on his own experience from the Nile and Copenhagen and the examples of Duncan at Camperdown and Rodney at the Saintes Nelson decided to split his fleet into squadrons rather than forming it into a similar line parallel to the enemy 238 These squadrons would then cut the enemy s line in a number of places allowing a pell mell battle to develop The British ships could overwhelm and destroy parts of their opponents formation before unengaged enemy ships could come to their aid 238 Battle of Trafalgar 1805 EditMain article Battle of Trafalgar Preparation Edit The combined French and Spanish fleet under Villeneuve s command numbered thirty three ships of the line Napoleon had intended for Villeneuve to sail into the English Channel and cover a planned invasion of Britain However the entry of Austria and Russia into the war forced Napoleon to call off this invasion and transfer troops to Germany Villeneuve had been reluctant to risk engagement with the British and this reluctance led Napoleon to send Vice Admiral Francois Rosily to Cadiz in order to take command of the fleet Rosily was then to sail it into the Mediterranean and land troops at Naples before making port at Toulon 236 Villeneuve decided to sail the fleet out before his successor could arrive 236 On 20 October 1805 the fleet was sighted making its way out of harbour by patrolling British frigates and Nelson was informed that they appeared to be heading to the west 239 The Battle of Trafalgar by J M W Turner oil on canvas 1822 1824 shows the last three letters of the signal England expects that every man will do his duty flying from VictoryAt four o clock in the morning of 21 October Nelson ordered the Victory to turn towards the approaching enemy fleet and signalled the rest of his force to battle stations He then went below and made out his will before returning to the quarterdeck to carry out an inspection 240 Despite having twenty seven ships to Villeneuve s thirty three Nelson was confident of success declaring that he would not be satisfied with taking fewer than twenty prizes 240 He returned briefly to his cabin to write a final prayer after which he joined Victory s signal lieutenant John Pasco Mr Pasco I wish to say to the fleet England confides that every man will do his duty You must be quick for I have one more signal to make which is for close action 241 Pasco suggested changing confides to expects which being in the Signal Book could be signalled by the use of a single code three flags whereas confides would have to be spelt out letter by letter Nelson agreed and the signal was hoisted 241 As the fleets converged Victory s Captain Thomas Hardy suggested that Nelson remove the decorations on his coat so that he would not be so easily identified by enemy sharpshooters Nelson replied that it was too late to be shifting a coat adding that they were military orders and he did not fear to show them to the enemy e 243 Captain Henry Blackwood of the frigate HMS Euryalus suggested Nelson come aboard his ship to better observe the battle Nelson refused and also turned down Hardy s suggestion to let Admiral Sir Eliab Harvey s HMS Temeraire come ahead of Victory and lead the line into battle 243 Battle is joined Edit Victory came under fire initially passing wide but then with greater accuracy as the distances decreased A cannonball struck and killed Nelson s secretary John Scott nearly cutting him in two Hardy s clerk then took over but he too was almost immediately killed Victory s wheel was shot away another cannonball cut down eight marines Standing next to Nelson on the quarterdeck Hardy s shoe buckle was suddenly dented by a splinter Nelson observed This is too warm work to last long 244 Victory had by now reached the enemy line and Hardy asked Nelson which ship to engage first Nelson told him to take his pick whereupon Hardy moved Victory across the stern of the 80 gun French flagship Bucentaure 244 Victory then came under fire from the 74 gun Redoutable which was lying off Bucentaure s stern as well as the 130 gun Santisima Trinidad As sharpshooters from the enemy ships fired onto Victory s deck from their rigging Nelson and Hardy continued directing and giving orders 244 Wounding and death Edit Nelson is shot on the quarterdeck painted by Denis Dighton c 1825At a quarter past one in the afternoon 164 Hardy realised that Nelson was not by his side He turned to see Nelson kneeling on the deck supporting himself with his hand before falling onto his side Hardy rushed to him at which point Nelson smiled Hardy I do believe they have done it at last my backbone is shot through 244 He had been hit by a musket ball fired from the mizzen top of Redoutable at a range of 50 feet 15 m The ball entered his left shoulder passed through a lung 164 then his spine at the sixth and seventh thoracic vertebrae and lodged two inches 5 cm below his right shoulder blade in the muscles of his back Nelson was carried below to the cockpit by sergeant major of marines Robert Adair and two seamen As he was being carried down he asked them to pause while he gave advice to a midshipman on the handling of the tiller 245 He then draped a handkerchief over his face to avoid causing alarm amongst the crew He was taken to ship surgeon William Beatty telling him You can do nothing for me I have but a short time to live My back is shot through 246 Nelson was made comfortable fanned and brought lemonade and watered wine to drink after he