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John Byron

Vice-Admiral John Byron (8 November 1723 – 1 April 1786) was a British Royal Navy officer and explorer. He earned the nickname "Foul-Weather Jack" in the press because of his frequent encounters with bad weather at sea.[1] As a midshipman, he sailed in the squadron under George Anson on his voyage around the world, though Byron made it only to southern Chile, where his ship was wrecked. He returned to England with the captain of HMS Wager. He was governor of Newfoundland following Hugh Palliser, who left in 1768. He circumnavigated the world as a commodore with his own squadron in 1764–1766. He fought in battles in the Seven Years' War and the American Revolution. He rose to Vice Admiral of the White before his death in 1786.


John Byron
Captain the Honourable John Byron, Joshua Reynolds, 1759
Born8 November 1723
Died10 April 1786 (aged 62)
London, England
Buried
Church of St Mary the Virgin, Twickenham
Allegiance Kingdom of Great Britain
Service/branch Royal Navy
Years of service1731–1786
RankVice-Admiral
Commands heldHMS Siren
HMS Dolphin
Leeward Islands Station
Battles/wars

His grandsons include the poet Lord Byron and George Anson Byron, admiral and explorer, who were the 6th and 7th Baron Byron, respectively.

Early career

Byron was the second son of William Byron, 4th Baron Byron and Frances Berkeley, the daughter of William, 4th Baron Berkeley. After studying at Westminster School he joined the Royal Navy at the age of 14, making his first voyage aboard HMS Romney in 1738–40.[2]

Anson's voyage around the world

In 1740, he accompanied George Anson on his voyage around the world as a midshipman aboard one of the several ships in the squadron.

 
Wreck of the Wager

On 14 May 1741, HMS Wager under Captain Cheap (as Captain Dandy Kidd had died), was shipwrecked on the coast of Chile on what is now called Wager Island and Byron was one of the survivors.[3] The survivors decided to split in two teams, one to make its way by boat to Rio de Janeiro on the Atlantic coast; the other, including John Byron and the Captain, to sail north along the Spanish colonial coast.

Captain Cheap at Wager Island had a party of 19 men after the deserters rejoined the camp. This included the surgeon Elliot and Lieutenant Hamilton who had been cast adrift with him plus midshipmen John Byron and Alexander Campbell who had been in the barge. They rowed up the coast but were punished by continuous rain, headwinds and waves that threatened the boats. One night while the men slept on shore, one of the boats was capsized while at anchor and was swept out to sea with its two boatkeepers. One of the men got ashore but the other drowned. As it was now impossible for them all to fit in the remaining boat, four marines were left ashore with muskets to fend for themselves. The winds prevented them from getting around the headland so they returned to pick up the marines only to find them gone. They returned to Wager Island in early February 1742. With one death on the journey, there were now 13 in the group.

Martín Olleta, a Chono chieftain, guided the men up the coast to the Spanish settlements of Chiloé Island so they set out again. Two men died; after burying the bodies, the six seamen rowed off in the boat never to be seen again while Cheap, Hamilton, Byron, Campbell and the dying Elliot were on shore looking for food. Olleta then agreed to take the remaining four on by canoe for their only remaining possession, a musket. It is likely the party travelled across Presidente Ríos Lake in inland Taitao Peninsula, a lake Chile regarded as officially discovered in 1945.[4][5] Eventually they made it to be taken prisoner by the Spanish. The Spaniards treated them well and they were eventually taken to the inland capital of Santiago where they were released on parole. The Spaniards heard that Anson had been generous in the treatment of the prisoners he had taken and this kindness was returned.

Byron and the other three men stayed in Santiago till late 1744 and were offered passage on a French ship bound for Spain. Three accepted the passage. Campbell elected to take a mule across the Andes and joined the Spanish Admiral Pizarro in Montevideo on the Asia only to find Isaac Morris and the two seamen who had been abandoned in Freshwater Bay on the Atlantic coast. After time in prison in Spain, Campbell reached Britain in May 1746, followed by the other three two months later.

