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John Benbow

Vice-Admiral John Benbow (10 March 1653 – 4 November 1702) was an English officer in the Royal Navy. He joined the navy aged 25 years, seeing action against Algerian pirates before leaving and joining the merchant navy in which he traded until the Glorious Revolution of 1688, whereupon he returned to the Royal Navy and was commissioned.

John Benbow
Benbow in 1701, by Sir Godfrey Kneller.
He holds a simple officer's hanger.[1]
Nickname(s)"Brave Benbow", "A Brother Tar"[2]
Born(1653-03-10)10 March 1653
Shrewsbury, England
Died4 November 1702(1702-11-04) (aged 49)
Port Royal, Jamaica
Allegiance Kingdom of England
Service/branch Royal Navy
Years of service1678–1702
RankVice-admiral of the White
Commands heldHMS York
HMS Bonaventure
HMS Britannia
HMS Sovereign
HMS Norwich
HMS Northumberland
HMS Charles Galley
HMS Suffolk
HMS Duke
HMS Gloucester
HMS Breda
Jamaica Station
Battles/warsBattle of Beachy Head
Battles of Barfleur and La Hogue
Action of August 1702

Benbow fought against France during the Nine Years War (1688–97), serving on and later commanding several English vessels and taking part in the battles of Beachy Head, Barfleur and La Hogue in 1690 and 1692. He went on to achieve fame during campaigns against Salé and Moor pirates; laying siege to Saint-Malo; and fighting in the West Indies against France during the War of the Spanish Succession (1701–1714).

Benbow's fame and success earned him both public notoriety and a promotion to admiral. He was then involved in an incident during the action of August 1702, in which a number of his captains refused to support him while he commanded a squadron of ships.[3][4] Benbow instigated the trial and later imprisonment or execution of a number of the captains involved, though he did not live to see these results. These events contributed to his notoriety, and led to several references to him in subsequent popular culture.[5][6]

Family and early years edit

Benbow was born the son of William and Martha Benbow. The astrologer John Partridge recorded the exact time and date of his birth as being at noon on 10 March 1653, and this is the date used by the National Museum of the Royal Navy,[4] the Encyclopædia Britannica,[5] and the local historical accounts of Joseph Nightingale published in 1818.[7] A biography within an 1819 publication of The Gentleman's Magazine, however, records in a short biography entitled Life and Exploits of Admiral Benbow by D. Parkes that he was born in 1650,[8] as does the 1861 Sea kings and naval heroes by John George Edgar.[9] Edgar records that Benbow's father died when Benbow was very young,[9] while Parkes' account describes his father as being in the service of the Army under Charles I and not dying until Benbow was in his teens. Encyclopædia Britannica writes that Benbow's father was in fact a tanner.[5] Meanwhile, his uncle, Thomas, was executed by Charles I.[8] Both Parkes and the National Museum of the Royal Navy concur that Benbow was born in Coton Hill in Shrewsbury, Shropshire,[4][8] and Nightingale asserts that the death of both uncle and father, and the family's association with Charles I in the years following his execution, ensured that the "family were brought very low". Benbow's lack of possessions, Nightingale writes, turned him to a career at sea.

Naval career edit

Early years edit

Benbow entered the Royal Navy on 30 April 1678, aged 25 years.[7] He became master's mate aboard the 64-gun HMS Rupert under the command of Captain Arthur Herbert, whilst she was fitting out at Portsmouth.[4] He sailed with her to the Mediterranean, where Herbert was promoted to the rank of vice-admiral whilst serving under the commander-in-chief in the Mediterranean, Admiral Sir John Narborough.[10] During this period the English fleet was often in action against the Barbary pirates of North Africa that were actively preying upon European shipping.[10] Rupert herself captured an Algerine warship in 1678, which was later commissioned in the Royal Navy as HMS Tiger Prize.[11] Benbow distinguished himself well in a number of actions against the Algerine vessels, and won Herbert's approval. On Narborough's return to England, Herbert was appointed acting commander-in-chief, and made Benbow master aboard HMS Nonsuch on 15 June 1679.[12] Nonsuch would remain at Tangiers and off the African coast and had a number of successive captains who would go on to achieve flag rank, including George Rooke, Cloudesley Shovell and Francis Wheler. All were impressed by Benbow, and would afterwards help to advance his career.[13]

Nonsuch was next in action on 8 August 1681, this time against the Algerine warship Golden Horse. Golden Horse had been engaged by HMS Adventure, under the command of Captain William Booth, and when Nonsuch arrived on the scene Golden Horse surrendered.[14] A dispute then arose over the question of the prize money and how it should be shared out, and comments were made amongst Nonsuch's crew against those of Adventure. Benbow's repetition of these eventually came to Booth's knowledge,[4] and the captain brought a court-martial against Benbow; however, this revealed that Benbow had only been repeating these words rather than being their originator.[4] Benbow was ordered to forfeit three months' pay, amounting to £12 15s., to Adventure's crew, and to "ask Captain Booth's pardon on board His Majesty's ship Bristol, declaring that he had no malicious intent in speaking those words; all the commanders being present, and a boat's crew of each ship's company".[4][13]

Merchant trading edit

Nonsuch then returned to England and was paid off on 9 November 1681. Benbow left the Royal Navy and entered the merchant service, sailing a merchant vessel from London and Bristol to ports in Italy and Spain.[4] By 1686 he was a "tough merchant seaman" and the owner and commander of a frigate named Benbow, trading with the Levant.[15] In May 1687 he commanded a merchant vessel, Malaga Merchant,[16] and was aboard her when she was attacked by a Salé pirate. He mounted a successful defence and beat off the attack.[17] It was claimed afterwards that he cut off and salted the heads of thirteen Moors who were slain aboard his ship, and then took them into Cadiz to claim a reward from the magistrates.[17] A Moorish skull-cap, "coated with varnish and set in silver" and bearing the inscription "First adventure of Captain John Benbow, and gift to Richard Ridley, 1687" is referred to in 1844 by Charles Dickens in Bentley's Miscellany where he speaks of Shrewsbury's history,[18] and the 1885 Dictionary of National Biography also relates the story.[13]

Return to the Navy edit

 
Thomas Murray's triple portrait of Thomas Phillips (left), John Benbow (centre) and Sir Ralph Delaval (right). The three had been important figures in British fleet operations against the north coast of France during 1692–93.[19]

Benbow only returned to the Royal Navy after the Glorious Revolution in 1688. His first recorded commission was to the post of third lieutenant of HMS Elizabeth on 1 June 1689, under the command of Captain David Mitchell.[4] His first command came on 20 September of that year, when he was appointed captain of HMS York. He was transferred to HMS Bonaventure on 26 October and then to HMS Britannia on 12 November.[4]

Benbow's next post was as Master Attendant of Chatham Dockyard.[13] He then moved to become Master Attendant at Deptford Dockyard in early March 1690, a post he intermittently held for the next six years.[20] He was master of HMS Sovereign in summer 1690, under his old commander Arthur Herbert, now Lord Torrington.[20] He was assigned to act as master of the fleet, and took part in the English defeat in the Battle of Beachy Head. After the defeat, a Royal Commission was held into the circumstances that led to it.[16] Benbow was highly regarded as a specialist in both navigation and pilotage,[3] and his evidence given in July 1690 to the preliminary investigation strongly favoured his old patron, Torrington. He did not, however, testify during Torrington's court-martial in December that year.[21]

Benbow continued aboard Sovereign throughout 1691, and by the summer of 1692, was again master of the fleet, this time under Admiral Edward Russell,[22] then aboard Britannia. Benbow worked closely with his old colleague David Mitchell, then serving as Russell's first captain, and Josiah Burchett, Russell's clerk. Benbow may have advised Russell to take the Gull Passage inside the Goodwin Sands to the Downs, where they linked up with the Dutch forces.[23] Benbow served as master of the fleet during the Battles of Barfleur and La Hogue. After the battles, Benbow returned to Deptford to resume his duties as master attendant, spending a brief period at Portsmouth Dockyard helping to oversee repairs to the fleet.[24] He had already had his pay upgraded to that of a master attendant, he was now to be paid as a master, in addition to his master attendant's wage, presumably as an acknowledgement of his special services.[13]

With the bomb flotillas edit

 
Benbow's attack on Saint-Malo, where he blew up the machine ship Vesuvius, 1693

Benbow returned to active naval service in September 1693, joining Thomas Phillips, the second engineer of the ordnance, in jointly commanding a flotilla of bomb vessels to attack Saint-Malo.[1] Benbow went aboard the 48-gun HMS Norwich and began the bombardment on 26 November.[25] It continued intermittently until 19 November when a large fireship was sent into the harbour. An attempt was made to bring her alongside the town walls, but she ran aground, was set on fire, and exploded. Despite the failure of the initial plan, considerable damage was done, and Benbow's forces were able to take the fort on Quince Rock and disable it, carrying artillery and prisoners away and bringing them to Guernsey.[19] Benbow was still dissatisfied with the overall result and initiated a court-martial against Captain Henry Tourville, accusing him of cowardice for not bringing his ship in closer. There was no conviction though, as the mortars were proved to be defective.[14]