complained of feeling hot and thirsty He asked several times to see Hardy who was on deck supervising the battle and asked Beatty to remember him to Emma his daughter and his friends 246 Hardy came belowdecks to see Nelson just after half past two and informed him that a number of enemy ships had surrendered Nelson told him that he was sure to die and begged him to pass his possessions on to Emma 247 Those with Nelson at this point were the chaplain Alexander Scott the purser Walter Burke Nelson s steward Chevalier and Beatty Nelson fearing that a gale was blowing up instructed Hardy to be sure to anchor After reminding him to take care of poor Lady Hamilton Nelson said Kiss me Hardy 247 Beatty recorded that Hardy knelt and kissed Nelson on the cheek He then stood for a minute or two before kissing Nelson on the forehead Nelson asked Who is that On hearing that it was Hardy he replied God bless you Hardy 247 By now very weak Nelson continued to murmur instructions to Burke and Scott fan fan rub rub drink drink Beatty had heard Nelson murmur Thank God I have done my duty and when he returned Nelson s voice had faded and his pulse was very weak 247 Nelson looked up as Beatty took his pulse then closed his eyes Scott who remained by Nelson as he died recorded his last words as God and my country 248 Nelson died at half past four in the afternoon three hours after he had been shot 247 He was 47 years old The Death of Nelson by Daniel Maclise Houses of Parliament London Return to England EditNelson s body was placed in a cask of brandy mixed with camphor and myrrh which was then lashed to the Victory s mainmast and placed under guard 249 Victory was towed to Gibraltar after the battle and on arrival the body was transferred to a lead lined coffin filled with spirits of wine 249 Collingwood s dispatches about the battle were carried to England aboard HMS Pickle and when the news arrived in London a messenger was sent to Merton Place to bring the news of Nelson s death to Emma Hamilton She later recalled They brought me word Mr Whitby from the Admiralty Show him in directly I said He came in and with a pale countenance and faint voice said We have gained a great Victory Never mind your Victory I said My letters give me my letters Captain Whitby was unable to speak tears in his eyes and a deathly paleness over his face made me comprehend him I believe I gave a scream and fell back and for ten hours I could neither speak nor shed a tear 250 King George III on receiving the news is alleged to have said in tears We have lost more than we have gained 251 The Times reported We do not know whether we should mourn or rejoice The country has gained the most splendid and decisive Victory that has ever graced the naval annals of England but it has been dearly purchased 251 Funeral Edit Print of the royal barge carrying Nelson s body Nelson s coffin in the crossing of St Paul s during the funeral service the dome hung with captured French and Spanish flags The sarcophagus of Nelson in the crypt of St Paul s Nelson s body was unloaded from the Victory at the Nore It was conveyed upriver in Commander Sir George Grey s yacht Chatham to Greenwich and placed inside a lead coffin The lead coffin was then placed inside a wooden one made from the mast of L Orient which had been salvaged after the Battle of the Nile He lay in state for three days in the Painted Hall of Greenwich Hospital where the surrounding arrangements all but disintegrated under the crush of crowds far greater than authorities had anticipated 164 His body was then taken upriver aboard a barge originally used as King Charles II s state barge accompanied by Lord Samuel Hood chief mourner Sir Peter Parker and the Prince of Wales 252 The Prince of Wales at first announced his intention of attending the funeral as chief mourner However he ultimately attended in a private capacity along with his brothers when his father King George III reminded him that it was against protocol for the heir to the throne to attend the funerals of anyone except members of the royal family 253 On 8 January 1806 the coffin was taken into the Admiralty for the night attended by Nelson s chaplain Alexander Scott 252 The following day 9 January a funeral procession consisting of 32 admirals over a hundred captains and an escort of 10 000 soldiers took the coffin from the Admiralty to St Paul s Cathedral 254 After a four hour service he was interred within a crypt in a sarcophagus originally carved for Cardinal Wolsey 5 the sarcophagus and its base had been previously taken over for the tomb of Henry VIII which was never completed 255 The sailors charged with folding the flag which they were to then place on Nelson s coffin after it had been lowered through the floor of the nave instead tore it into fragments each taking a piece as a memorial of their fallen commander 256 164 Assessment Edit Pierre Nicolas Legrand de Lerant s Apotheosis of Nelson c 1805 18 Nelson ascends into immortality as the Battle of Trafalgar rages in the background He is supported by Neptune whilst Fame holds a crown of stars as a symbol of immortality over Nelson s head A grieving Britannia holds out her arms whilst Hercules Mars Minerva and Jupiter look on Nelson was regarded as a highly effective leader and someone who was able to sympathise with the needs of his men He based his command on love rather than authority inspiring both his superiors and his subordinates with his considerable