In England, the official court martial examined only the loss of the Wager in which Baynes, in nominal charge at the time, was acquitted of blame but reprimanded for omissions of duty. Disputes over what happened after the wreck were instead played out as Bulkeley and Cummins, Campbell, Morris, the cooper Young and later Byron published their own accounts, the last of which was the only one that in any way defended Cheap who had since died. Twenty-nine crew members plus seven marines made it back to England.

Byron's account of his adventures and the Wager Mutiny are recounted in The Narrative of the Honourable John Byron (1768). His book sold well enough to be printed in several editions.

Byron was appointed captain of HMS Siren in December 1746.[3]

Seven Years' War

In 1760, during the Seven Years' War, Byron commanded a squadron sent to destroy the fortifications at Louisbourg, Quebec, which had been captured by the British two years before. They wanted to ensure it could not be used by the French in Canada. In July of that year he defeated the French flotilla sent to relieve New France at the Battle of Restigouche.

Commodore, governor and vice admiral

In early 1764 the British Admiralty determined that it would require a permanent naval settlement off the South American coast, in order to resupply naval vessels seeking to enter the Pacific via Cape Horn. Captain Byron was selected to explore the South Atlantic for a suitable island upon which to establish such a settlement. The South American mainland was controlled by Spain, which was hostile to local expansion of British interests; to disguise Byron's mission it was announced that he had been appointed the new Navy Commander-in-Chief, East Indies. Byron set sail in June 1764, ostensibly to take up the East Indies post. For the voyage he was granted command of the 24-gun frigate HMS Dolphin and the 16-gun sloop HMS Tamar.[6]

 
The mythical Pepys Island, which Byron searched for in 1764–65. Illustration by William Hacke, 1699.

Byron's two-vessel flotilla crossed the Atlantic over the winter of 1764 and made its way slowly down the South American coast. The Admiralty had ordered Byron to first seek Pepys Island, reputedly discovered off the Patagonian coast by the corsair Ambrose Cowley in 1683. Byron reached the co-ordinates given by Cowley in January 1765, but there was no sign of the island and the search was swiftly abandoned.[note 1] On 5 February Byron reached the Patagonian settlement of Port Desire where he resupplied his vessels from the storeship HMS Florida.[6]

Between June 1764 and May 1766, Byron completed his own circumnavigation of the globe as captain of HMS Dolphin. This was the first such circumnavigation that was accomplished in less than 2 years.[7] His actions nearly caused a war between Great Britain and Spain, as both countries had armed fleets ready to contest the sovereignty of the Falkland Islands. Later Byron encountered islands and extant residents of the Tuamotus and Tokelau Islands, and Nikunau in the southern Gilbert Islands; he also visited Tinian in the Northern Marianas Islands.[8] A notable member of Byron's crew was Master's Mate Erasmus Gower whom Byron chose to 'take a significant part' in the ceremony when he took possession of the Falkland Islands. Byron had examined Gower for his lieutenant's examination in 1762 and was so impressed that he chose him to accompany him on his own circumnavigation (1764–65) and ensured that he was appointed as lieutenant to Commander Philip Carteret immediately afterwards in the next circumnavigation (1766–69).[9]

In 1769 he was appointed governor of Newfoundland off the mainland of Canada, an office he held for the next three years.[3]

He was promoted to rear admiral on 31 March 1775. In 1779, he served as Commander-in-chief of the Leeward Islands Station[10] during the American War of Independence. After being severely injured during a storm on his way to the West Indies, Byron unsuccessfully attacked a French fleet under the Comte d'Estaing at the Battle of Grenada in July 1779.[11] He subsequently resigned his post and returned to England, where he suffered from poor health for the rest of his life.

Byron was briefly Commander-in-Chief, North American Station from 1 October 1779.[12] He was made vice admiral of the white in September 1780.[3]

Family

 
John Byron Death Notice

On 8 September 1748 he married his first cousin Sophia Trevanion, daughter of John Trevanion of Caerhays in Cornwall and Barbara Berkeley, the sister of his mother.[13][14] They had two sons and seven daughters:[15]

