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Humphrey Fleming Senhouse

Captain Sir Humphrey Fleming Senhouse[a] KCH CB (29 June 1781 – 13 June 1841) was a British Royal Navy officer. He served in the Napoleonic Wars, War of 1812, and First Anglo-Chinese War. In China, he was the senior naval officer of the British fleet from 31 March 1841 until his death on board his flagship, HMS Blenheim, in Hong Kong from fever contracted during the capture of Canton.

Sir Humphrey Fleming Senhouse
Born29 June 1781
Barbados
Died13 June 1841 (aged 59)
Hong Kong
Buried
AllegianceUnited Kingdom
Service/branchRoyal Navy
Years of service1797–1841
RankCaptain
WarsNapoleonic Wars
War of 1812
First Anglo-Chinese War
AwardsKCH (1832)
Kt (1834)
CB (1841)

Early life edit

Senhouse was born on 29 June 1781 in Barbados,[1] where he was baptised on 23 August 1781 in the Parish of Saint Philip.[2][3] He was the third son of William Senhouse (1741–1800) by the same's wife Elizabeth Ward Wood. William, who was a lieutenant in the Royal Navy, was Surveyor-General of Barbados and of the British Leeward Islands. Elizabeth was the daughter of Samson Wood, who was the Speaker of the Barbados Assembly. Senhouse's grandfather, who was also named Humphrey Senhouse, of Netherhall, Cumberland, married Mary, who was the daughter of Sir George Fleming, 2nd Baronet, Bishop of Carlisle.[3][4]

Senhouse joined the Royal Navy in January 1797 on HMS Prince of Wales, which was the flagship of Rear-Admiral Henry Harvey in the West Indies Station. Senhouse in November 1797 moved to the brig Requin, in which he arrived in England for the first time in 1799. Senhouse from March 1800 to April 1802 served in HMS Fisgard under Captains Thomas Byam Martin and Michael Seymour.[3]

Mediterranean and North America edit

On 7 April 1802, Senhouse passed the examination for promotion to lieutenant, and was attached to HMS Galgo two days later. In May 1803, he was appointed to HMS Conqueror with Captain Thomas Louis. With Israel Pellew, who relieved Louis in April 1804, Senhouse served in the Mediterranean, West Indies, and in the Battle of Trafalgar, until January 1806. He again went to the West Indies on board HMS Elephant, and was put on board the flagship of HMS Northumberland under Sir Alexander Cochrane. In September 1806, he was appointed to command HMS Express on the Spanish Main and Leeward Islands until March 1808, when he joined HMS Belleisle as a flag-lieutenant to Cochrane, who sent him home with despatches in July 1808 in HMS Subtle.[3]

On 26 January 1809, Senhouse rejoined Cochrane, now in command of HMS Neptune.[3] After assisting in the debarkation of troops in the invasion of Martinique, he was promoted on 7 March to HMS Wolverine, which he commanded in the West Indies until the following December. There, he also commanded HMS Ringdove and HMS Superieure. He was promoted to commander on 2 June. From 1810 to 1812, Senhouse commanded HMS Recruit at Gibraltar, Newfoundland, and the Halifax Station. He then commanded the 18-gun sloop HMS Martin from 1812 to 1814 in the Halifax Station.[3][5]

In the War of 1812 against the United States, he defended the Martin, aground in Delaware Bay, against a flotilla of eight gunboats and two blockships on 29 July 1813. He made prize of the 6-gun privateer Snap Dragon containing 80 men, assisted in the capture of Moose Island, and was sent home with despatches by Cochrane, announcing the success of the expedition in Castine, Maine.[5] He was promoted to post-captain on 12 October 1814, and from April to September 1815, commanded HMS Superb on the coast of France as flag-captain to Sir Henry Hotham.[3] From 25 February 1831 to 1834, he served in HMS St Vincent, most of the time as flag-captain to Vice-Admiral Hotham, commander-in-chief of the Mediterranean Station.[5] King William IV told Hotham at Windsor:

Sir Henry, you are most fortunate in having one of the cleverest fellows of the navy for your Captain. [...] Yes, I am sure I need not tell you so; he must be not only a clever man, but most zealous in his profession; few like him would have employed the leisure the peace has given him in gaining the information he has; there was not a question I asked him that he could not give me a ready and satisfactory reply. [...] You are lucky in having him.[6]