courage commitment and charisma dubbed the Nelson touch 257 258 Nelson combined this talent with an adept grasp of strategy and politics making him a highly successful naval commander Admiral Togo himself often called the Nelson of the East placed Nelson as among the greatest naval commanders in history second only to Admiral Yi Sun sin 259 The memorandum Nelson wrote before Trafalgar expresses his attitude well No captain can do very wrong if he places his ship alongside that of the enemy 260 Nelson s personality was complex often characterised by a desire to be noticed both by his superiors and the public He was easily flattered by praise and dismayed when he felt he was not given sufficient credit for his actions 261 This led him to take risks and to enthusiastically publicise his resultant successes 262 which was not always considered acceptable at the time 263 Nelson was also highly confident in his abilities determined and able to make important decisions 264 His active career meant that he was considerably experienced in combat and was a shrewd judge of his opponents able to identify and exploit his enemies weaknesses 257 He was often prone to insecurities however as well as violent mood swings 265 and was extremely vain he loved to receive decorations and tributes 266 Despite his personality he remained a highly professional leader and was driven all his life by a strong sense of duty 265 Nelson s fame reached new heights after his death and he came to be regarded as one of Britain s greatest military heroes ranked alongside the Duke of Marlborough and Duke of Wellington 267 In the BBC s 100 Greatest Britons programme in 2002 Nelson was voted the ninth greatest Briton of all time 268 Aspects of Nelson s life and career were controversial both during his lifetime and after his death His affair with Emma Hamilton was widely remarked upon and disapproved of to the extent that Emma was denied permission to attend his funeral She and their daughter Horatia were also subsequently ignored by the government which awarded Nelson s money and titles only to legitimate family 269 Nelson s actions during the reoccupation of Naples have also been the subject of debate His approval of the wave of reprisals against the Jacobins who had surrendered under the terms agreed by Cardinal Ruffo as well as his personal intervention in securing the execution of Francesco Caracciolo are considered by some biographers such as Robert Southey to have been a shameful breach of honour A prominent contemporary politician Charles James Fox was among those who attacked Nelson for his actions at Naples declaring in the House of Commons I wish that the atrocities of which we hear so much and which I abhor as much as any man were indeed unexampled I fear that they do not belong exclusively to the French Naples for instance has been what is called delivered and yet if I am rightly informed it has been stained and polluted by murders so ferocious and by cruelties of every kind so abhorrent that the heart shudders at the recital The besieged rebels demanded that a British officer should be brought forward and to him they capitulated They made terms with him under the sanction of the British name Before they sailed their property was confiscated numbers were thrown into dungeons and some of them I understand notwithstanding the British guarantee were actually executed 270 Other pro republican writers produced books and pamphlets decrying the events in Naples as atrocities 271 Later assessments including one by Andrew Lambert have stressed that the armistice had not been authorised by the King of Naples and that the retribution meted out by the Neapolitans was not unusual for the time Lambert also suggests that Nelson in fact acted to put an end to the bloodshed using his ships and men to restore order in the city 271 Legacy Edit Main articles Legacy of Horatio Nelson 1st Viscount Nelson and Monuments and memorials to Horatio Nelson 1st Viscount Nelson See also List of places named after Horatio Nelson HMS Lord Nelson and HMS Nelson Nelson s Column in Trafalgar Square London Nelson s influence continued long after his death and saw periodic revivals of interest especially during times of crisis in Britain In the 1860s Poet Laureate Alfred Tennyson appealed to the image and tradition of Nelson in order to oppose the defence cuts being made by Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone 272 First Sea Lord Jackie Fisher was a keen exponent of Nelson during the early years of the twentieth century and often emphasised his legacy during his period of naval reform 273 Winston Churchill also found Nelson to be a source of inspiration during the Second World War 274 Nelson has been frequently depicted in art and literature appearing in paintings by Benjamin West and Arthur William Devis and in books and biographies by John McArthur James Stanier Clarke and Robert Southey 275 Nelson is also celebrated and commemorated in numerous songs written both during his life and following his death Nelson s victory in the Battle of the Nile is commemorated in The Battle of the Nile a favourite patriotic song 276 Thomas Attwood s Nelson s Tomb A Favourite Song commemorates Nelson s death in the Battle of Trafalgar 277 In 1797 the famous composer Haydn wrote a mass to commemorate Nelson s stunning defeat over Napoleon and the French In 1800 Nelson visited Eisenstadt for four days and most certainly saw Haydn