  • Frances Byron (1749–1823), later married Charles Leigh
  • Sophia Byron (died in infancy)
  • Isabella Byron (died in infancy)
  • Juliana Elizabeth Byron (1754–88), later married her cousin Hon. William Byron (d. 1776, son of William Byron, 5th Baron Byron)
  • Sophia Maria Byron (1755–1821), the 'maiden aunt' of the poet George Gordon Byron
  • John "Mad Jack" Byron (1757–91), who in turn fathered the poet George Gordon Byron, the future 6th Baron Byron
  • George Anson Byron (1758–93), noted navy officer and father of George Anson Byron junior, another admiral and explorer and later the 7th Baron Byron
  • Charlotte Byron (died in infancy)
  • Augusta Barbara Charlotte Byron (1762–1824), later married Admiral Christopher Parker

John was the brother of Hon. George Byron, married to Frances Levett, daughter of Elton Levett of Nottingham, a descendant of Ambrose Elton, Esq., High Sheriff of Herefordshire in 1618 and a surgeon in Nottingham.[16][17]

Death and legacy

According to a note written by his wife Sophia to their financial agent, John Byron died on 1 April 1786 at home in Bolton Row, London (not 10 April, as subsequent biographies claim).[18] On that date nine days later his remains were buried in the Berkeley family vault situated beneath the chancel of the Church of St Mary the Virgin, Twickenham.[19][20]

John's life was a great inspiration for his grandson the poet George Gordon Byron, though they never met. The poet both drew from his grandfather's experiences in his writing, using his 'Narrative' for the shipwreck scene in Don Juan, and wrote of the kinship he felt in having such a turbulent, unlucky life: he wrote in an epistle to his half-sister Augusta Leigh that "he had no rest at sea, nor I on shore".[21]

In fiction

John Byron's experiences in the Anson voyage form the basis of the novel The Unknown Shore by Patrick O'Brian. It closely follows Byron's account in The Narrative of the Honourable John Byron (1768).

In The Dark Design by Philip José Farmer, John Byron is a crewmember of the schooner The Razzle Dazzle.

Bibliography

  • Emily Brand, The Fall of the House of Byron (John Murray, 2020)
  • James Gambier, "John Byron", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  • Violet Walker, The House of Byron (Quiller Press, 1988)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Historian Robert Rea describes Pepys Island as "completely mythical;" Cowley's description of it was either fictional or a mistaken landfall among the Falklands.[6]

References

  1. ^ Brand, Emily (2020). The Fall of the House of Byron. John Murray. p. 183.
  2. ^ Brand, Emily (2020). The Fall of the House of Byron. John Murray. p. 78.
  3. ^ a b c d Douglas, W. A. B. (1979). "Byron, John". In Halpenny, Francess G (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. IV (1771–1800) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  4. ^ Vásquez Caballero, Ricardo Felipe. "Aau, el secreto de los chono" (PDF) (in Spanish). (PDF) from the original on 23 March 2016. Retrieved 24 January 2019. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  5. ^ Álvarez A., Ricardo; Navarro P., Magdalena; Saavedra G., Gonzalo; Donoso C., Cristián (2015). "Referencias exploratorias sobre el lago Presidente Ríos, para sortear el Istmo de Ofqui, Península de Taitao, Región de Aysén" [Exploratory references on Presidente Ríos lake, for routes round the Ofqui Isthmus, Taitao Peninsula, Aysén Region, Chile]. Magallania (in Spanish). 43 (1): 91–101. doi:10.4067/S0718-22442015000100006. Retrieved 21 December 2019.
  6. ^ a b c Rea, Robert R. (October 1981). "Florida and the Royal Navy's Floridas". The Florida Historical Quarterly. Florida Historical Society. 60 (2): 187–191.
  7. ^ "Circumnavigation: Notable global maritime circumnavigations". Solarnavigator.net. Retrieved 20 July 2009.
  8. ^ Officer on Board the Said Ship. (1767). A voyage round the world in His Majesty’s Ship the 'Dolphin', commanded by the honourable commodore Byron. London: J. Newbery and F. Newbery.
  9. ^ Bates, Ian M. (31 May 2017). Champion of the Quarterdeck: Admiral Sir Erasmus Gower (1742-1814) (1st ed.). Sage Old Books. pp. 28, 35–73. ISBN 9780958702126.
  10. ^ Haydn, Joseph (13 June 2008). The Book of Dignities: Containing Lists of the Official Personages of the British Empire ... from the Earliest Periods to the Present Time ... Together with the Sovereigns and Rulers of Europe, from the Foundation of Their Respective States; the Peerage of England and Great Britain Original 1851 Digitized by the University of Michigan. Longmans, Brown, Green, and Longmans. p. 279.
  11. ^ Brand, Emily (2020). The Fall of the House of Byron. John Murray. pp. 183, 187.
  12. ^ James Gambier, "John Byron", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  13. ^ John Burke, Esq. (1834). A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland Vol. I. Henry Colburn. p. 255. Retrieved 13 June 2018.
  14. ^ Sir Bernard Burke, LL.D. (1866). A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire. Harrison, 59, Pall Mall. p. 47. Retrieved 13 June 2018.
  15. ^ Brand, Emily (2020). The Fall of the House of Byron. John Murray. pp. 96–102.
  16. ^ Lodge, Edmund (1832). The Genealogy of the Existing British Peerage with Brief Histories of the Family Histories of the Nobility, Edmund Lodge, London, 1832. Retrieved 20 July 2009.
  17. ^ Mayo, Charles Herbert (1882). A Genealogical Account of the Mayo and Elton Families of the Counties of Wilts and Hereford, Charles Herbert Mayo, London, 1882. Privately printed by C. Whittingham. p. 16. Retrieved 20 July 2009. thomas levett lichfield.
  18. ^ Brand, Emily (2020). The Fall of the House of Byron. John Murray. p. 231.
  19. ^ "At Twickenham Park, Lord John Berkeley". The Twickenham Museum. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  20. ^ Brand, Emily. The Fall of the House of Byron. p. 232.
  21. ^ Brand, Emily (2020). The Fall of the House of Byron. John Murray. p. 77.