 
Benbow's bombardment of Dieppe in July 1694

Benbow's experience led to him being promoted to a similar flotilla, this time to be deployed against Dunkirk under the command of Vice-Admiral Shovell. A number of converted merchant vessels, rigged like fireships but designed to explode rather than burn, were assigned to support the expedition.[9] Benbow had a hand in preparing these vessels for the operation throughout 1694, and worked closely with the principal storekeeper of the ordnance, Willem Meesters.[26][27] Benbow's attacking fleet was covered by Shovell's fleet on the Downs and the attack was planned for 12 and 13 September.[27] However, the French were able to block the entrance to the port, preventing Benbow's squadron from entering, and a storm further disrupted operations.[27] Benbow drew back from Dunkirk, and instead sailed around to Calais, where he carried out a further bombardment on 27 September. He returned to the Downs and then resumed his duties at Deptford Dockyard. He spent December organising a convoy for a fleet of merchant vessels due to sail to Cadiz.[20]

Rise to admiral edit

 
Benbow as an admiral, engraved by John Chapman and published in 1797

Benbow was soon at sea again in March 1695, being appointed commander-in-chief of His Majesty's ships which were then off the coast of France. His squadron was highly successful, taking a number of French merchants in early April and bringing them to England as prizes.[4] Benbow was recommended by Lord Berkeley, who had served with Benbow at Saint-Malo, to be promoted to rear-admiral at the next opportunity, and in the meantime he was appointed to the command of the 70-gun HMS Northumberland.[4] He was soon joined by a volunteer – his then fourteen-year-old son – also named John Benbow.[12] Benbow then sailed with Berkeley and the Dutch lieutenant-admiral Philips van Almonde to Saint-Malo, intending to operate against privateering operations being conducted from the area.[3][27] Benbow moved to command HMS Charles Galley, to direct the inshore operations of ten English and Dutch warships, nine English bomb vessels, and seventeen small boats and vessels.[28] They began operations on their arrival off Saint-Malo on 4 July, remaining in action until evening the next day when they withdrew, without having achieved any decisive result. Several houses had been destroyed for the damage and loss of a few of the bomb vessels.[28] Benbow was given eight bomb vessels and seven or eight frigates and was dispatched down the coast. He attacked Granville on 8 July, shelling it with over 900 bombs over several hours, and departed having set the town ablaze.[28]

Public and private reception edit

The outcome of the operations had left Benbow in a tense relationship with his immediate superiors. Berkeley had been accused of excessive timidity in his actions, which it was believed had led to the failure of the attack on Dunkirk. Benbow on the other hand was widely lauded for his fearless inshore attacks with his bomb vessels.[29] Berkeley wrote on 28 July:

As to Captain Benbow, I know of no difference between him and me, nor have we had any. He has no small obligation to me, but being called in some of the foolish printed papers ‘the famous Captain Benbow’, I suppose has put him a little out of himself, and has made him play the fool, as I guess, in some of his letters. I will not farther now particularize this business, but time will show I have not been in the wrong, unless being too kind to an ungrateful man.[30]

However, the Admiralty approved of Benbow's conduct and ordered him "to be paid as Rear-Admiral during the time he has been employed this summer on the coast of France ... as a reward for his good service."[12][13] Benbow was then appointed to the grand committee of sixty men to oversee the plans for Greenwich Hospital in December 1695, but the issue dragged on until 1 May 1696.[1] The Admiralty again stepped in, and Benbow was finally promoted and appointed commander-in-chief of the squadron before Dunkirk as "Rear-Admiral of the Blue for the duration of this present expedition" and moved aboard the 70-gun HMS Suffolk.[3] His orders were to protect English and Dutch shipping, especially from the squadron of the privateer Jean Bart. Bart, however, was mostly successful in evading pursuit, usually escaping into Dunkirk when Benbow's force drew near.[31]

Benbow was appointed to command a squadron in the Soundings in December 1696.[32] He carried out a number of cruises between March and August 1697, protecting allied trade and escorting the West Indian and Virginian merchant fleets into port. These activities marked the last English naval expedition of the war. He also carried out reconnaissance activities on the French fleet in port in Brest in July, before resuming patrol operations off Dunkirk, this time in concert with a number of Dutch ships under Rear-Admiral Philips van der Goes, until the end of the war in September 1697.[33]

Appointment to the West Indies edit

Benbow was made commander-in-chief of the King's ships in the West Indies on 9 March 1698, and instructed to tackle the issue of piracy.[4] He sailed in November, the first leg taking him from Portsmouth to Madeira.[14] Sailing under his protection from the Salé pirates was Paramore, under Edmond Halley, then sailing to the North Atlantic to carry out experiments to observe magnetic variations.[34] Benbow finally reached Barbados in February 1699, and moved to the Spanish Main aboard his flagship, the 60-gun HMS Gloucester. He threatened the governor of Cartagena with a blockade, and so compelled him to restore two English merchant ships that he had detained.[35] These ships had been intended to take part in an expedition against the Scottish Darién scheme. Without the ships, this became impossible and the colonists were saved for the time being. This was counter to the English government's desire to see the end of the Scottish colonising efforts, and in June Benbow and the other West Indies governors received orders "not to assist the Scotch colony in Darien".[36]

Benbow then sailed as far north as Newfoundland in order to drive the pirates away, but they evaded capture.[37] Benbow returned to England in the summer of 1700, and was appointed to the command of a fleet in the Downs.[5] Benbow served there until summer 1701, under the command of Admiral Sir George Rooke.[4] He was promoted to rear-admiral of the red on 14 April, followed by vice-admiral of the blue on 30 June.[1] He then flew his flag in the 70-gun HMS Breda.[38]

Spanish treasure fleet, West Indies, the action of 1702 edit

With the peace becoming increasingly uneasy, the English government became concerned over the possible fate of the Spanish silver fleet, due to arrive in European waters from America.[39] They were worried that the French would intercept the ships and use the treasure for war preparations. Benbow was issued secret instructions to find the fleet, and then "to seize and bring them to England, taking care that no embezzlement be made".[40] Benbow's squadron was detached on 2 September and sailed for the West Indies, arriving on 14 November, and was at the Jamaica Station in mid-December.[8][41] He remained there for several months, being joined on 8 May 1702 by several vessels under Captain William Whetstone. Whetstone was made Rear-Admiral under Benbow, who had been promoted to Vice-Admiral of the White on 19 January 1702[35]

By now, the War of the Spanish Succession had broken out, and news of its declaration reached Benbow on 7 July. He detached Whetstone and six ships to search off Port St Louis in Hispaniola for a French squadron under Admiral Jean du Casse, which he believed would call at the port on his voyage to Cartagena, and from there he might raid English and Dutch shipping. After Whetstone had left, Benbow took his squadron and sailed for Cartagena, anticipating that either he or Whetstone would find Du Casse and bring him to battle.[42]

 
The legend of 'Brave Benbow', "Adml Benbow courageously commanding his Men to fight after his Leg was shattered to Pieces, St Martha (West Indies) 19–24 July 1702."[43]

By the time that Whetstone had reached Hispaniola, Du Casse had already departed. Benbow's force subsequently sighted the French on 19 August, sailing off Cape Santa Marta. The French had three transports and four warships carrying between 68 and 70 guns, while Benbow commanded seven ships carrying between 50 and 70 guns.[42] The English forces were heavily scattered, and the light winds meant that they were slow to regroup. They did not achieve a form of collective order until four in the afternoon, after which a partial engagement was fought, lasting about two hours, until nightfall caused the fleets to temporarily break off.[44]

The action quickly revealed a breakdown in discipline amongst Benbow's captains. He had intended that the 64-gun HMS Defiance under Captain Richard Kirkby would lead the line of battle, but Kirkby was not maintaining his station. Benbow decided to take the lead himself, and Breda pulled ahead, followed by the 50-gun HMS Ruby under Captain George Walton.[44] The two maintained contact with the French throughout the night, but the other five ships refused to close. The chase ensued until 24 August, with only Benbow, Walton, and Samuel Vincent aboard HMS Falmouth making active efforts to bring the French to battle. At times, they bore the brunt of the fire of the entire squadron. Ruby was disabled on 23 August, and Benbow ordered her to retire to Port Royal.[44] The French resumed the action at two in the morning on 24 August, the entire squadron closing on Breda from astern and pounding her. Benbow himself was hit by a chain-shot that broke his leg and he was carried below.[45]

Benbow was determined to continue the pursuit, despite his wounds and despite Captain Kirkby's arrival on board, attempting to persuade Benbow to abandon the pursuit. Benbow summoned a council of war, and the other captains agreed, signing a paper drafted by Kirkby which declared that they believed "that after six days of battle the squadron lacked enough men to continue and that there was little chance of a decisive action, since the men were exhausted, there was a general lack of ammunition, the ships' rigging and masts were badly damaged, and the winds were generally variable and undependable."[3] They recommended breaking off the action and following the French to see if the situation improved. Benbow had "seen the cowardly behaviour of some of them before, [and] had reason to believe that they either had a design against him or to be traitors to their country if an opportunity happened that the French could have destroyed the Admiral".[28][46] He, therefore, ordered the squadron to return to Jamaica. On their arrival, he ordered the captains to be imprisoned, awaiting a trial by court-martial.[44]