In July 1831, British warships in the Mediterranean observed smoke caused by the emergence of a volcanic island between Pantelleria and Malta. After being detached in the cutter Hind to ascertain its exact position, Senhouse landed on the island on 3 August, where he planted the Union Jack and named it Graham Island.[7] He was nominated a Knight Commander of the Hanoverian Guelphic Order on 13 April 1832,[3] and made a Knight Bachelor on 5 June 1834.[8]

China edit

 
Tomb of Senhouse in Macao (published 1844)

On 9 April 1839, Senhouse commissioned HMS Blenheim. He was sent from England to fill the office of second-in-command of British naval forces in China, where he served in the First Anglo-Chinese War.[6] Commodore Gordon Bremer, commander-in-chief of British forces, entrusted the attack on Anunghoy Island to Senhouse in the capture of the Bogue forts on 26 February 1841. After the Blenheim fired broadsides from starboard at the island's fort, Senhouse landed with about 300 marines and seamen to clear the few remaining defenders.[9][10] On 31 March, Bremer sailed to Calcutta in the steamer Queen to confer with Lord Auckland about the state of affairs and request reinforcements, leaving Senhouse in command of the naval forces.[11]

On 13 June 1841, Senhouse died on board the Blenheim in Hong Kong from fever contracted during the operations in Canton in May 1841. As the next senior naval officer, Captain Thomas Herbert took over command of the ship and fleet.[12][13] Duncan MacPherson of the Madras Army wrote, "On the morning of the 13th of June, when it was announced to him [Senhouse] that all hopes of saving his life was at an end, he immediately directed that the signal be made for all captains of H. M.'s ships to repair on board; but ere the first had arrived, our gallant commodore was a corpse."[14]

Before he died, he wished to be interred in Macao because of uncertainty about Hong Kong's future as a British settlement. The steamship Nemesis arrived with his body in Macao on 16 June. The next morning, a funeral procession began from Captain Charles Elliot's house. Major-General Hugh Gough, Captain Herbert, Deputy Superintendent of Trade Alexander Johnston, at least 70 military officers, and nearly all the British and foreign residents were in attendance. Also present was the Portuguese governor of Macau, his band who played the funeral march, and a contingent of Portuguese troops who fired three volleys over his grave at the Old Protestant Cemetery.[2][13]

On 29 June, Senhouse was nominated a Companion of the Most Honourable Military Order of the Bath.[6] A bell that he captured in the Bogue forts was sent to England by Captain John Charles Pitman in HMS Druid. It was donated to St Mary's Church in Gosforth by Senhouse's widow in 1844.[15] Mount Stenhouse on Lamma Island is almost certainly named for him, but has acquired a misspelling over time.

Family edit

 
Memorial in Gosforth church

In 1810, Senhouse married Elizabeth, daughter of Vice-Admiral John Manley.[3] She died on 1 March 1865, aged 81.[16] They had two daughters:[3]

  • Elizabeth Manley Fleming Senhouse, who at Gosforth on 5 October 1843[17] married Captain Pitman, who had served as Senhouse's aide-de-camp in China.[18]
  • Rose Mary Fleming Senhouse (d. at Gosforth 11 January 1903, aged 74)[19][20]

Senhouse purchased the manor of Seascale in 1834.[21] He built the mansion Seascale (later named Steelfield) in Gosforth.[22]