External links

john, byron, other, people, named, disambiguation, vice, admiral, november, 1723, april, 1786, british, royal, navy, officer, explorer, earned, nickname, foul, weather, jack, press, because, frequent, encounters, with, weather, midshipman, sailed, squadron, un. For other people named John Byron see John Byron disambiguation Vice Admiral John Byron 8 November 1723 1 April 1786 was a British Royal Navy officer and explorer He earned the nickname Foul Weather Jack in the press because of his frequent encounters with bad weather at sea 1 As a midshipman he sailed in the squadron under George Anson on his voyage around the world though Byron made it only to southern Chile where his ship was wrecked He returned to England with the captain of HMS Wager He was governor of Newfoundland following Hugh Palliser who left in 1768 He circumnavigated the world as a commodore with his own squadron in 1764 1766 He fought in battles in the Seven Years War and the American Revolution He rose to Vice Admiral of the White before his death in 1786 Vice AdmiralThe HonourableJohn ByronCaptain the Honourable John Byron Joshua Reynolds 1759Born8 November 1723Died10 April 1786 aged 62 London EnglandBuriedChurch of St Mary the Virgin TwickenhamAllegiance Kingdom of Great BritainService wbr branch Royal NavyYears of service1731 1786RankVice AdmiralCommands heldHMS SirenHMS DolphinLeeward Islands StationBattles warsSeven Years War Battle of Restigouche American War of Independence Battle of GrenadaHis grandsons include the poet Lord Byron and George Anson Byron admiral and explorer who were the 6th and 7th Baron Byron respectively Contents 1 Early career 2 Anson s voyage around the world 3 Seven Years War 4 Commodore governor and vice admiral 5 Family 6 Death and legacy 7 In fiction 8 Bibliography 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksEarly career EditByron was the second son of William Byron 4th Baron Byron and Frances Berkeley the daughter of William 4th Baron Berkeley After studying at Westminster School he joined the Royal Navy at the age of 14 making his first voyage aboard HMS Romney in 1738 40 2 Anson s voyage around the world EditIn 1740 he accompanied George Anson on his voyage around the world as a midshipman aboard one of the several ships in the squadron Wreck of the Wager On 14 May 1741 HMS Wager under Captain Cheap as Captain Dandy Kidd had died was shipwrecked on the coast of Chile on what is now called Wager Island and Byron was one of the survivors 3 The survivors decided to split in two teams one to make its way by boat to Rio de Janeiro on the Atlantic coast the other including John Byron and the Captain to sail north along the Spanish colonial coast Captain Cheap at Wager Island had a party of 19 men after the deserters rejoined the camp This included the surgeon Elliot and Lieutenant Hamilton who had been cast adrift with him plus midshipmen John Byron and Alexander Campbell who had been in the barge They rowed up the coast but were punished by continuous rain headwinds and waves that threatened the boats One night while the men slept on shore one of the boats was capsized while at anchor and was swept out to sea with its two boatkeepers One of the men got ashore but the other drowned As it was now impossible for them all to fit in the remaining boat four marines were left ashore with muskets to fend for themselves The winds prevented them from getting around the headland so they returned to pick up the marines only to find them gone They returned to Wager Island in early February 1742 With one death on the journey there were now 13 in the group Martin Olleta a Chono chieftain guided the men up the coast to the Spanish settlements of Chiloe Island so they set out again Two men died after burying the bodies the six seamen rowed off in the boat never to be seen again while Cheap Hamilton Byron Campbell and the dying Elliot were on shore looking for food Olleta then agreed to take the remaining four on by canoe for their only remaining possession a musket It is likely the party travelled across Presidente Rios Lake in inland Taitao Peninsula a lake Chile regarded as officially