Benbow received a letter from du Casse after the engagement:

Sir,
I had little hopes on Monday last but to have supped in your cabin: but it pleased God to order it otherwise. I am thankful for it. As for those cowardly captains who deserted you, hang them up, for by God they deserve it.
Yours,
Du Casse.[47][48]

Trial of the captains edit

Acting Rear-Admiral Whetstone returned to Port Royal, having spent 62 days cruising off Hispaniola, and preparations were made for the trial. Before it could begin, Captain Thomas Hudson died, who had commanded HMS Pendennis. The remaining captains appeared at the court-martial which convened on Breda, held between 19 and 23 October.[44] Due to his injuries, Benbow passed to Whetstone the role of presiding over the court, but he was present at the trial. The court found Captain Kirkby of HMS Defiance and Cooper Wade of Greenwich guilty of breach of orders, neglect of duty, and the "ill signed paper and consultation ... which obliged the Admiral ... to give over the chase and fight", and condemned them to be shot.[44]

John Constable of HMS Windsor was found guilty of breach of orders and drunkenness and was cashiered.[44] Samuel Vincent of Falmouth and Christopher Fogg of Breda were initially sentenced to be cashiered for signing the six captains' resolution, but Benbow personally declared that they had fought bravely, and their sentences were remitted by the Lord High Admiral.[44] The sentences were deferred so that Queen Anne could have a chance to examine the proceedings. After her consideration in January 1703, she allowed the sentences to proceed and Constable, Kirkby, and Wade were returned to England as prisoners. Constable was imprisoned until 1704, when the Queen pardoned him. Kirkby and Wade were shot aboard HMS Bristol on 16 April 1703 while she was anchored in Plymouth Sound under Captain Edward Acton.[49] Controversy slowly began to develop over the events of August 1702. Supporters of the disgraced Kirkby and Wade sought to discredit Benbow by publishing their own account of the action.[3][50]

Death and burial edit

Benbow died at Port Royal, Kingston, Jamaica on 4 November 1702.[4] Whetstone reported that the cause of death was "the wound of his leg which he received in battle with Monsieur Du Casse, it never being set to perfection, which malady being aggravated by the discontent of his mind, threw him into a sort of melancholy which ended his life as before."[3] He was buried on 16 November in the chancel of St Andrew's Church, Kingston.[5] A marble slab was later laid over the grave, emblazoned with a coat of arms and inscribed:

Here lyeth the Body of John Benbow, Esq., Admiral of the White, a true pattern of English Courage, who lost his life in Defence of his Queene & Country, November the 4th, 1702, In the 52nd year of his age, by a wound in his Legg. Received in an Engagement with Monsr. Du Casse; being Much Lamented.[51]

Secretary of State Lord Nottingham wrote to Benbow in January 1703, before news of his death had reached London, to inform him that the queen was "extremely well pleased with your conduct and much offended with the baseness of those officers who deserted and betrayed you." Meanwhile, the cabinet was preparing to promote him to vice-admiral of the white and to dispatch him to transport troops to Newfoundland.[3]

Personal life and legacy edit

Benbow married a woman named Martha (died 1722) after his return to England in 1681. The couple had at least seven children, including daughter Martha and sons Richard and John. Another son Solomon was baptised in 1686 but died in infancy.[52] There are also records of two more sons named Richard who were born in Kent, and another daughter named Katherine.[53] Son John went on to serve in the Royal Navy.[52] The family lived in the parish of St Dunstan and All Saints, Stepney. In 1709, Katherine married Paul Calton of Milton, Berkshire, where Benbow is said to have stayed in the 1690s. According to Parish Records William Benbow son of Admiral John Benbow was buried at St Nicholas Parish Church, Deptford, Kent (now SE London) on 7 April 1729. One of the admiral's granddaughters married the Rev. John Simpson, who commissioned the current Stoke Hall, Derbyshire, following his acquisition of the estate upon their marriage.[54]

Benbow and Peter the Great edit

Benbow signed a three-year lease on Sayes Court in June 1696, a house belonging to diarist John Evelyn.[55] Six months later, Evelyn wrote to a friend complaining, "I have let my house to Captain Benbow, and have the mortification of seeing everyday much of my former labours and expenses there impairing for want of a more polite tenant."[56] In January 1698, Tsar Peter of Russia arrived in London to study British shipbuilding and seamanship. He and his entourage were provided with Sayes Court to reside in during their stay by William III. The Russians spent three months in London before leaving to tour the country. Benbow promptly asked for reparations from the Treasury, in order to be able to reimburse Evelyn and recover his own losses. He complained that the Russians had caused considerable damage to his house, with "much of the furniture broke, lost or destroyed".[57] Christopher Wren was instructed to survey the property and declared it "entirely ruined". Benbow lost "twenty fine paintings" and "several fine draughts and other designs relating to the Sea" from his personal property. The Treasury eventually allowed payment of £350 9s. 6d. in compensation.[58]

"Brave Benbow" edit

 
An engraving produced in 1804 that helped to promote the legend.

Benbow's fame led to his name entering popular culture. A monument by sculptor John Evan Thomas was erected in 1843 by public subscription in St Mary's Church, Shrewsbury commemorating Benbow as "a skillful and daring seaman whose heroic exploits long rendered him the boast of the British Navy and still point him out as the Nelson of his times."[59] A 74-gun ship of the line and two battleships were named HMS Benbow.[60]

 
The Admiral Benbow in Penzance, reportedly an inspriation for Stevenson's Inn

There are a number of real life Admiral Benbow public houses around the world, and other institutions that have borne his name.[61] Whether they are named as a result of Robert Louis Stevenson's use of "The Admiral Benbow Inn" in his novel Treasure Island, or if they're named for the Admiral himself, it is impossible to say. It is alleged that Stevenson named the Hawkins' Inn after the arrest of several members of the "Benbow Brandy Men" smuggling gang that frequented the Benbow pub in Penzance shortly before he visited in August 1877.[62][6][63]

The incident of August 1702 also took hold on the popular imagination, and was celebrated in an alehouse song, listed as number 227 in the Roud Folk Song Index:

Come all you seamen bold
and draw near, and draw near,
Come all you seamen bold and draw near.
It's of an Admiral's fame,
O brave Benbow was his name,
How he fought all on the main,
you shall hear, you shall hear.

Brave Benbow he set sail
For to fight, for to fight
Brave Benbow he set sail for to fight.
Brave Benbow he set sail
with a fine and pleasant gale
But his captains they turn'd tail
in a fright, in a fright.

Says Kirby unto Wade:
We will run, we will run
Says Kirby unto Wade, we will run.
For I value no disgrace,
nor the losing of my place,
But the enemy I won't face,
nor his guns, nor his guns.

The Ruby and Benbow
fought the French, fought the French
The Ruby and Benbow fought the French.
They fought them up and down,
till the blood came trickling down,
Till the blood came trickling down
where they lay, where they lay.

Brave Benbow lost his legs
by chain shot, by chain shot
Brave Benbow lost his legs by chain shot.
Brave Benbow lost his legs,
And all on his stumps he begs,
Fight on my English lads,
'Tis our lot, 'tis our lot.

The surgeon dress'd his wounds,
Cries Benbow, cries Benbow
The surgeon dress'd his wounds, cries Benbow.
Let a cradle now in haste,
on the quarterdeck be placed
That the enemy I may face
'Til I die, 'Til I die.[64]

Its musical theme forms one of the three arrangements on which English composer Ralph Vaughan Williams based his Sea Songs, originally arranged for military band in 1923 as the second movement of his English Folk Song Suite,[65] and subsequently re-arranged for full orchestra in 1942 by the composer.[66]

The song was collected in the oral tradition from traditional singers in England in the twentieth century. A recording of Sam Bennett of Ilmington, Warwickshire made by James Madison Carpenter in the 1930s can be heard on the Vaughan Williams Memorial Library Website.[67] The Copper Family also have a traditional version of the song which was passed down through several generations and is available online.[68]

Another song has survived from the period with different air and rhythm but also known as Admiral Benbow, and it is often sung by folksingers. It begins We sailed from Virginia and thence to Fayal.