s new mass and in response he met and gave the elderly Haydn a watch he wore during the battle The city of Nelson in New Zealand is named after him 278 A number of monuments and memorials were constructed across the country and abroad to honour his memory and achievements Dublin s monument to Nelson Nelson s Pillar completed in 1809 was destroyed by Irish republicans in 1966 279 In Montreal a statue was started in 1808 and completed in 1809 280 In Great Yarmouth on the coast in his home county of Norfolk the Britannia Monument aka the Norfolk Naval Pillar to Nelson was erected in 1819 with dedications at the base to his four main naval victories Others followed around the world with London s Trafalgar Square being created in his memory in 1835 and the centrepiece Nelson s Column finished in 1843 281 A Royal Society of Arts blue plaque was unveiled in 1876 to commemorate Nelson at 147 New Bond Street 282 The architect of the Britannia Royal Naval College Dartmouth Sir Aston Webb placed a window high in the chapel such that annually on 21 October at the time of Nelson s death the light from it falls on the statue of Christ behind the altar 283 Nelson and his monuments are seen more critically in countries that felt the negative aspects of colonialism and who may seek to revise their public history Major public memorials in primary locations in some cities have been subject to protest and removal as conscious acts In 1966 the Nelson Pillar in Dublin was blown up by Irish Republicans a novelty folk song Up went Nelson topped the Irish pop charts in the wake of the explosion while a newspaper article marking the 55th anniversary noted For many the biggest surprise about the blowing up of Nelson s Pillar is why it took 157 years The resentment had run deep Almost fifty years after the 1916 Rising an Englishman still towered over every other notable in the city many groused 284 Across the Atlantic in the Caribbean in 2020 after years of campaigning the Nelson Statue in National Heroes Square Bridgetown Barbados was removed and placed in a museum It had stood since 1813 in a central public space of the capital known until 1999 as Trafalgar Square The Barbadian Prime Minister Mia Mottley said at the ceremony marking the statue s removal National Heroes Square must reflect our heroes And while we accept that the statue of the vice admiral Lord Horatio Nelson is an important historic relic it is not a relic to be placed in the National Heroes Square of a nation that has had to fight for too long to shape its destiny and to forge a positive future for its citizens 285 Titles EditNelson s titles as inscribed on his coffin and read out at the funeral by the Garter King at Arms Sir Isaac Heard were The Most Noble Lord Horatio Nelson Viscount and Baron Nelson of the Nile and of Burnham Thorpe in the County of Norfolk Baron Nelson of the Nile and of Hilborough in the said County Knight of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath Vice Admiral of the White Squadron of the Fleet Commander in Chief of his Majesty s Ships and Vessels in the Mediterranean Duke of Bronte in the Kingdom of Sicily Knight Grand Cross of the Sicilian Order of St Ferdinand and of Merit Member of the Ottoman Order of the Crescent Knight Grand Commander of the Order of Saint Joachim 286 Nelson received large Naval Gold Medals for the battles of St Vincent the Nile and posthumously Trafalgar one of very few recipients of three such medals 287 Nelson was granted a royal license in 1802 to receive and wear the foreign Order of Saint Joachim 288 He was a Colonel of Marines from 1795 to 1797 289 and voted a Freeman of the cities and boroughs of London 10 March 1797 Bath Salisbury Exeter 15 January 1801 290 Plymouth Monmouth Sandwich Oxford 22 July 1802 291 Hereford Haverfordwest in 1802 292 293 and Worcester 30 August 1802 294 295 The University of Oxford in full Congregation bestowed the honorary degree of Doctor of Civil Law upon Nelson on 30 July 1802 296 123 In 1799 Nelson was created Duke of Bronte Italian Duca di Bronte of the Kingdom of Sicily after 1816 existing in the nobility of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies by King Ferdinand III of Sicily and after briefly experimenting with the signature Bronte Nelson of the Nile he signed himself Nelson amp Bronte for the rest of his life 297 Nelson had no legitimate children his daughter Horatia married the Reverend Philip Ward with whom she had ten children before her death in 1881 298 Since Nelson died without legitimate issue his viscountcy and his barony created in 1798 both of the Nile and of Burnham Thorpe in the County of Norfolk became extinct upon his death 299 However the barony created in 1801 of the Nile and of Hilborough in the County of Norfolk passed by a special remainder which included Nelson s father and sisters and their male issue to William Nelson who was Nelson s older brother In November 1805 William Nelson was created Earl Nelson and Viscount Merton of Trafalgar and of Merton in the County of Surrey in recognition of his late brother s services and he also inherited the dukedom of Bronte 300 Armorial bearings Edit Paternal arms of Nelson Or a cross flory sable surmounted by a bendlet gules Augmented arms of Nelson Or a cross flory sable surmounted by a bend gules thereon another bend engrailed of the field charged with three hand grenades of the second fired proper a chief of augmentation wavy argent thereon