discovered in 1945 4 5 Eventually they made it to be taken prisoner by the Spanish The Spaniards treated them well and they were eventually taken to the inland capital of Santiago where they were released on parole The Spaniards heard that Anson had been generous in the treatment of the prisoners he had taken and this kindness was returned Byron and the other three men stayed in Santiago till late 1744 and were offered passage on a French ship bound for Spain Three accepted the passage Campbell elected to take a mule across the Andes and joined the Spanish Admiral Pizarro in Montevideo on the Asia only to find Isaac Morris and the two seamen who had been abandoned in Freshwater Bay on the Atlantic coast After time in prison in Spain Campbell reached Britain in May 1746 followed by the other three two months later In England the official court martial examined only the loss of the Wager in which Baynes in nominal charge at the time was acquitted of blame but reprimanded for omissions of duty Disputes over what happened after the wreck were instead played out as Bulkeley and Cummins Campbell Morris the cooper Young and later Byron published their own accounts the last of which was the only one that in any way defended Cheap who had since died Twenty nine crew members plus seven marines made it back to England Byron s account of his adventures and the Wager Mutiny are recounted in The Narrative of the Honourable John Byron 1768 His book sold well enough to be printed in several editions Byron was appointed captain of HMS Siren in December 1746 3 Seven Years War EditMain article Great Britain in the Seven Years War In 1760 during the Seven Years War Byron commanded a squadron sent to destroy the fortifications at Louisbourg Quebec which had been captured by the British two years before They wanted to ensure it could not be used by the French in Canada In July of that year he defeated the French flotilla sent to relieve New France at the Battle of Restigouche Commodore governor and vice admiral EditIn early 1764 the British Admiralty determined that it would require a permanent naval settlement off the South American coast in order to resupply naval vessels seeking to enter the Pacific via Cape Horn Captain Byron was selected to explore the South Atlantic for a suitable island upon which to establish such a settlement The South American mainland was controlled by Spain which was hostile to local expansion of British interests to disguise Byron s mission it was announced that he had been appointed the new Navy Commander in Chief East Indies Byron set sail in June 1764 ostensibly to take up the East Indies post For the voyage he was granted command of the 24 gun frigate HMS Dolphin and the 16 gun sloop HMS Tamar 6 The mythical Pepys Island which Byron searched for in 1764 65 Illustration by William Hacke 1699 Byron s two vessel flotilla crossed the Atlantic over the winter of 1764 and made its way slowly down the South American coast The Admiralty had ordered Byron to first seek Pepys Island reputedly discovered off the Patagonian coast by the corsair Ambrose Cowley in 1683 Byron reached the co ordinates given by Cowley in January 1765 but there was no sign of the island and the search was swiftly abandoned note 1 On 5 February Byron reached the Patagonian settlement of Port Desire where he resupplied his vessels from the storeship HMS Florida 6 Between June 1764 and May 1766 Byron completed his own circumnavigation of the globe as captain of HMS Dolphin This was the first such circumnavigation that was accomplished in less than 2 years 7 His actions nearly caused a war between Great Britain and Spain as both countries had armed fleets ready to contest the sovereignty of the Falkland Islands Later Byron encountered islands and extant residents of the Tuamotus and Tokelau Islands and Nikunau in the southern Gilbert Islands he also visited Tinian in the Northern Marianas Islands 8 A notable member of Byron s crew was Master s Mate Erasmus Gower whom Byron chose to take a significant part in the ceremony when he took possession of the Falkland Islands Byron had examined Gower for his lieutenant s examination