References edit

Specific edit

  1. ^ a b c d . Maritime Art Greenwich. Greenwich Maritime Museum. 20 August 2015. Archived from the original on 29 December 2004. Retrieved 7 June 2009.
  2. ^ Death of Admiral Benbow. The Brother Tars Song. Published by printed by J. Fowler. 1780.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Matthew, pp. 50–68.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o . The National Museum. The Royal Navy. 2004. Archived from the original on 14 November 2008. Retrieved 7 June 2009.
  5. ^ a b c d e "John Benbow". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 12 June 2009.
  6. ^ a b Nightingale, pp. 167–175.
  7. ^ a b c d Parkes, D (1819). Life and Exploits of Admiral Benbow. Vol. The Gentleman's magazine. Printed by F. Jefferies. pp. 9–11.
  8. ^ a b c Edgar, pp. 206–214.
  9. ^ a b le Fevre, pp. 22–27.
  10. ^ Joy, Brian. . Archived from the original on 12 October 2009. Retrieved 12 June 2009.
  11. ^ a b c Stephen, p. 211.
  12. ^ a b c d e f Stephen, p. 208.
  13. ^ a b c Allen, pp. 76–81.
  14. ^ Blackwood, W. (1948). Blackwood's magazine. Vol. v. 263–264. AMS Press. p. 190. ISBN 978-0-404-07730-3.
  15. ^ a b Clowes, p. 460.
  16. ^ a b Campbell, p. 206.
  17. ^ Dickens, Charles; William Harrison Ainsworth; Albert Smith; George Cruikshank (1844). Bentley's Miscellany. Richard Bentley. p. 590.
  18. ^ a b Stephen, pp. 208–214.
  19. ^ a b c Bowle, John (1981). John Evelyn and his world. Routledge. p. 219. ISBN 978-0-7100-0721-6.
  20. ^ Stephen, p. 172.
  21. ^ Royal Naval Exhibition (Issue 1119 ed.). London: The Graphic. 9 May 1891.
  22. ^ Aubrey, p. 82.
  23. ^ Merriman, p. 37
  24. ^ Stephen, p. 214.
  25. ^ Clowes, p. 477.
  26. ^ a b c d Harris, p. 190.
  27. ^ a b c d Clowes, pp. 477–480.
  28. ^ Stephen, pp. 208–211.
  29. ^ William John Hardy and Edward Bateson, ed. (1908). Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, of the Reign of William and Mary: 1695 & addenda 1689–1695. Public Record Office: Printed for Her Majesty's Stationery Office by Eyre and Spottiswoode. p. xii.
  30. ^ Clark, J. Kent (1984). Goodwin Wharton. Oxford University Press. p. 308. ISBN 978-0-19-212234-6.
  31. ^ Stephen, p. 87.
  32. ^ Treves, pp. 289–295.
  33. ^ Halley, Edmond; Thrower, Norman Joseph William (1981). The three voyages of Edmond Halley in the Paramore, 1698–1701. Hakluyt Society. pp. 36–39. ISBN 978-0-904180-02-2.
  34. ^ a b Stephen, p. 453.
  35. ^ Stephen, p. 209.
  36. ^ Robertson, James Alexander. "Spanish Voyages to the Northwest Coast of America". The Hispanic American Historical Review: 145–146.
  37. ^ Herman, Arthur2 (2004). To rule the waves: how the British Navy shaped the modern world. Harper Collins. p. 45. ISBN 978-0-06-053424-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  38. ^ Rodger, N. A. M. (2005). The command of the ocean: a naval history of Britain, 1649–1815. W. W. Norton. p. 165. ISBN 978-0-393-06050-8.
  39. ^ Japikse, pp. 477–9
  40. ^ Cundall, p. xx
  41. ^ a b Roberts, Walter Adolphe (1942). The French in the West Indies. The Bobbs-Merrill Company. pp. 76–81. ISBN 978-0-8154-0377-7.
  42. ^ . National Maritime Museum. 20 August 2015. Archived from the original on 21 May 2009. Retrieved 7 June 2009.
  43. ^ a b c d e f g h An Account of the Arraignments and Tryals of Col. Richard Kirkby, Capt. John Constable, Capt. Cooper Wade, Capt. Samuel Vincent, and Capt. Christopher Fogg. Behalf of Her Majesty, at a Court-martial Held on Board the Ship Breda in Port-Royal. 1703. pp. 1–10.
  44. ^ James, p. 57.
  45. ^ Publications of the Navy Records Society. Vol. 4–125. Navy Records Society. 1984. p. 168.
  46. ^ Phillips, Michael. "HMS Dreda, 70 gun 3rd rate". Ships of the Old Navy. Age of Nelson.org. Retrieved 7 June 2009.
  47. ^ Kingston, W.H.G. (November 2007). . Dodo Press. ISBN 978-1-4065-8371-7. Archived from the original on 11 March 2008. Retrieved 2 December 2006.
  48. ^ Trevelyan, pp. 252–253.
  49. ^ Woodman, p. 48.
  50. ^ Verrill, p. 282.
  51. ^ a b Laughton, p. 200.
  52. ^ Historians of the Charles Benbow Family. "History of the Benbow Family of the United Kingdom, and Selected Allied Families". Retrieved 20 June 2009.
  53. ^ "Stoke Hall and Nutbourne Pumping Station". Restoration Home - One Year On. Series 1. Episode 1. 29 August 2012. BBC Television. Retrieved 22 July 2013.
  54. ^ Welcher, pp. 130–133.
  55. ^ Evelyn, p. 359.
  56. ^ Morfill, p. 143.
  57. ^ Cross, p. 25.
  58. ^ Pidgeon, p. 85.
  59. ^ "HMS Benbow". battleship-cruisers.co.uk. Retrieved 12 June 2009.
  60. ^ Benbow, W. A. "ADMIRAL BENBOW PUBS". BraveBenbow. Retrieved 17 December 2021.
  61. ^ Watson, pp. 25–27.
  62. ^ Gainey, Tom (10 December 2017). "Cornwall's smuggling past - a look at six pubs at the heart of a 'golden age' of criminality". The Cornishman.
  63. ^ Nettel, pp. 286–287.
  64. ^ Timothy Reynish, notes for British Wind Band Classics, Chandos Records 9697, 1999
  65. ^ Philip Lane, notes for British Light Miniatures, Naxos 8.570332 (released 2007)
  66. ^ "Admiral Benbow (continued) (VWML Song Index SN16606)". The Vaughan Williams Memorial Library. Retrieved 6 October 2021.
  67. ^ "Sussex Traditions". Retrieved 6 October 2021.

General edit

Online edit

  • "Admiral John Benbow". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/2076. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • "Vice-Admiral John Benbow, 1653–1702". Maritime Art Greenwich. Greenwich Maritime Museum. 20 August 2015.
  • . The National Museum. The Royal Navy. 2004. Archived from the original on 14 November 2008. Retrieved 7 June 2009.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Benbow, John" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 715.
  • Laughton, John Knox (1885). "Benbow, John (1653–1702)" . In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 4. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  • "Ship – Admiral Benbow, from Liverpool, attacked by Pirates, April, 1829". Sydney Monitor (Nsw : 1828 – 1838). 14 November 1829. p. 4.

Printed edit

  • Allen, Joseph (1852). Battles of the British Navy. Published by Henry G. Bohn. ISBN 978-0-217-70408-3.
  • Aubrey, Philip (1979). The defeat of James Stuart's Armada, 1692. Leicester University Press. ISBN 978-0-7185-1168-5.
  • Benbow, William A. (1992). Brave Benbow: The Life of Vice-admiral John Benbow, 1651–1702 (5th ed.). Bill Benbow.
  • Campbell, John; [[John Berkenhout]], [[Henry Redhead Yorke]], [[William Stevenson (antiquary)|William Stevenson]] (1812). Lives of the British Admirals. Harvard University: C. J. Barrington. ISBN 978-0-665-33213-5.
  • Clowes, William Laird; Alfred Thayer Mahan (1898). The Royal Navy. Vol. II. University of Michigan: Sampson Low, Marston and Co. ISBN 978-1-86176-017-3.
  • Cross, Anthony Glenn (2000). Peter the Great through British eyes: perceptions and representations of the Tsar since 1698. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-78298-2.
  • Cundall, Frank (1915). Historic Jamaica. West India Committee.
  • Edgar, John George (1861). Sea Kings and Naval Heroes. Oxford University: Published by F.Warne.
  • Evelyn, John; William Bray (1859). Diary and Correspondence of John Evelyn. Vol. II. Published by H. G. Bohn. ISBN 978-0-559-30610-5.
  • le Fevre, Peter (2000). Precursors of Nelson. Joseph K. Lange, Richard Harding. Stackpole Books. ISBN 978-0-8117-2901-7.
  • Harris, Simon (2001). Sir Cloudesley Shovell: Stuart Admiral. Spellmount. ISBN 978-1-86227-099-2.
  • James, Lawrence (1997). The Rise and Fall of the British Empire. St. Martin's Griffen. ISBN 978-0-312-16985-5.
  • Japikse, N. (1927). Correspondentie van Willem III en van Hans Willem Bentinck (in German).
  • Kennedy, Paul (1976). The Rise and Fall of British Naval Mastery. University of Michigan: Scribner. ISBN 978-0-684-14609-6.
  • Laughton, Leonard George Carr; Roger Charles Anderson (1944). The Mariner's Mirror. London: Society for Nautical Research.
  • Locker, Edward Hawke (1831). The Naval Gallery of Greenwich Hospital. Oxford University: Harding and Lepard.
  • Matthew, Henry Colin Gray; Brian Howard Harrison (2004). Oxford dictionary of national biography. Vol. V. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-280089-3.
  • Maxwell, Kenneth (2003). Naked tropics: essays on empire and other rogues. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-94577-6.
  • Merriman, Reginald Dundas (1961). Queen Anne's Navy. Naval Records Society.
  • Morfill, William Richard (1901). Russia. Published by Fisher Unwin. ISBN 978-0-89875-762-0.
  • Nettel, Reginald (1954). Sing a Song of England. Phoenix House.
  • Nightingale, Joseph (1818). Shropshire. Gentleman's Magazine.
  • Pidgeon, Henry (1851). Memorials of Shrewsbury. Oxford University: Published by J. H. Leake. ISBN 978-0-903802-00-0.
  • Rodger, N. A. M. (1996). The Wooden World. W. W. Norton & Co. Ltd. ISBN 978-0-393-31469-4.
  • Stephen (1885). "Benbow, John (1653–1702)". In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 4. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  • Strang, Herbert (1909). Humphrey Bold, A story of the time of Benbow. American Libraries of the Encyclopædia Britannica: Indianapolis: The Bobbs-Merrill company.
  • Trevelyan, George Macaulay (1948). England Under Queen Anne. Indiana University: Longmans, Green and Co.
  • Treves, Frederick (1908). The Cradle of the Deep (3rd ed.). New York: Emith, Elder & Co., New York Public Library.
  • Verrill, Alpheus Hyatt (1923). In the wake of the buccaneers. The Century Co. ISBN 978-0-87380-168-3.
  • Watson, Harold Francis (1969). Coasts of Treasure Island. Published by Naylor Co.
  • Welcher, Jeanne K. (1972). John Evelyn. University of Michigan: Twayne Publishers.
  • Woodman, Richard (2005). A Brief History of Mutiny. Carroll & Graf. ISBN 978-0-7867-1567-1.