waves of the sea from which issuant in the centre a palm tree between a disabled ship on the dexter and a battery in ruins on the sinister all proper 301 Deemed an example of debased heraldry 302 Contemporary drawing of Nelson s heraldic achievement before the Battle of Trafalgar 303 Arms were granted and confirmed on 20 October 1797 Nelson s paternal arms Or a cross flory sable over all a bendlet gules were augmented to honour his naval victories After the Battle of Cape St Vincent 14 February 1797 Nelson was created a Knight of the Bath and was granted heraldic supporters appropriate for peers of a sailor and a lion 304 In honour of the Battle of the Nile in 1798 the Crown granted him an augmentation of honour blazoned On a chief wavy argent a palm tree between a disabled ship and a ruinous battery all issuant from waves of the sea all proper deemed a notorious example of debased heraldry 302 the Latin motto Palmam qui meruit ferat let him who has earned it bear the palm and added to his supporters a palm branch in the hand of the sailor and in the paw of the lion and a tri colored flag and staff in the mouth of the latter 305 After Nelson s death his elder brother and heir William Nelson 1st Earl Nelson was granted a further augmentation On a fess wavy overall azure the word TRAFALGAR or 306 This additional augmentation was not used by those who succeeded him in the earldom including the present Earl Nelson 301 The Garter King of Arms wrote the following explanation of the arms to Nelson s wife In the Chief of the Arms a Palm Tree emblematic of Victory between a disabled Ship and a ruinous Battery form striking memorials of the glorious event of 1 August 1798 in the Bay of Aboukir near the Mouth of the Nile In the Crest the Chelengk a more minute description of which I had the pleasure of delivering to your Ladyship is an indication of the distinctions rendered to his Lordship s merits by the Grand Signior and the Naval Crown may bear a striking allusion to his Lordship s victory in those Seas where the Corona Navalis was first conferred by the Romans on persons who had eminently distinguished themselves in Naval combats The Palm Branch in the hand of the Sailor and in the paw of the Lion is a continuation of the emblem in the Chief of the Arms as well as allusive to the Motto Palmam qui meruit ferat let he who earns the palm bear it The tri coloured Flag of the subdued Enemy was added to and involved with the Colours in the mouth of the Lion which had been granted to his Lordship in commemoration of his distinguished gallantry and services on 14 February 1797 With regard to your Ladyship s question whether Lord Nelson is in consequence of the Royal Warrant precluded from the use of his Crest of the San Josef a ship he won in battle from the Spaniards I have no hesitation in giving my decided opinion that he may bear it with his new Crest at his own pleasure citation needed The herald Wilfrid Scott Giles d 1982 wrote a jocular verse describing the successive augmentations to the Nelson arms ending with the line But where alas is Nelson s ancient cross 307 See also EditBibliography of 18th 19th century Royal Naval history Nelson hold Turning a blind eyeNotes Edit Title in the nobility of Sicily The spelling of the name was widely varied and numerous versions exist even in current literature Variations include Hinchinbroke Hinchinbrooke Hinchingbroke Hinchingbrook and Hinchingbrooke The pressed copy in the British Library states cruel not cursed which Nelson artefacts specialist Martyn Downer argues alters the author s intended meaning significantly Biographer Roger Knight disputes the veracity of this story calling it a myth 202 Historian Nicholas A M Rodger disputes this claim calling it a myth and saying that Nelson was wearing an old uniform coat with inconspicuous cloth replicas of his decorations There is no evidence that he deliberately sought or recklessly courted death though he was certainly well enough aware of the risks of action 242 References Edit Sugden 2004 p 36 Pettigrew 1849 p 1 a b Britannica 11th edition p 352 Nelson the man Royal Museums Greenwich Rmg co uk Retrieved 6 May 2022 a b Hibbert 1994 p 394 Nelson or about Horatio Horatio Nelson Wikiquote en wikiquote org Retrieved 8 September 2022 Nicolas The Despatches and Letters of Lord Nelson Vol I p 18 Sugden 2004 p 56 Hibbert 1994 p 13 Joining the Royal Navy Nelson Trafalgar and those who served National Archives Retrieved 28 July 2015 a b Pettigrew 1849 p 4 Sugden 2004 p 75 Sugden 2004 p 81 Sugden 2004 p 464 Sugden 2004 pp 92 93 Sugden 2004 pp 95 97 Sugden 2004 p 103 No 11550 The London Gazette 4 April 1775 p 2 Sugden 2004 p 106 Sugden 2004 pp 109 111 Sugden 2004 p 113 Sugden 2004 p 126 White 2006 p 87 Nelson Nelson The New Letters 2008 p 166 Sugden 2004 p 128 Sugden 2004 p 131 Sugden 2004 p 135 Goodwin 2002 p 81 Sugden 2004 p 143 Sugden 2004 p 145 Sugden 2004 p 147 Oman 1987 p 30 Sugden 2004 p 163 Cite error The named reference Sudgen was invoked but never defined see the help page Report from Colonel Polson on the capture of the fort at San Juan No 12101 The London Gazette 18 July 1780 p 3 Sugden 2004 p 168 White Colin 2002 The Nelson Encyclopedia Royal Naval Museum Stackpole Books p 106 ISBN 978 0811700139 a b Coleman Terry 2004 The Nelson Touch The Life and Legend of Horatio Nelson Oxford University Press USA ISBN 978 0199924059 Hill Richard 1855 A week at Port Royal Cornwall Chronicle Office pp 