References edit

Footnotes
  1. ^ Sometimes written as Humphrey Le Fleming Senhouse.
Citations
  1. ^ Barbados, Church Records, 1637-1849
  2. ^ a b Ride, Lindsay; Ride, May (1996). An East India Company Cemetery: Protestant Burials in Macao. Hong Kong University Press. pp. 220–222. ISBN 962-209-384-1.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Lee, Sidney, ed. (1897). "Senhouse, Humphrey Fleming" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 51. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 244–245.
  4. ^ Burke, J. Bernard (1852). A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain & Ireland for 1852. Volume 2. London: Colburn & Co. p. 1211.
  5. ^ a b c O'Byrne, William R. (1849). "Senhouse, Edward Hooper § note-1" . A Naval Biographical Dictionary. London: John Murray. p. 1050.
  6. ^ a b c Urban, Sylvanus (1841). The Gentleman's Magazine. Volume 16. London: William Pickering. pp. 654–656.
  7. ^ "Account of the Volcanic Island". The Journal of the Royal Geographical Society of London. Volume 1. London: John Murray. 1832. pp. 258, 261.
  8. ^ Shaw, William A. (1906). The Knights of England. Volume 2. London: Sherratt and Hughes. p. 335.
  9. ^ "No. 19984". The London Gazette. 3 June 1841. p. 1425.
  10. ^ Bingham, John Elliot (1843). Narrative of the Expedition to China from the Commencement of the War to Its Termination in 1842 (2nd ed.). Volume 2. London: Henry Colburn. p. 60.
  11. ^ Bernard, W. D.; Hall, W. H. (1847). The Nemesis in China (3rd ed.). London: Henry Colburn. p. 159.
  12. ^ The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Register for British and Foreign India, China, and Australasia. Volume 36. London: Wm. H. Allen & Co. 1841. p. 208.
  13. ^ a b The Nautical Magazine and Naval Chronicle, for 1841. London: Simpkin, Marshall, & Co. pp. 858–859.
  14. ^ MacPherson, Duncan (1843). The War in China (3rd ed.). London: Saunders and Otley. p. 167.
  15. ^ Parker, C. A.; Collingwood, W. G. (1926). The Gosforth District: Its Antiquities and Places of Interest. Extra Series. Volume 15. Kendal: Titus Wilson & Son. p. 60.
  16. ^ Urban, Sylvanus (1865). The Gentleman's Magazine. New Series. Volume 18. London: John Henry and James Parker. p. 530.
  17. ^ Urban, Sylvanus (1843). The Gentleman's Magazine. Volume 20. London: William Pickering. p. 647.
  18. ^ O'Byrne, William R. (1849). "Pitman, John Charles" . A Naval Biographical Dictionary. London: John Murray. p. 909.
  19. ^ "In Memoriam". Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society. Series 2. Volume 3. 1903. p. 421.
  20. ^ "Deaths". The Times. No. 36977. London. 14 January 1903. p. 1.
  21. ^ Transactions of the Cumberland & Westmorland Antiquarian & Archaeological Society. Volume 12. Part 2. 1893. p. 260.
  22. ^ Parker & Collingwood 1926, p. 34