External links edit

  •   Admiral Benbow. Letitia Elizabeth's poetical illustration to a painting by Sir G. Kneller, engraved by W. T. Mote (actually William Henry Mote) from Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1838 together with a brief historical note.

john, benbow, this, article, about, naval, officer, castaway, author, account, about, madagascar, explorer, british, politician, admiral, benbow, redirects, here, fictional, treasure, island, vice, admiral, march, 1653, november, 1702, english, officer, royal,. This article is about the naval officer For his son a castaway and author of an account about Madagascar see John Benbow explorer For the British politician see John Benbow MP Admiral Benbow redirects here For the fictional inn see Treasure Island Vice Admiral John Benbow 10 March 1653 4 November 1702 was an English officer in the Royal Navy He joined the navy aged 25 years seeing action against Algerian pirates before leaving and joining the merchant navy in which he traded until the Glorious Revolution of 1688 whereupon he returned to the Royal Navy and was commissioned John BenbowBenbow in 1701 by Sir Godfrey Kneller He holds a simple officer s hanger 1 Nickname s Brave Benbow A Brother Tar 2 Born 1653 03 10 10 March 1653Shrewsbury EnglandDied4 November 1702 1702 11 04 aged 49 Port Royal JamaicaAllegiance Kingdom of EnglandService wbr branch Royal NavyYears of service1678 1702RankVice admiral of the WhiteCommands heldHMS YorkHMS BonaventureHMS BritanniaHMS SovereignHMS NorwichHMS NorthumberlandHMS Charles GalleyHMS SuffolkHMS DukeHMS GloucesterHMS BredaJamaica StationBattles warsBattle of Beachy HeadBattles of Barfleur and La HogueAction of August 1702Benbow fought against France during the Nine Years War 1688 97 serving on and later commanding several English vessels and taking part in the battles of Beachy Head Barfleur and La Hogue in 1690 and 1692 He went on to achieve fame during campaigns against Sale and Moor pirates laying siege to Saint Malo and fighting in the West Indies against France during the War of the Spanish Succession 1701 1714 Benbow s fame and success earned him both public notoriety and a promotion to admiral He was then involved in an incident during the action of August 1702 in which a number of his captains refused to support him while he commanded a squadron of ships 3 4 Benbow instigated the trial and later imprisonment or execution of a number of the captains involved though he did not live to see these results These events contributed to his notoriety and led to several references to him in subsequent popular culture 5 6 Contents 1 Family and early years 2 Naval career 2 1 Early years 2 2 Merchant trading 2 3 Return to the Navy 2 4 With the bomb flotillas 2 5 Rise to admiral 2 6 Public and private reception 2 7 Appointment to the West Indies 2 8 Spanish treasure fleet West Indies the action of 1702 2 9 Trial of the captains 3 Death and burial 4 Personal life and legacy 4 1 Benbow and Peter the Great 4 2 Brave Benbow 5 References 5 1 Specific 5 2 General 5 2 1 Online 5 2 2 Printed 6 External linksFamily and early years editBenbow was born the son of William and Martha Benbow The astrologer John Partridge recorded the exact time and date of his birth as being at noon on 10 March 1653 and this is the date used by the National Museum of the Royal Navy 4 the Encyclopaedia Britannica 5 and the local historical accounts of Joseph Nightingale published in 1818 7 A biography within an 1819 publication of The Gentleman s Magazine however records in a short biography entitled Life and Exploits of Admiral Benbow by D Parkes that he was born in 1650 8 as does the 1861 Sea kings and naval heroes by John George Edgar 9 Edgar records that Benbow s father died when Benbow was very young 9 while Parkes account describes his father as being in the service of the Army under Charles I and not dying until Benbow was in his teens Encyclopaedia Britannica writes that Benbow s father was in fact a tanner 5 Meanwhile his uncle Thomas was executed by Charles I 8 Both Parkes and the National Museum of the Royal Navy concur that Benbow was born in Coton Hill in Shrewsbury Shropshire 4 8 and Nightingale asserts that the death of both uncle and father and the family s association with Charles I in the years following his execution ensured that the family were brought very low Benbow s lack of possessions Nightingale writes turned him to a career at sea Naval career editEarly years edit Benbow entered the Royal Navy on 30 April 1678 aged 25 years 7 He became master s mate aboard the 64 gun HMS Rupert under the command of Captain Arthur Herbert whilst she was fitting out at Portsmouth 4 He sailed with her to the Mediterranean where Herbert was promoted to the rank of vice admiral whilst serving under the commander in chief in the Mediterranean Admiral Sir John Narborough 10 During this period the English fleet was often in action against the Barbary pirates of North Africa that were actively preying upon European shipping 10 Rupert herself captured an Algerine warship in 1678 which was later commissioned in the Royal Navy as HMS Tiger Prize 11 Benbow distinguished himself well in a number of actions against the Algerine vessels and won Herbert s approval On Narborough s return to England Herbert was appointed acting commander in chief and made Benbow master aboard HMS Nonsuch on 15 June 1679 12 Nonsuch would remain at Tangiers and off the African coast and had a number of successive captains who would go on to achieve flag rank including George Rooke Cloudesley Shovell and Francis Wheler All were impressed by Benbow and would afterwards help to advance his career 13 Nonsuch was next in action on 8 August 1681 this time against the Algerine warship Golden Horse Golden Horse had been engaged by HMS Adventure under the command of Captain William Booth and when Nonsuch arrived on the scene Golden Horse surrendered 14 A dispute then arose over the question of the prize money and how it should be shared out and comments were made amongst Nonsuch s crew against those of Adventure Benbow s repetition of these eventually came to Booth s knowledge 4 and the captain brought a court martial against Benbow however this revealed that Benbow had only been repeating these words rather than being their originator 4 Benbow was ordered to forfeit three months pay amounting to 12 15s to Adventure s crew and to ask Captain Booth s pardon on board His Majesty s ship Bristol declaring that he had no malicious intent in speaking those words all the commanders being present and a boat s crew of each ship s company 4 13 Merchant trading edit Nonsuch then returned to England and was paid off on 9 November 1681 Benbow left the Royal Navy and entered the merchant service sailing a merchant vessel from London and Bristol to ports in Italy and Spain 4 By 1686 he was a tough merchant seaman and the owner and commander of a frigate named Benbow trading with the Levant 15 In May 1687 he commanded a merchant vessel Malaga Merchant 16 and was aboard her when she was attacked by a Sale pirate He mounted a successful defence and beat off the attack 17 It was claimed afterwards that he cut off and salted the heads of thirteen Moors who were slain aboard his ship and then took them into Cadiz to claim a reward from the magistrates 17 A Moorish skull cap coated with varnish and set in silver and bearing the inscription First adventure of Captain John Benbow and gift to Richard Ridley 1687 is referred to in 1844 by Charles Dickens in Bentley s Miscellany where he speaks of Shrewsbury s history 18 and the 1885 Dictionary of National Biography also relates the story 13 Return to the Navy edit nbsp Thomas Murray s triple portrait of Thomas Phillips left John Benbow centre and Sir Ralph Delaval right The three had been important figures in British fleet operations against the north coast of France during 1692 93 19 Benbow only returned to the Royal Navy after the Glorious Revolution in 1688 His first recorded commission was to the post of third lieutenant of HMS Elizabeth on 1 June 1689 under the command of Captain David Mitchell 4 His first command came on 20 September of that year when he was appointed captain of HMS York He was transferred to HMS Bonaventure on 26 October and then to HMS Britannia on 12 November 4 Benbow s next post was as Master Attendant of Chatham Dockyard 13 He then moved to become Master Attendant at Deptford Dockyard in early March 1690 a post he intermittently held for the next six years 20 He was master of HMS Sovereign in summer 1690 under his old commander Arthur Herbert now Lord Torrington 20 He was assigned to act as master of the fleet and took part in the English defeat in the Battle of Beachy Head After the defeat a Royal Commission was held into the circumstances that led to it 16 Benbow was highly regarded as a specialist in both navigation and pilotage 3 and his evidence given in July 1690 to the preliminary investigation strongly favoured his old patron Torrington He did not however testify during Torrington s court martial in December that year 21 Benbow continued aboard Sovereign throughout 1691 and by the summer of 1692 was again master of the fleet this time under Admiral Edward Russell 22 then aboard Britannia Benbow worked closely with his old colleague David Mitchell then serving as Russell s first captain and Josiah Burchett Russell s clerk Benbow may have advised Russell to take the Gull Passage inside the Goodwin Sands to the Downs where they linked up with the Dutch forces 23 Benbow served as master of the fleet during the Battles of Barfleur and La Hogue After the battles Benbow returned to Deptford to resume his duties as master attendant spending a brief period at Portsmouth Dockyard helping to oversee repairs to the fleet 24 He had already had his pay upgraded to that of a master attendant he