in 1762 and was so impressed that he chose him to accompany him on his own circumnavigation 1764 65 and ensured that he was appointed as lieutenant to Commander Philip Carteret immediately afterwards in the next circumnavigation 1766 69 9 In 1769 he was appointed governor of Newfoundland off the mainland of Canada an office he held for the next three years 3 He was promoted to rear admiral on 31 March 1775 In 1779 he served as Commander in chief of the Leeward Islands Station 10 during the American War of Independence After being severely injured during a storm on his way to the West Indies Byron unsuccessfully attacked a French fleet under the Comte d Estaing at the Battle of Grenada in July 1779 11 He subsequently resigned his post and returned to England where he suffered from poor health for the rest of his life Byron was briefly Commander in Chief North American Station from 1 October 1779 12 He was made vice admiral of the white in September 1780 3 Family Edit John Byron Death Notice On 8 September 1748 he married his first cousin Sophia Trevanion daughter of John Trevanion of Caerhays in Cornwall and Barbara Berkeley the sister of his mother 13 14 They had two sons and seven daughters 15 Frances Byron 1749 1823 later married Charles Leigh Sophia Byron died in infancy Isabella Byron died in infancy Juliana Elizabeth Byron 1754 88 later married her cousin Hon William Byron d 1776 son of William Byron 5th Baron Byron Sophia Maria Byron 1755 1821 the maiden aunt of the poet George Gordon Byron John Mad Jack Byron 1757 91 who in turn fathered the poet George Gordon Byron the future 6th Baron Byron George Anson Byron 1758 93 noted navy officer and father of George Anson Byron junior another admiral and explorer and later the 7th Baron Byron Charlotte Byron died in infancy Augusta Barbara Charlotte Byron 1762 1824 later married Admiral Christopher ParkerJohn was the brother of Hon George Byron married to Frances Levett daughter of Elton Levett of Nottingham a descendant of Ambrose Elton Esq High Sheriff of Herefordshire in 1618 and a surgeon in Nottingham 16 17 Death and legacy EditAccording to a note written by his wife Sophia to their financial agent John Byron died on 1 April 1786 at home in Bolton Row London not 10 April as subsequent biographies claim 18 On that date nine days later his remains were buried in the Berkeley family vault situated beneath the chancel of the Church of St Mary the Virgin Twickenham 19 20 John s life was a great inspiration for his grandson the poet George Gordon Byron though they never met The poet both drew from his grandfather s experiences in his writing using his Narrative for the shipwreck scene in Don Juan and wrote of the kinship he felt in having such a turbulent unlucky life he wrote in an epistle to his half sister Augusta Leigh that he had no rest at sea nor I on shore 21 In fiction EditJohn Byron s experiences in the Anson voyage form the basis of the novel The Unknown Shore by Patrick O Brian It closely follows Byron s account in The Narrative of the Honourable John Byron 1768 In The Dark Design by Philip Jose Farmer John Byron is a crewmember of the schooner The Razzle Dazzle Bibliography EditEmily Brand The Fall of the House of Byron John Murray 2020 James Gambier John Byron Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Violet Walker The House of Byron Quiller Press 1988 See also EditBaron Byron Cape Byron in Australia named after Byron List of Newfoundland and Labrador lieutenant governors List of people of Newfoundland and Labrador European and American voyages of scientific explorationNotes Edit Historian Robert Rea describes Pepys Island as completely mythical Cowley s description of it was either fictional or a mistaken landfall among the Falklands 6 References Edit Brand Emily 2020 The Fall of the House of Byron John Murray p 183 Brand Emily 2020 The Fall of the House of Byron John Murray p 78 a b c d Douglas W A B 1979 Byron John In Halpenny Francess G ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol IV 1771 1800 online ed University of Toronto Press Retrieved 27 June 2015 Vasquez Caballero Ricardo Felipe Aau el secreto de los chono