humphrey, fleming, senhouse, captain, june, 1781, june, 1841, british, royal, navy, officer, served, napoleonic, wars, 1812, first, anglo, chinese, china, senior, naval, officer, british, fleet, from, march, 1841, until, death, board, flagship, blenheim, hong,. Captain Sir Humphrey Fleming Senhouse a KCH CB 29 June 1781 13 June 1841 was a British Royal Navy officer He served in the Napoleonic Wars War of 1812 and First Anglo Chinese War In China he was the senior naval officer of the British fleet from 31 March 1841 until his death on board his flagship HMS Blenheim in Hong Kong from fever contracted during the capture of Canton Sir Humphrey Fleming SenhouseBorn29 June 1781BarbadosDied13 June 1841 aged 59 Hong KongBuriedOld Protestant Cemetery MacaoAllegianceUnited KingdomService wbr branchRoyal NavyYears of service1797 1841RankCaptainWarsNapoleonic WarsWar of 1812First Anglo Chinese WarAwardsKCH 1832 Kt 1834 CB 1841 Contents 1 Early life 2 Mediterranean and North America 3 China 4 Family 5 ReferencesEarly life editSenhouse was born on 29 June 1781 in Barbados 1 where he was baptised on 23 August 1781 in the Parish of Saint Philip 2 3 He was the third son of William Senhouse 1741 1800 by the same s wife Elizabeth Ward Wood William who was a lieutenant in the Royal Navy was Surveyor General of Barbados and of the British Leeward Islands Elizabeth was the daughter of Samson Wood who was the Speaker of the Barbados Assembly Senhouse s grandfather who was also named Humphrey Senhouse of Netherhall Cumberland married Mary who was the daughter of Sir George Fleming 2nd Baronet Bishop of Carlisle 3 4 Senhouse joined the Royal Navy in January 1797 on HMS Prince of Wales which was the flagship of Rear Admiral Henry Harvey in the West Indies Station Senhouse in November 1797 moved to the brig Requin in which he arrived in England for the first time in 1799 Senhouse from March 1800 to April 1802 served in HMS Fisgard under Captains Thomas Byam Martin and Michael Seymour 3 Mediterranean and North America editOn 7 April 1802 Senhouse passed the examination for promotion to lieutenant and was attached to HMS Galgo two days later In May 1803 he was appointed to HMS Conqueror with Captain Thomas Louis With Israel Pellew who relieved Louis in April 1804 Senhouse served in the Mediterranean West Indies and in the Battle of Trafalgar until January 1806 He again went to the West Indies on board HMS Elephant and was put on board the flagship of HMS Northumberland under Sir Alexander Cochrane In September 1806 he was appointed to command HMS Express on the Spanish Main and Leeward Islands until March 1808 when he joined HMS Belleisle as a flag lieutenant to Cochrane who sent him home with despatches in July 1808 in HMS Subtle 3 On 26 January 1809 Senhouse rejoined Cochrane now in command of HMS Neptune 3 After assisting in the debarkation of troops in the invasion of Martinique he was promoted on 7 March to HMS Wolverine which he commanded in the West Indies until the following December There he also commanded HMS Ringdove and HMS Superieure He was promoted to commander on 2 June From 1810 to 1812 Senhouse commanded HMS Recruit at Gibraltar Newfoundland and the Halifax Station He then commanded the 18 gun sloop HMS Martin from 1812 to 1814 in the Halifax Station 3 5 In the War of 1812 against the United States he defended the Martin aground in Delaware Bay against a flotilla of eight gunboats and two blockships on 29 July 1813 He made prize of the 6 gun privateer Snap Dragon containing 80 men assisted in the capture of Moose Island and was sent home with despatches by Cochrane announcing the success of the expedition in Castine Maine 5 He was promoted to post captain on 12 October 1814 and from April to September 1815 commanded HMS Superb on the coast of France as flag captain to Sir Henry Hotham 3 From 25 February 1831 to 1834 he served in HMS St Vincent most of the time as flag captain to Vice Admiral Hotham commander in chief of the Mediterranean Station 5 King William IV told Hotham at Windsor Sir Henry you are most fortunate in having one of the cleverest fellows of the navy for your Captain Yes I am sure I need not tell you so he must be not only a clever man but most zealous in his profession few like him would have employed the leisure the peace has given him in gaining the information he has there was not a question I asked him that he could not give me a ready and satisfactory reply You are lucky in having him 6 In July 1831 British warships in the Mediterranean observed smoke caused by the emergence of a volcanic island between Pantelleria and Malta After being detached in the cutter Hind to ascertain its exact position Senhouse landed on the island on 3 August where he planted the Union Jack and named it Graham Island 7 He was nominated a Knight Commander of the Hanoverian Guelphic Order on 13 April 1832 3 and made a Knight Bachelor on 5 June 1834 8 China edit nbsp Tomb of Senhouse in Macao published 1844 On 9 April 1839 Senhouse commissioned HMS Blenheim He was sent from England to fill the office of second in command of British naval forces in China where he served in the First Anglo Chinese War 6 Commodore Gordon Bremer