was now to be paid as a master in addition to his master attendant s wage presumably as an acknowledgement of his special services 13 With the bomb flotillas edit nbsp Benbow s attack on Saint Malo where he blew up the machine ship Vesuvius 1693Benbow returned to active naval service in September 1693 joining Thomas Phillips the second engineer of the ordnance in jointly commanding a flotilla of bomb vessels to attack Saint Malo 1 Benbow went aboard the 48 gun HMS Norwich and began the bombardment on 26 November 25 It continued intermittently until 19 November when a large fireship was sent into the harbour An attempt was made to bring her alongside the town walls but she ran aground was set on fire and exploded Despite the failure of the initial plan considerable damage was done and Benbow s forces were able to take the fort on Quince Rock and disable it carrying artillery and prisoners away and bringing them to Guernsey 19 Benbow was still dissatisfied with the overall result and initiated a court martial against Captain Henry Tourville accusing him of cowardice for not bringing his ship in closer There was no conviction though as the mortars were proved to be defective 14 nbsp Benbow s bombardment of Dieppe in July 1694Benbow s experience led to him being promoted to a similar flotilla this time to be deployed against Dunkirk under the command of Vice Admiral Shovell A number of converted merchant vessels rigged like fireships but designed to explode rather than burn were assigned to support the expedition 9 Benbow had a hand in preparing these vessels for the operation throughout 1694 and worked closely with the principal storekeeper of the ordnance Willem Meesters 26 27 Benbow s attacking fleet was covered by Shovell s fleet on the Downs and the attack was planned for 12 and 13 September 27 However the French were able to block the entrance to the port preventing Benbow s squadron from entering and a storm further disrupted operations 27 Benbow drew back from Dunkirk and instead sailed around to Calais where he carried out a further bombardment on 27 September He returned to the Downs and then resumed his duties at Deptford Dockyard He spent December organising a convoy for a fleet of merchant vessels due to sail to Cadiz 20 Rise to admiral edit nbsp Benbow as an admiral engraved by John Chapman and published in 1797Benbow was soon at sea again in March 1695 being appointed commander in chief of His Majesty s ships which were then off the coast of France His squadron was highly successful taking a number of French merchants in early April and bringing them to England as prizes 4 Benbow was recommended by Lord Berkeley who had served with Benbow at Saint Malo to be promoted to rear admiral at the next opportunity and in the meantime he was appointed to the command of the 70 gun HMS Northumberland 4 He was soon joined by a volunteer his then fourteen year old son also named John Benbow 12 Benbow then sailed with Berkeley and the Dutch lieutenant admiral Philips van Almonde to Saint Malo intending to operate against privateering operations being conducted from the area 3 27 Benbow moved to command HMS Charles Galley to direct the inshore operations of ten English and Dutch warships nine English bomb vessels and seventeen small boats and vessels 28 They began operations on their arrival off Saint Malo on 4 July remaining in action until evening the next day when they withdrew without having achieved any decisive result Several houses had been destroyed for the damage and loss of a few of the bomb vessels 28 Benbow was given eight bomb vessels and seven or eight frigates and was dispatched down the coast He attacked Granville on 8 July shelling it with over 900 bombs over several hours and departed having set the town ablaze 28 Public and private reception edit The outcome of the operations had left Benbow in a tense relationship with his immediate superiors Berkeley had been accused of excessive timidity in his actions which it was believed had led to the failure of the attack on Dunkirk Benbow on the other hand was widely lauded for his fearless inshore attacks with his bomb vessels 29 Berkeley wrote on 28 July As to Captain Benbow I know of no difference between him and me nor have we had any He has no small obligation to me but being called in some of the foolish printed papers the famous Captain Benbow I suppose has put him a little out of himself and has made him play the fool as I guess in some of his letters I will not farther now particularize this business but time will show I have not been in the wrong unless being too kind to an ungrateful man 30 However the Admiralty approved of Benbow s conduct and ordered him to be paid as Rear Admiral during the time he has been employed this summer on the coast of France as a reward for his good service 12 13 Benbow was then appointed to the grand committee of sixty men to oversee the plans for Greenwich Hospital in December 1695 but the issue dragged on until 1 May 1696 1 The Admiralty again stepped in and Benbow was finally promoted and appointed commander in chief of the squadron before Dunkirk as Rear Admiral of the Blue for the duration of this present expedition and moved aboard the 70 gun HMS Suffolk 3 His orders were to protect English and Dutch shipping especially from the squadron of the privateer Jean Bart Bart however was mostly successful in evading pursuit usually escaping into Dunkirk when Benbow s force drew near 31 Benbow was appointed to command a squadron in the Soundings in December 1696 32 He carried out a number of cruises between March and August 1697 protecting allied trade and escorting the West Indian and Virginian merchant fleets into port These activities marked the last English naval expedition of the war He also carried out reconnaissance activities on the French fleet in port in Brest in July before resuming patrol operations off Dunkirk this time in concert with a number of Dutch ships under Rear Admiral Philips van der Goes until the end of the war in September 1697 33 Appointment to the West Indies edit Benbow was made commander in chief of the King s ships in the West Indies on 9 March 1698 and instructed to tackle the issue of piracy 4 He sailed in November the first leg taking him from Portsmouth to Madeira 14 Sailing under his protection from the Sale pirates was Paramore under Edmond Halley then sailing to the North Atlantic to carry out experiments to observe magnetic variations 34 Benbow finally reached Barbados in February 1699 and moved to the Spanish Main aboard his flagship the 60 gun HMS Gloucester He threatened the governor of Cartagena with a blockade and so compelled him to restore two English merchant ships that he had detained 35 These ships had been intended to take part in an expedition against the Scottish Darien scheme Without the ships this became impossible and the colonists were saved for the time being This was counter to the English government s desire to see the end of the Scottish colonising efforts and in June Benbow and the other West Indies governors received orders not to assist the Scotch colony in Darien 36 Benbow then sailed as far north as Newfoundland in order to drive the pirates away but they evaded capture 37 Benbow returned to England in the summer of 1700 and was appointed to the command of a fleet in the Downs 5 Benbow served there until summer 1701 under the command of Admiral Sir George Rooke 4 He was promoted to rear admiral of the red on 14 April followed by vice admiral of the blue on 30 June 1 He then flew his flag in the 70 gun HMS Breda 38 Spanish treasure fleet West Indies the action of 1702 edit With the peace becoming increasingly uneasy the English government became concerned over the possible fate of the Spanish silver fleet due to arrive in European waters from America 39 They were worried that the French would intercept the ships and use the treasure for war preparations Benbow was issued secret instructions to find the fleet and then to seize and bring them to England taking care that no embezzlement be made 40 Benbow s squadron was detached on 2 September and sailed for the West Indies arriving on 14 November and was at the Jamaica Station in mid December 8 41 He remained there for several months being joined on 8 May 1702 by several vessels under Captain William Whetstone Whetstone was made Rear Admiral under Benbow who had been promoted to Vice Admiral of the White on 19 January 1702 35 By now the War of the Spanish Succession had broken out and news of its declaration reached Benbow on 7 July He detached Whetstone and six ships to search off Port St Louis in Hispaniola for a French squadron under Admiral Jean du Casse which he believed would call at the port on his voyage to Cartagena and from there he might raid English and Dutch shipping After Whetstone had left Benbow took his squadron and sailed for Cartagena anticipating that either he or Whetstone would find Du Casse and bring him to battle 42 nbsp The legend of Brave Benbow Adml Benbow courageously commanding his Men to fight after his Leg was shattered to Pieces St Martha West Indies 19 24 July 1702 43 By the time that Whetstone had reached Hispaniola Du Casse had already departed Benbow s force subsequently sighted the French on 19 August sailing off Cape Santa Marta The French had three transports and four warships carrying between 68 and 70 guns while Benbow commanded seven ships carrying between 50 and 70 guns 42 The English forces were heavily scattered and the light winds meant that they were slow to regroup They did not achieve a form of collective order until four in the afternoon after which a partial engagement was fought lasting about two hours until nightfall caused the fleets to temporarily break off 44 The action quickly revealed a breakdown in discipline amongst Benbow s captains He had intended that the 