2 5 Retrieved 4 October 2010 Robinson Jane 2019 Mary Seacole The Charismatic Black Nurse Who Became a Heroine of the Crimea Little Brown Book Group ISBN 978 1472144904 Sugden 2004 p 182 Sugden 2004 p 187 Grindal 2016 p 14 Petley Christer 2018 Reflections on Nelson s dark side University of Southampton Slavery and Revolution project Cobbett s weekly political register Volume 11 January to June London R Bagshaw 1807 pp 295 296 1 letter of 10 June 1805 see Dane 1942 p 261 Note that the more disputed material from this letter has been edited out of this wartime volume The Nelson Dispatch Journal of the Nelson Society vol 3 pt 12 Autumn 2020 pp 724 743 Olusoga David 2016 Black and British A Forgotten History Chapter Introduction Macmillan 2016 ISBN 978 1447299745 a b Downer Martyn 2017 Nelson s Lost Jewel The Extraordinary Story of the Lost Diamond Chelengk p 77 a b Nicolas The Despatches and Letters of Lord Nelson Vol 3 p 231 Sugden 2013 p 684 Nicolas The Despatches and Letters of Lord Nelson Vol 6 p 412 Pettigrew 1849 vol 2 p 81 Sugden 2004 p 190 Sugden 2004 p 195 Sugden 2004 p 197 Sugden 2004 p 202 Sugden 2004 pp 204 205 Sugden 2004 p 206 Sugden 2004 p 209 Sugden 2004 p 215 Sugden 2004 p 219 Sugden 2004 p 220 Sugden 2004 pp 222 223 Sugden 2004 p 224 Sugden 2004 p 225 Sugden 2004 p 227 Sugden 2004 pp 241 243 Sugden 2004 p 243 Sugden 2004 Sugden 2004 p 265 Sugden 2004 p 292 Coleman 2001 p 67 Sugden 2004 p 307 Williams Kate 2009 England s Mistress The Infamous Life of Emma Hamilton Large Print ed BBC Audiobooks Ltd by arr with Random House ISBN 978 1408430781 Sugden 2004 p 351 Sugden 2004 p 366 Sugden 2004 p 371 Sugden 2004 pp 378 380 Sugden 2004 p 397 Sugden 2004 p 412 Sugden 2004 p 422 Sugden 2004 p 427 Sugden 2004 p 429 Sugden 2004 p 431 Sugden 2004 p 434 Sugden 2004 p 437 Sugden 2004 p 444 Sugden 2004 pp 445 446 a b Sugden 2004 pp 446 447 a b Sugden 2004 pp 452 453 a b Sugden 2004 p 455 Sugden 2004 p 461 Sugden 2004 p 471 Sugden 2004 p 487 Sugden 2004 p 493 Oman 1987 p 127 Sugden 2004 pp 509 510 Sugden 2004 pp 513 514 Sugden 2004 p 522 Sugden 2004 p 533 Sugden 2004 p 537 Sugden 2004 p 546 Sugden 2004 p 550 a b Sugden 2004 p 556 Sugden 2004 p 574 Sugden 2004 p 579 Sugden 2004 p 584 Sugden 2004 p 588 Sugden 2004 p 594 a b Sugden 2004 p 603 Sugden 2004 p 641 Sugden 2004 p 647 Sugden 2004 p 683 Sugden 2004 pp 21 22 Sugden 2004 p 685 Oman 1987 p 174 a b c Coleman 2001 p 126 a b c Coleman 2001 p 128 a b c Coleman 2001 p 127 Report of the battle from Jervis No 13987 The London Gazette 3 March 1797 pp 211 213 Coleman 2001 p 120 a b The Complete Peerage Volume IX St Catherine Press 1936 p 463 Edited by H A Doubleday and Lord Howard de Walden Coleman 2001 p 130 No 14012 The London Gazette 23 May 1797 p 474 Coleman 2001 p 131 a b Hibbert 1994 p 118 Reports of the attack from Jervis and Nelson No 14032 The London Gazette 1 August 1797 pp 716 717 Coleman 2001 pp 133 134 Hibbert 1994 p 121 a b c Hibbert 1994 p 122 2 Ellis Harold 1996 Operations that Made History London Greenwich Medical Media p 88 ISBN 978 1900151153 Hibbert 1994 p 123 p 251 Nelson Neurology Clinics 1998 16 4 919 935 a b Bradford 2005 p 160 Reports of the battle from Earl St Vincent and Nelson No 14041 The London Gazette 2 September 1797 pp 835 836 Bradford 2005 p 162 a b Bradford 2005 p 164 a b Bradford 2005 p 166 a b Bradford 2005 p 167 Bradford 2005 p 168 Bradford 2005 p 172 Lavery 2003 pp 65 66 Lavery 2003 p 101 Bradford 2005 pp 176 177 Bradford 2005 pp 188 189 Bradford 2005 p 192 Bradford 2005 pp 193 194 Bradford 2005 p 196 Oman 1987 p 252 Bradford 2005 p 198 Bradford 2005 p 200 a b Bradford 2005 p 203 Bradford 2005 p 205 Hibbert 1994 p 142 Bradford 2005 p 209 Reports of the battle from Nelson No 15065 The London Gazette 2 October 1798 pp 915 917 Bradford 2005 p 209 Bradford describes it as the most complete victory ever recorded in naval history Hibbert 1994 p 147 Hibbert 1994 p 153 Hibbert 1994 p 156 a b c d e f g h i j Rodger N A M 23 September 2004 Nelson Horatio Viscount Nelson 1758 1805 naval officer Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Vol 21 online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 19877 ISBN 978 0 19 861412 8 Retrieved 27 August 2021 via Oxford University Press Subscription or UK public library membership required Hibbert 1994 p 159 No 15067 The London Gazette 6 October 1798 p 931 a b Hibbert 1994 p 160 a b Hibbert 1994 p 162 a b Hibbert 1994 p 165 Hibbert 1994 p 170 Hibbert 1994 p 178 No 15107 The London Gazette 16 February 1799 pp 146 147 Hibbert 1994 p 181 a b North Jonathan 2018 Nelson at Naples Stroud Amberley p 304 ISBN 978 1445679372 Hibbert 1994 p 184 Hibbert 1994 p 186 Hibbert 1994 p 187 Hibbert 1994 p 190 Hibbert 1994 p 193 Hibbert 1994 p 194 Castello Di Nelson Sicilia Maniace icastelli it Hibbert 1994 p 197 Hibbert 1994 p 203 Bradford p 250 Hibbert 1994 p 207 Hibbert 1994 p 204 Hibbert 1994 p 205 Hibbert 1994 p 211 Hibbert 1994 p 212 Hibbert 1994 p 216 Hibbert 1994 p 224 a b Hibbert 1994 p 230 a b Hibbert 1994 p 235 Hibbert 1994 p 237 No 15324 The London Gazette 30 December 1800 pp 8 9 Hibbert 1994 p 242 Hibbert 1994 p 246 Hibbert 1994 p 254 Hibbert 1994 p 256 Hibbert 1994 p 260 a b Hibbert 1994 p 261 Knight 2005 p 497 Pocock 1987 p 237 Hibbert 1994 p 263 Hibbert 1994 p 264 Report of the battle from Nelson No 15354 The London Gazette 19 April 1801 pp 402 404 Hibbert 1994 p 265 Hibbert 1994 p 268 No 15366 The London Gazette 19 May 1801 p 549 No 15393 The London