PDF in Spanish Archived PDF from the original on 23 March 2016 Retrieved 24 January 2019 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Alvarez A Ricardo Navarro P Magdalena Saavedra G Gonzalo Donoso C Cristian 2015 Referencias exploratorias sobre el lago Presidente Rios para sortear el Istmo de Ofqui Peninsula de Taitao Region de Aysen Exploratory references on Presidente Rios lake for routes round the Ofqui Isthmus Taitao Peninsula Aysen Region Chile Magallania in Spanish 43 1 91 101 doi 10 4067 S0718 22442015000100006 Retrieved 21 December 2019 a b c Rea Robert R October 1981 Florida and the Royal Navy s Floridas The Florida Historical Quarterly Florida Historical Society 60 2 187 191 Circumnavigation Notable global maritime circumnavigations Solarnavigator net Retrieved 20 July 2009 Officer on Board the Said Ship 1767 A voyage round the world in His Majesty s Ship the Dolphin commanded by the honourable commodore Byron London J Newbery and F Newbery Bates Ian M 31 May 2017 Champion of the Quarterdeck Admiral Sir Erasmus Gower 1742 1814 1st ed Sage Old Books pp 28 35 73 ISBN 9780958702126 Haydn Joseph 13 June 2008 The Book of Dignities Containing Lists of the Official Personages of the British Empire from the Earliest Periods to the Present Time Together with the Sovereigns and Rulers of Europe from the Foundation of Their Respective States the Peerage of England and Great Britain Original 1851 Digitized by the University of Michigan Longmans Brown Green and Longmans p 279 Brand Emily 2020 The Fall of the House of Byron John Murray pp 183 187 James Gambier John Byron Oxford Dictionary of National Biography John Burke Esq 1834 A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland Vol I Henry Colburn p 255 Retrieved 13 June 2018 Sir Bernard Burke LL D 1866 A Genealogical History of the Dormant Abeyant Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire Harrison 59 Pall Mall p 47 Retrieved 13 June 2018 Brand Emily 2020 The Fall of the House of Byron John Murray pp 96 102 Lodge Edmund 1832 The Genealogy of the Existing British Peerage with Brief Histories of the Family Histories of the Nobility Edmund Lodge London 1832 Retrieved 20 July 2009 Mayo Charles Herbert 1882 A Genealogical Account of the Mayo and Elton Families of the Counties of Wilts and Hereford Charles Herbert Mayo London 1882 Privately printed by C Whittingham p 16 Retrieved 20 July 2009 thomas levett lichfield Brand Emily 2020 The Fall of the House of Byron John Murray p 231 At Twickenham Park Lord John Berkeley The Twickenham Museum Retrieved 27 June 2015 Brand Emily The Fall of the House of Byron p 232 Brand Emily 2020 The Fall of the House of Byron John Murray p 77 External links Edit Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Byron Hon John Works by John Byron at Project Gutenberg Works by or about John Byron at Internet Archive Biography at Government House The Governorship of Newfoundland and Labrador Ships of the World An Historical Encyclopedia HMS Dolphin Archived 10 December 2005 at the Wayback Machine Byron John Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography 1900 Hawkesworth John Byron John Wallis Samuel Carteret Philip Cook James Banks Joseph 1773 An account of the voyages undertaken by the order of His present Majesty for making discoveries in the Southern Hemisphere and successively performed by Commodore Byron Captain Wallis Captain Carteret and Captain Cook in the Dolphin the Swallow and the Endeavour drawn up from the journals which were kept by the several commanders and from the papers of Joseph Banks esq London Printed for W Strahan and T Cadell Volume I Volume II IIIPolitical officesPreceded bySir Hugh Palliser Commodore Governor of Newfoundland1769 1771 Succeeded byMolyneux ShuldhamMilitary officesPreceded bySamuel Barrington Commander in Chief Leeward Islands Station1779 Succeeded bySir Hyde ParkerPreceded byJames Gambier Commander in Chief North American Station1779 Succeeded byMariot Arbuthnot Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Byron amp oldid 1151383544, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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