64 gun HMS Defiance under Captain Richard Kirkby would lead the line of battle but Kirkby was not maintaining his station Benbow decided to take the lead himself and Breda pulled ahead followed by the 50 gun HMS Ruby under Captain George Walton 44 The two maintained contact with the French throughout the night but the other five ships refused to close The chase ensued until 24 August with only Benbow Walton and Samuel Vincent aboard HMS Falmouth making active efforts to bring the French to battle At times they bore the brunt of the fire of the entire squadron Ruby was disabled on 23 August and Benbow ordered her to retire to Port Royal 44 The French resumed the action at two in the morning on 24 August the entire squadron closing on Breda from astern and pounding her Benbow himself was hit by a chain shot that broke his leg and he was carried below 45 Benbow was determined to continue the pursuit despite his wounds and despite Captain Kirkby s arrival on board attempting to persuade Benbow to abandon the pursuit Benbow summoned a council of war and the other captains agreed signing a paper drafted by Kirkby which declared that they believed that after six days of battle the squadron lacked enough men to continue and that there was little chance of a decisive action since the men were exhausted there was a general lack of ammunition the ships rigging and masts were badly damaged and the winds were generally variable and undependable 3 They recommended breaking off the action and following the French to see if the situation improved Benbow had seen the cowardly behaviour of some of them before and had reason to believe that they either had a design against him or to be traitors to their country if an opportunity happened that the French could have destroyed the Admiral 28 46 He therefore ordered the squadron to return to Jamaica On their arrival he ordered the captains to be imprisoned awaiting a trial by court martial 44 Benbow received a letter from du Casse after the engagement Sir I had little hopes on Monday last but to have supped in your cabin but it pleased God to order it otherwise I am thankful for it As for those cowardly captains who deserted you hang them up for by God they deserve it Yours Du Casse 47 48 Trial of the captains edit Acting Rear Admiral Whetstone returned to Port Royal having spent 62 days cruising off Hispaniola and preparations were made for the trial Before it could begin Captain Thomas Hudson died who had commanded HMS Pendennis The remaining captains appeared at the court martial which convened on Breda held between 19 and 23 October 44 Due to his injuries Benbow passed to Whetstone the role of presiding over the court but he was present at the trial The court found Captain Kirkby of HMS Defiance and Cooper Wade of Greenwich guilty of breach of orders neglect of duty and the ill signed paper and consultation which obliged the Admiral to give over the chase and fight and condemned them to be shot 44 John Constable of HMS Windsor was found guilty of breach of orders and drunkenness and was cashiered 44 Samuel Vincent of Falmouth and Christopher Fogg of Breda were initially sentenced to be cashiered for signing the six captains resolution but Benbow personally declared that they had fought bravely and their sentences were remitted by the Lord High Admiral 44 The sentences were deferred so that Queen Anne could have a chance to examine the proceedings After her consideration in January 1703 she allowed the sentences to proceed and Constable Kirkby and Wade were returned to England as prisoners Constable was imprisoned until 1704 when the Queen pardoned him Kirkby and Wade were shot aboard HMS Bristol on 16 April 1703 while she was anchored in Plymouth Sound under Captain Edward Acton 49 Controversy slowly began to develop over the events of August 1702 Supporters of the disgraced Kirkby and Wade sought to discredit Benbow by publishing their own account of the action 3 50 Death and burial editBenbow died at Port Royal Kingston Jamaica on 4 November 1702 4 Whetstone reported that the cause of death was the wound of his leg which he received in battle with Monsieur Du Casse it never being set to perfection which malady being aggravated by the discontent of his mind threw him into a sort of melancholy which ended his life as before 3 He was buried on 16 November in the chancel of St Andrew s Church Kingston 5 A marble slab was later laid over the grave emblazoned with a coat of arms and inscribed Here lyeth the Body of John Benbow Esq Admiral of the White a true pattern of English Courage who lost his life in Defence of his Queene amp Country November the 4th 1702 In the 52nd year of his age by a wound in his Legg Received in an Engagement with Monsr Du Casse being Much Lamented 51 Secretary of State Lord Nottingham wrote to Benbow in January 1703 before news of his death had reached London to inform him that the queen was extremely well pleased with your conduct and much offended with the baseness of those officers who deserted and betrayed you Meanwhile the cabinet was preparing to promote him to vice admiral of the white and to dispatch him to transport troops to Newfoundland 3 Personal life and legacy editBenbow married a woman named Martha died 1722 after his return to England in 1681 The couple had at least seven children including daughter Martha and sons Richard and John Another son Solomon was baptised in 1686 but died in infancy 52 There are also records of two more sons named Richard who were born in Kent and another daughter named Katherine 53 Son John went on to serve in the Royal Navy 52 The family lived in the parish of St Dunstan and All Saints Stepney In 1709 Katherine married Paul Calton of Milton Berkshire where Benbow is said to have stayed in the 1690s According to Parish Records William Benbow son of Admiral John Benbow was buried at St Nicholas Parish Church Deptford Kent now SE London on 7 April 1729 One of the admiral s granddaughters married the Rev John Simpson who commissioned the current Stoke Hall Derbyshire following his acquisition of the estate upon their marriage 54 Benbow and Peter the Great edit Benbow signed a three year lease on Sayes Court in June 1696 a house belonging to diarist John Evelyn 55 Six months later Evelyn wrote to a friend complaining I have let my house to Captain Benbow and have the mortification of seeing everyday much of my former labours and expenses there impairing for want of a more polite tenant 56 In January 1698 Tsar Peter of Russia arrived in London to study British shipbuilding and seamanship He and his entourage were provided with Sayes Court to reside in during their stay by William III The Russians spent three months in London before leaving to tour the country Benbow promptly asked for reparations from the Treasury in order to be able to reimburse Evelyn and recover his own losses He complained that the Russians had caused considerable damage to his house with much of the furniture broke lost or destroyed 57 Christopher Wren was instructed to survey the property and declared it entirely ruined Benbow lost twenty fine paintings and several fine draughts and other designs relating to the Sea from his personal property The Treasury eventually allowed payment of 350 9s 6d in compensation 58 Brave Benbow edit nbsp An engraving produced in 1804 that helped to promote the legend Benbow s fame led to his name entering popular culture A monument by sculptor John Evan Thomas was erected in 1843 by public subscription in St Mary s Church Shrewsbury commemorating Benbow as a skillful and daring seaman whose heroic exploits long rendered him the boast of the British Navy and still point him out as the Nelson of his times 59 A 74 gun ship of the line and two battleships were named HMS Benbow 60 nbsp The Admiral Benbow in Penzance reportedly an inspriation for Stevenson s InnThere are a number of real life Admiral Benbow public houses around the world and other institutions that have borne his name 61 Whether they are named as a result of Robert Louis Stevenson s use of The Admiral Benbow Inn in his novel Treasure Island or if they re named for the Admiral himself it is impossible to say It is alleged that Stevenson named the Hawkins Inn after the arrest of several members of the Benbow Brandy Men smuggling gang that frequented the Benbow pub in Penzance shortly before he visited in August 1877 62 6 63 The incident of August 1702 also took hold on the popular imagination and was celebrated in an alehouse song listed as number 227 in the Roud Folk Song Index Come all you seamen bold and draw near and draw near Come all you seamen bold and draw near It s of an Admiral s fame O brave Benbow was his name How he fought all on the main you shall hear you shall hear Brave Benbow he set sail For to fight for to fight Brave Benbow he set sail for to fight Brave Benbow he set sail with a fine and pleasant gale But his captains they turn d tail in a fright in a fright Says Kirby unto Wade We will run we will run Says Kirby unto Wade we will run For I value no disgrace nor the losing of my place But the enemy I won t face nor his guns nor his guns The Ruby and Benbow fought the French fought the French The Ruby and Benbow fought the French They fought them up and down till the blood came trickling down Till the blood came trickling down where they lay where they lay Brave Benbow lost his legs by chain shot by chain shot Brave Benbow lost his legs by chain shot Brave Benbow lost his legs And all on his stumps he begs Fight on my English lads Tis our lot tis our lot The surgeon dress d his wounds Cries Benbow cries Benbow The surgeon dress d his wounds cries Benbow Let a cradle now in haste on the quarterdeck be placed That the enemy I may face Til I die Til I die 64 Its musical theme forms one of the three arrangements on which English composer Ralph Vaughan