commander in chief of British forces entrusted the attack on Anunghoy Island to Senhouse in the capture of the Bogue forts on 26 February 1841 After the Blenheim fired broadsides from starboard at the island s fort Senhouse landed with about 300 marines and seamen to clear the few remaining defenders 9 10 On 31 March Bremer sailed to Calcutta in the steamer Queen to confer with Lord Auckland about the state of affairs and request reinforcements leaving Senhouse in command of the naval forces 11 On 13 June 1841 Senhouse died on board the Blenheim in Hong Kong from fever contracted during the operations in Canton in May 1841 As the next senior naval officer Captain Thomas Herbert took over command of the ship and fleet 12 13 Duncan MacPherson of the Madras Army wrote On the morning of the 13th of June when it was announced to him Senhouse that all hopes of saving his life was at an end he immediately directed that the signal be made for all captains of H M s ships to repair on board but ere the first had arrived our gallant commodore was a corpse 14 Before he died he wished to be interred in Macao because of uncertainty about Hong Kong s future as a British settlement The steamship Nemesis arrived with his body in Macao on 16 June The next morning a funeral procession began from Captain Charles Elliot s house Major General Hugh Gough Captain Herbert Deputy Superintendent of Trade Alexander Johnston at least 70 military officers and nearly all the British and foreign residents were in attendance Also present was the Portuguese governor of Macau his band who played the funeral march and a contingent of Portuguese troops who fired three volleys over his grave at the Old Protestant Cemetery 2 13 On 29 June Senhouse was nominated a Companion of the Most Honourable Military Order of the Bath 6 A bell that he captured in the Bogue forts was sent to England by Captain John Charles Pitman in HMS Druid It was donated to St Mary s Church in Gosforth by Senhouse s widow in 1844 15 Mount Stenhouse on Lamma Island is almost certainly named for him but has acquired a misspelling over time Family edit nbsp Memorial in Gosforth churchIn 1810 Senhouse married Elizabeth daughter of Vice Admiral John Manley 3 She died on 1 March 1865 aged 81 16 They had two daughters 3 Elizabeth Manley Fleming Senhouse who at Gosforth on 5 October 1843 17 married Captain Pitman who had served as Senhouse s aide de camp in China 18 Rose Mary Fleming Senhouse d at Gosforth 11 January 1903 aged 74 19 20 Senhouse purchased the manor of Seascale in 1834 21 He built the mansion Seascale later named Steelfield in Gosforth 22 References editFootnotes Sometimes written as Humphrey Le Fleming Senhouse Citations Barbados Church Records 1637 1849 a b Ride Lindsay Ride May 1996 An East India Company Cemetery Protestant Burials in Macao Hong Kong University Press pp 220 222 ISBN 962 209 384 1 a b c d e f g h i j Lee Sidney ed 1897 Senhouse Humphrey Fleming Dictionary of National Biography Vol 51 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 244 245 Burke J Bernard 1852 A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain amp Ireland for 1852 Volume 2 London Colburn amp Co p 1211 a b c O Byrne William R 1849 Senhouse Edward Hooper note 1 A Naval Biographical Dictionary London John Murray p 1050 a b c Urban Sylvanus 1841 The Gentleman s Magazine Volume 16 London William Pickering pp 654 656 Account of the Volcanic Island The Journal of the Royal Geographical Society of London Volume 1 London John Murray 1832 pp 258 261 Shaw William A 1906 The Knights of England Volume 2 London Sherratt and Hughes p 335 No 19984 The London Gazette 3 June 1841 p 1425 Bingham John Elliot 1843 Narrative of the Expedition to China from the Commencement of the War to Its Termination in 1842 2nd ed Volume 2 London Henry Colburn p 60 Bernard W D Hall W H 1847 The Nemesis in China 3rd ed London Henry Colburn p 159 The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Register for British and Foreign India China and Australasia Volume 36 London Wm H Allen amp Co 1841 p 208 a b The Nautical Magazine and Naval Chronicle for 1841 London Simpkin Marshall amp Co pp 858 859 MacPherson Duncan 1843 The War in China 3rd ed London Saunders and Otley p 167 Parker C A Collingwood W G 1926 The Gosforth District Its Antiquities and Places of Interest Extra Series Volume 15 Kendal Titus Wilson amp Son p 60 Urban Sylvanus 1865 The Gentleman s Magazine New Series Volume 18 London John Henry and James Parker p 530 Urban Sylvanus 1843 The Gentleman s Magazine Volume 20 London William Pickering p 647 O Byrne William R 1849 Pitman John Charles A Naval Biographical Dictionary London John Murray p 909 In Memoriam Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society Series 2 Volume 3 1903 p 421 Deaths The Times No 36977 London 14 January 1903 p 1 Transactions of the Cumberland amp Westmorland Antiquarian amp Archaeological Society Volume 12 Part 2 1893 p 260 Parker amp Collingwood 1926 p 34 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Humphrey Fleming Senhouse amp oldid 1185224363, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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