Gazette 4 August 1801 p 948 David Beamish List of Peerages Retrieved 2 June 2011 Hibbert 1994 p 272 Hibbert 1994 p 279 a b Hibbert 1994 p 281 Hibbert 1994 p 298 Hibbert Christopher Nelson A Personal History Viking 1994 ISBN 0670843423 Coleman 2001 p 298 Hibbert 1994 p 323 Gurney William Brodie Gurney Joseph 1803 The Trial of Edward Marcus Despard Esquire For High Treason at the Session House Newington Surrey On Monday the Seventh of February 1803 London M Gurney p 176 Agnew David 1886 Book First Chapter 10 Section VIII Protestant exiles from France chiefly in the reign of Louis XIV or The Huguenot refugees and their descendants in Great Britain and Ireland Volume 1 Third ed For Private Circulation p 204 Retrieved 11 November 2020 Jay Mike 2004 The Unfortunate Colonel Despard London Bantam Press p 301 ISBN 0593051955 Gillis Bernadette August 2014 A Caribbean Coupling Beyond Black and White The Interracial Marriage of Catherine and Edward Marcus Despard and its Implications for British Views on Race Class and Gender during the Age of Reform PDF Durham North Carolina Graduate School of Duke University pp 51 52 Retrieved 12 November 2020 Hibbert 1994 p 326 No 15695 The London Gazette 23 April 1804 p 495 a b Hibbert 1994 p 336 Hibbert 1994 p 337 Hibbert 1994 p 338 a b Hibbert 1994 p 339 Hibbert 1994 p 350 a b Hibbert 1994 p 351 Knight Roger 2005 The Pursuit of Victory The Life and Achievement of Horatio Nelson Basic Books p 497 ISBN 978 0465037643 Nicolas The Despatches and Letters of Lord Nelson Vol VII p 35 idem p 36 Tom Pocock Horatio Nelson p 316 Hibbert 1994 p 356 Southey 1922 The Life of Nelson 1922 edition p 296 a b c Hibbert 1994 p 362 Hibbert 1994 p 360 a b Adkin 2007 p 411 Hibbert 1994 p 363 a b Hibbert 1994 p 365 a b Hibbert 1994 p 366 Rodger 2004 a b Hibbert 1994 p 368 a b c d Hibbert 1994 p 370 Hibbert 1994 p 371 a b Hibbert 1994 p 372 a b c d e Hibbert 1994 p 376 Hayward 2003 p 63 a b Hibbert 1994 p 378 Hibbert 1994 p 379 a b Hibbert 1994 p 381 a b Hibbert 1994 p 382 Hibbert Christopher Nelson A Personal History 1994 p 382 Memorials of St Paul s Cathedral Sinclair W p 453 London Chapman amp Hall Ltd 1909 The Archaeological Journal Volume 51 1894 p 160 Lambert 2005 p 316 a b Lambert 2004 pp 107 108 Lambert 2004 xvii Hawley Samuel 2005 The Imjin War Japan s Sixteenth Century Invasion of Korea and Attempt to Conquer Chin Conquistador Press p 490 ISBN 978 8995442425 Nelson s Trafalgar Memorandum www bl uk Lambert 2004 p 44 Lambert 2004 p 64 Warner Oliver 1976 Command at sea great fighting admirals from Hawke to Nimitz New York St Martin s Press p 110 Internet Archive website Retrieved 19 July 2019 Lambert 2004 pp 52 53 a b Lambert 2004 p 4 Lambert 2004 p 151 Lee 2005 pp 3 4 Churchill voted greatest Briton bbc co uk 24 November 2002 Oman 1987 pp 571 572 Coleman 2001 p 228 a b Lambert 2004 pp 365 366 Lambert 2004 p 340 Lambert 2004 p 346 Lambert 2004 p 354 Lambert 2004 p 323 Fielding J W The Battle of the Nile a Favorite Patriotic Song New York Printed amp sold at J Hewitt s Musical Repository No 59 Maiden Lane 1804 Attwood Thomas and Thomas Cory Nelson s Tomb a Favourite Song Sung by Mr Incledon London Printed amp sold by Goulding amp Company 117 New Bond St amp Westmorland St Dublin History of Nelson New Zealand Nelsonweb 6 October 2011 Retrieved 22 January 2023 Lambert 2004 p 327 The Nelson Monument in Montreal 1808 Retrieved 7 October 2014 Lambert 2004 p 328 Nelson Horatio Lord Nelson 1758 1805 English Heritage Retrieved 23 October 2012 Battle of Trafalgar Once a year light on Nelson s death with video BBC News Devon 22 October 2021 Blowing up Nelson s Pillar and the fate of Nelson s head Barbados removes Nelson statue from National Heroes Square The Naval Chronicle p 233 Joslin Litherland and Simpkin pp 40 41 46 Page 745 Issue 15497 13 July 1802 London Gazette The Gazette www thegazette co uk Retrieved 30 July 2022 The Complete Peerage Volume IX St Catherine Press 1936 p 462 Edited by H A Doubleday and Lord Howard de Walden Admiral Nelson is given the Freedom of the City Exeter Memories Retrieved 17 October 2021 Freedom of the City Oxford City Council 31 August 2022 Retrieved 31 August 2022 Town finds lost Nelson scroll in its safe Wales Online 31 March 2013 Retrieved 28 March 2020 House where Nelson given Haverfordwest honour for sale BBC News 22 June 2010 Retrieved 28 March 2020 Pettigrew 1849 p 96 Worcester City Freemen Worcestershire County Council 31 August 2022 Retrieved 31 August 2022 Lambert 2004 p 237 Coleman 2001 p 353 Oman 1987 p 571 Haydn 1851 p 550 Lambert 2004 p 312 a b Montague Smith P W ed Debrett s Peerage Baronetage Knightage and Companionage Kelly s Directories Ltd Kingston upon Thames 1968 p 822 Earl Nelson a b George Thomas Clark 1809 1898 article on heraldry in the Encyclopaedia Britannica 9th amp 10th editions 3 The Heraldry Society 2 April 2015 Horatio Viscount Nelson The Heraldry Society Retrieved 2 April 2015 Adkin 2007 p 550 Harrison James 2007 1806 The Life of the Right Honourable Horatio Lord Viscount Nelson Vol 1 BiblioBazaar LLC p 266 ISBN 978 1 4346 0663 1 Foster Joseph 1882 The Peerage Baronetage and Knightage of the British Empire for 1882 with the Orders of Knighthood Westminster Nichols and Sons p 494 Full text see file description in File AugmentedArms Admiral HoratioNelson svgBibliography EditAdkin Mark 2007 The Trafalgar Companion A Guide to History s Most Famous Sea Battle and the Life of Admiral Lord Nelson London Aurum