Williams based his Sea Songs originally arranged for military band in 1923 as the second movement of his English Folk Song Suite 65 and subsequently re arranged for full orchestra in 1942 by the composer 66 The song was collected in the oral tradition from traditional singers in England in the twentieth century A recording of Sam Bennett of Ilmington Warwickshire made by James Madison Carpenter in the 1930s can be heard on the Vaughan Williams Memorial Library Website 67 The Copper Family also have a traditional version of the song which was passed down through several generations and is available online 68 Another song has survived from the period with different air and rhythm but also known as Admiral Benbow and it is often sung by folksingers It begins We sailed from Virginia and thence to Fayal References editSpecific edit a b c d Vice Admiral John Benbow 1653 1702 Maritime Art Greenwich Greenwich Maritime Museum 20 August 2015 Archived from the original on 29 December 2004 Retrieved 7 June 2009 Death of Admiral Benbow The Brother Tars Song Published by printed by J Fowler 1780 a b c d e f g h Matthew pp 50 68 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Biography John Benbow The National Museum The Royal Navy 2004 Archived from the original on 14 November 2008 Retrieved 7 June 2009 a b c d e John Benbow Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 12 June 2009 a b Maxwell p 59 a b Nightingale pp 167 175 a b c d Parkes D 1819 Life and Exploits of Admiral Benbow Vol The Gentleman s magazine Printed by F Jefferies pp 9 11 a b c Edgar pp 206 214 a b le Fevre pp 22 27 Joy Brian History of the HMS Tiger Archived from the original on 12 October 2009 Retrieved 12 June 2009 a b c Stephen p 211 a b c d e f Stephen p 208 a b c Allen pp 76 81 Blackwood W 1948 Blackwood s magazine Vol v 263 264 AMS Press p 190 ISBN 978 0 404 07730 3 a b Clowes p 460 a b Campbell p 206 Dickens Charles William Harrison Ainsworth Albert Smith George Cruikshank 1844 Bentley s Miscellany Richard Bentley p 590 a b Stephen pp 208 214 a b c Bowle John 1981 John Evelyn and his world Routledge p 219 ISBN 978 0 7100 0721 6 Stephen p 172 Royal Naval Exhibition Issue 1119 ed London The Graphic 9 May 1891 Aubrey p 82 Merriman p 37 Stephen p 214 Clowes p 477 a b c d Harris p 190 a b c d Clowes pp 477 480 Stephen pp 208 211 William John Hardy and Edward Bateson ed 1908 Calendar of State Papers Domestic Series of the Reign of William and Mary 1695 amp addenda 1689 1695 Public Record Office Printed for Her Majesty s Stationery Office by Eyre and Spottiswoode p xii Clark J Kent 1984 Goodwin Wharton Oxford University Press p 308 ISBN 978 0 19 212234 6 Stephen p 87 Treves pp 289 295 Halley Edmond Thrower Norman Joseph William 1981 The three voyages of Edmond Halley in the Paramore 1698 1701 Hakluyt Society pp 36 39 ISBN 978 0 904180 02 2 a b Stephen p 453 Stephen p 209 Robertson James Alexander Spanish Voyages to the Northwest Coast of America The Hispanic American Historical Review 145 146 Herman Arthur2 2004 To rule the waves how the British Navy shaped the modern world Harper Collins p 45 ISBN 978 0 06 053424 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Rodger N A M 2005 The command of the ocean a naval history of Britain 1649 1815 W W Norton p 165 ISBN 978 0 393 06050 8 Japikse pp 477 9 Cundall p xx a b Roberts Walter Adolphe 1942 The French in the West Indies The Bobbs Merrill Company pp 76 81 ISBN 978 0 8154 0377 7 PAD5181 St Martha West Indies 19 24 July 1702 National Maritime Museum 20 August 2015 Archived from the original on 21 May 2009 Retrieved 7 June 2009 a b c d e f g h An Account of the Arraignments and Tryals of Col Richard Kirkby Capt John Constable Capt Cooper Wade Capt Samuel Vincent and Capt Christopher Fogg Behalf of Her Majesty at a Court martial Held on Board the Ship Breda in Port Royal 1703 pp 1 10 James p 57 Publications of the Navy Records Society Vol 4 125 Navy Records Society 1984 p 168 Phillips Michael HMS Dreda 70 gun 3rd rate Ships of the Old Navy Age of Nelson org Retrieved 7 June 2009 Kingston W H G November 2007 How Britannia Came to Rule the Waves Dodo Press ISBN 978 1 4065 8371 7 Archived from the original on 11 March 2008 Retrieved 2 December 2006 Trevelyan pp 252 253 Woodman p 48 Verrill p 282 a b Laughton p 200 Historians of the Charles Benbow Family History of the Benbow Family of the United Kingdom and Selected Allied Families Retrieved 20 June 2009 Stoke Hall and Nutbourne Pumping Station Restoration Home One Year On Series 1 Episode 1 29 August 2012 BBC Television Retrieved 22 July 2013 Welcher pp 130 133 Evelyn p 359 Morfill p 143 Cross p 25 Pidgeon p 85 HMS Benbow battleship cruisers co uk Retrieved 12 June 2009 Benbow W A ADMIRAL BENBOW PUBS BraveBenbow Retrieved 17 December 2021 Watson pp 25 27 Gainey Tom 10 December 2017 Cornwall s smuggling past a look at six pubs at the heart of a golden age of criminality The Cornishman Nettel pp 286 287 Timothy Reynish notes for British Wind Band Classics Chandos Records 9697 1999 Philip Lane notes for British Light Miniatures Naxos 8 570332 released 2007 Admiral Benbow continued VWML Song Index SN16606 The Vaughan Williams Memorial Library Retrieved 6 October 2021 Sussex Traditions Retrieved 6 October 2021 General edit Online edit Admiral John Benbow Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 2076 Subscription or UK public library membership required Vice Admiral John Benbow 1653 1702 Maritime Art Greenwich Greenwich Maritime Museum 20 August 2015 Biography John Benbow The National Museum The Royal Navy 2004 Archived from the original on 14 November 2008 Retrieved 7 June 2009 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Benbow John Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 3 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 715 Laughton John Knox 1885 Benbow John 1653 1702 In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 4 London Smith Elder amp Co Ship Admiral Benbow from Liverpool attacked by Pirates April 1829 Sydney Monitor Nsw 1828 1838 14 November 1829 p 4 Printed edit Allen Joseph 1852 Battles of the British Navy Published by Henry G Bohn ISBN 978 0 217 70408 3 Aubrey Philip 1979 The defeat of James Stuart s Armada 1692 Leicester University Press ISBN 978 0 7185 1168 5 Benbow William A 1992 Brave Benbow The Life of Vice admiral John Benbow 1651 1702 5th ed Bill Benbow Campbell John John Berkenhout Henry Redhead Yorke William Stevenson antiquary William Stevenson 1812 Lives of the British Admirals Harvard University C J Barrington ISBN 978 0 665 33213 5 Clowes William Laird Alfred Thayer Mahan 1898 The Royal Navy Vol II University of Michigan Sampson Low Marston and Co ISBN 978 1 86176 017 3 Cross Anthony Glenn 2000 Peter the Great through British eyes perceptions and representations of the Tsar since 1698 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 78298 2 Cundall Frank 1915 Historic Jamaica West India Committee Edgar John George 1861 Sea Kings and Naval Heroes Oxford University Published by F Warne Evelyn John William Bray 1859 Diary and Correspondence of John Evelyn Vol II Published by H G Bohn ISBN 978 0 559 30610 5 le Fevre Peter 2000 Precursors of Nelson Joseph K Lange Richard Harding Stackpole Books ISBN 978 0 8117 2901 7 Harris Simon 2001 Sir Cloudesley Shovell Stuart Admiral Spellmount ISBN 978 1 86227 099 2 James Lawrence 1997 The Rise and Fall of the British Empire St Martin s Griffen ISBN 978 0 312 16985 5 Japikse N 1927 Correspondentie van Willem III en van Hans Willem Bentinck in German Kennedy Paul 1976 The Rise and Fall of British Naval Mastery University of Michigan Scribner ISBN 978 0 684 14609 6 Laughton Leonard George Carr Roger Charles Anderson 1944 The Mariner s Mirror London Society for Nautical Research Locker Edward Hawke 1831 The Naval Gallery of Greenwich Hospital Oxford University Harding and Lepard Matthew Henry Colin Gray Brian Howard Harrison 2004 Oxford dictionary of national biography Vol V Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 280089 3 Maxwell Kenneth 2003 Naked tropics essays on empire and other rogues Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 94577 6 Merriman Reginald Dundas 1961 Queen Anne s Navy Naval Records Society Morfill William Richard 1901 Russia Published by Fisher Unwin ISBN 978 0 89875 762 0 Nettel Reginald 1954 Sing a Song of England Phoenix House Nightingale Joseph 1818 Shropshire Gentleman s Magazine Pidgeon Henry 1851 Memorials of Shrewsbury Oxford University Published by J H Leake ISBN 978 0 903802 00 0 Rodger N A M 1996 The Wooden World W W Norton amp Co Ltd ISBN 978 0 393 31469 4 Stephen 1885 Benbow John 1653 1702 In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 4 London Smith Elder amp Co Strang Herbert 1909 Humphrey Bold A story of the time of Benbow American Libraries of the Encyclopaedia Britannica Indianapolis The Bobbs Merrill company Trevelyan George Macaulay 1948 England Under Queen Anne Indiana University Longmans Green and Co Treves Frederick 1908 The Cradle of the Deep 3rd ed New York Emith Elder amp Co New York Public Library Verrill Alpheus Hyatt 1923 In the wake of the buccaneers The Century Co ISBN 978 0 87380 168 3 Watson Harold Francis 1969 Coasts of Treasure Island Published by Naylor Co Welcher Jeanne K 1972 John Evelyn University of Michigan Twayne Publishers Woodman Richard 2005 A Brief History of Mutiny Carroll amp Graf ISBN 978 0 7867 1567 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Benbow nbsp Admiral Benbow Letitia Elizabeth s poetical illustration to a painting by Sir G Kneller engraved by W T Mote actually William Henry Mote from Fisher s Drawing Room Scrap Book 1838 together with a brief historical note Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Benbow amp oldid 1208477284, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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