Press ISBN 978 1 84513 018 3 Bradford Ernle 2005 Nelson The Essential Hero Wordsworth Military Library ISBN 1 84022 202 6 Bryant Arthur 1970 Nelson London Collins Coleman Terry 2001 Nelson The man and the legend Bloomsbury ISBN 0 7475 5900 7 Dane Clemence 1942 The Nelson Touch An Anthology of Lord Nelson s Letters London Heinemann Goodwin Peter 2002 Nelson s Ships A History Of The Vessels In Which He Served 1771 1805 London Conway Maritime Press ISBN 0 8117 1007 6 Grindal Peter 2016 Opposing the Slavers The Royal Navy s Campaign against the Atlantic Slave Trade London I B Tauris amp Co ISBN 978 1 78831 286 8 Haydn Joseph 1851 The Book of Dignities Longmans Brown Green and Longmans Hayward Joel S A 2003 For God and Glory Lord Nelson and His Way of War ISBN 1 59114 351 9 Hibbert Christopher 1994 Nelson A Personal History Basic Books ISBN 0 201 40800 7 Howarth David 1969 Trafalgar The Nelson Touch London Collins Howarth David amp Stephen 1988 Nelson The Immortal Memory London J M Dent amp Sons Joslin E C Litherland E C Simpkin B T 1988 British Battles and Medals Spink ISBN 0907605257 Knight Roger 2005 The Pursuit of Victory The Life and Achievement of Horatio Nelson New York Basic Books ISBN 0 465 03764 X Lambert Andrew 2004 Nelson Britannia s God of War London Faber and Faber ISBN 0 571 21222 0 Lavery Brian 2003 Nelson and the Nile London Caxton Editions ISBN 1 84067 5225 Lee Christopher 2005 Nelson and Napoleon The Long Haul to Trafalgar headline books p 560 ISBN 0 7553 1041 1 Naish George P B 1958 Nelson s Letters to his Wife and other documents 1785 1831 London Navy Records Society Nelson Horatio Lord Viscount The Dispatches and Letters of Vice Admiral Lord Viscount Nelson With Notes by Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas G C M G The First Volume 1777 to August 1794 Henry Colburn London 1844 Nelson Horatio Lord Viscount The Dispatches and Letters of Vice Admiral Lord Viscount Nelson With Notes by Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas G C M G The Third Volume January 1798 to August 1799 Henry Colburn London 1845 Oman Carola 1987 Nelson London Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 0 340 40672 0 Pettigrew Thomas 1849 Memoirs of the Life of Vice Admiral Lord Viscount Nelson K B Duke of Bronte London T amp W Boone Pocock Tom 1987 Horatio Nelson London The Bodley Head ISBN 0 370 31124 8 Sugden John 2004 Nelson A Dream of Glory London Jonathan Cape ISBN 0 224 06097 X Sugden John 2013 Nelson The Sword of Albion New York Henry Holt and Co ISBN 978 080507807 7 von Pivka Otto 1980 Navies of the Napoleonic Era Hippocrene Books ISBN 0 88254 505 1 Warner Oliver 1958 A Portrait of Lord Nelson London Chatto amp Windus White Colin 2005 Nelson The New Letters Boydell Press ISBN 1 84383 130 9 Wilkinson Clennell 1931 Nelson London George G Harrap Further reading EditBeatty William 1807 The Death of Lord Nelson ISBN 0 9551394 4 9 Callender Sir Geoffrey 1912 The Life of Nelson Longmans Coleman Terry 2004 The Nelson Touch The Life and Legend Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 517322 8 Mahan Captain A T 1897 The Life of Nelson The Embodiment of the Sea Power of Great Britain Little Brown amp Co Pocock Tom 1980 The Young Nelson in the Americas Collins Rodger N A M 2004 The Command of the Ocean A Naval History of Britain 1649 1815 Allen Lane Southey Robert 1896 The Life of Nelson Longmans Green and Company 302 pages E book Vincent Edgar 2003 Nelson Love amp Fame Basic Books ISBN 0 300 10260 7 Warner Oliver 1959 Trafalgar B T Batsford Worrall Simon 2005 Battle of Trafalgar Admiral Lord Nelson s Fatal Victory National Geographic 208 4 Yonge Charles Duke 1863 The History of the British Navy Volumes I amp II Richard Bentley London Vol I 716 pages Vol II 809 pages E book v1 E book v2 The Naval Chronicle Volume 3 J Gold 1800 reissued by Cambridge University Press 2010 ISBN 978 1 108 01842 5 The Naval Chronicle Volume 6 J Gold 1806 reissued by Cambridge University Press 2010 ISBN 978 1 108 01854 8 External links EditHoratio Nelson 1st Viscount Nelson at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Data from Wikidata Hansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by the Viscount Nelson Works by Horatio Nelson 1st Viscount Nelson at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Horatio Nelson 1st Viscount Nelson at Internet Archive Works by Horatio Nelson 1st Viscount Nelson at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Collections related to Nelson held by the National Maritime Museum The Nelson Society Norfolk Nelson Museum Original Letters Written by Horatio Nelson Archived 25 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine Shapell Manuscript Foundation An essay on Nelson in The Oxonian Review of Books Nelson history Review of A T Mahan s biography Archived 4 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Military officesPreceded byViscount Keith Commander in Chief Mediterranean Fleet1803 1805 Succeeded byLord CollingwoodPeerage of the United KingdomNew title Baron Nelson of the Nile and of Hillborough 1801 1805 Succeeded byWilliam NelsonTitles of nobilityNew creation Duke of Bronte in the Kingdom of Sicily 1799 1805 Succeeded byWilliam Nelson Portals United Kingdom France War Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Horatio Nelson 1st Viscount Nelson amp oldid 1145231243, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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