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Hugh Palliser

Admiral Sir Hugh Palliser, 1st Baronet (26 February 1723[a] – 19 March 1796) was a Royal Navy officer. As captain of the 58-gun HMS Eagle he engaged and defeated the French 50-gun Duc d'Aquitain off Ushant in May 1757 during the Seven Years' War. He went on to serve as Commodore Governor of Newfoundland, then Controller of the Navy and then First Naval Lord. During the American Revolutionary War he came into a famous dispute with Augustus Keppel over his conduct as third-in-command of the Channel Fleet at the inconclusive Battle of Ushant in July 1778; the dispute led to Palliser being court-martialled, although he was subsequently acquitted. In retirement Palliser became Governor of Greenwich Hospital.

Admiral

Sir Hugh Palliser

Palliser c. 1775
Born26 February 1723 (1723-02-26)
Kirk Deighton, West Riding of Yorkshire, England
Died19 March 1796 (1796-03-20) (aged 73)
Chalfont St Giles, Buckinghamshire, England
AllegianceKingdom of Great Britain
Service/branchKingdom of Great Britain
Years of service1735–1796
RankAdmiral
Commands heldHMS Weazel
HMS Captain
HMS Sutherland
HMS Sheerness
HMS Yarmouth
HMS Seahorse
HMS Bristol
HMS Eagle
HMS Shrewsbury
HMS Guernsey
Newfoundland Station
Comptroller of the Navy
Lord Commissioner of the Admiralty
Greenwich Hospital
Battles/wars

Early life edit

Palliser was the only son of Hugh Palliser and Mary Robinson[1] and was born at Kirk Deighton, in the West Riding of Yorkshire (now in North Yorkshire). The family had estates in Yorkshire and Ireland. His parents died when he was still young, so he and his sisters were (probably) raised by relatives on his mother's side. He entered the navy in 1735 as a midshipman on HMS Aldborough commanded by his uncle Nicholas Robinson.[1] He followed his uncle to HMS Kennington in 1737, and then to HMS Tiger and HMS Essex.[2]

 
A model of the hull of HMS Captain after her 1708 rebuild

Palliser passed his lieutenant's examination on 12 May 1741 and was promoted to the rank on 18 September 1741.[3] He continued to serve aboard Essex, at first under Robinson, and after he was superseded, under Captain Richard Norris, the son of Sir John Norris. In February 1746 he was placed in command of HMS Weazel.[4] On 25 November 1746 he was appointed post-captain in HMS Captain, sailing for the West Indies with the broad pennant of Commodore Edward Legge. Legge died on 19 September 1747, and Palliser transferred to HMS Sutherland. Six months later an accidental fire in that ship's arms chest wounded Palliser; a ball entered his back and exited his groin; another ball struck his right hip; a third ball struck his left shoulder. Two other men were killed in the explosion. Palliser returned to England to recover, but remained lame in his left leg, and suffered perpetual and sometimes excruciating pain to which his death was eventually attributed.[5]

He returned to active service in December 1748 and was appointed to command the frigate HMS Sheerness, sailing her to the East Indies to bring news of the treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle which concluded Britain's role in the War of the Austrian Succession. Palliser was then part of Edward Boscawen's squadron on the Coromandel coast from July 1749, returning to Britain to pay off Sheerness in April 1750. As an alternative to half-pay he took up appointment as captain of HMS Yarmouth, the guardship at Chatham. Shortly afterwards he was moved to the much smaller 20-gun HMS Seahorse,[2] A difficulty arose when Scottish authorities accused a sailor from Seahorse of circulating a forged letter of indenture, in order to receive greater pay. The sailor took refuge aboard the ship, and Palliser refused to hand him over. Palliser was thereupon arrested in the sailor's place and held for several days in the Tolbooth Jail in Edinburgh. He was eventually released by order of the Scottish Lords of Session, who invoked their authority to supersede that of the judge of the vice-admiralty court in Edinburgh who had sought to commit Palliser for trial.[5]

In early 1753 he was appointed captain of the 50-gun HMS Bristol, but soon afterwards returned to command a convoy comprising Seahorse and Nightingale, with orders to protect transports being used to move two British Army regiments to the Colonies immediately prior to what would become the Seven Years' War against France. Palliser sailed in January 1755, directing the convoy in a long southern arc across the Atlantic, as far as the Tropic of Cancer. This represented a substantial deviation from the traditional and more direct easterly route, but enabled the convoy to travel in calmer weather and avoid the risk of losing transports to storms. The unorthodox navigation won Palliser some praise from British authorities.[5]

Seven Years' War edit

The ongoing friction between Britain and France ignited into open warfare in 1755. In October of that year Palliser was placed in command of the 58-gun HMS Eagle.[6] That ship engaged and defeated the French 50-gun Duc d'Aquitain off Ushant on 30 May 1757. After that battle Eagle returned to port for repairs, and Palliser moved to command of the 74-gun HMS Shrewsbury, part of the Channel Fleet under George Anson.[2]

In that ship in July 1758 he grounded and captured several French ships near Brest. In 1759 Palliser participated in the successful British capture of Quebec City, commanding the seamen who landed and took possession of Lower Town.[1] In 1760 Palliser was sent to the Mediterranean Sea[2] to chase a small French squadron which had slipped out of the port at Toulon. He bottled the French boats up at several ports in Turkey. In 1761 Palliser captured a Danish merchant ship from a small convoy off Sardinia, escorted by the Dano-Norwegian ship of the line HDMS Grønland, in a shrewd operation, where no shots were fired. It was a precarious operation, as Denmark-Norway was neutral in the war, but Palliser had intelligence information informing him that the Danish ships were in fact shipping goods from the Levant to Marseilles for French merchants, a practice, which ended after the incident.[7] In 1762 Palliser commanded a four-ship armada dispatched to retake St. John's, Newfoundland, but the area was already in British control when he arrived following the Battle of Signal Hill.[1]

Governor of Newfoundland and subsequent service edit

In 1764 Palliser was named Governor and Commander-in-Chief at Newfoundland. He had under his command the 50-gun HMS Guernsey, and several frigates. His forces encountered a similar French force which was ostensibly regulating their remaining fishing grounds in the area, but Palliser perceived that they had altered their maps to show they controlled more area than had been agreed upon in the negotiations which ended the conflict in this area. The French minister in London used this clash to complain to the British government against Palliser, but he was able to produce sufficient maps and supporting material to convince his superiors of his correct actions.[5]

Palliser actively supported the fisheries as a source of trained seamen for the Royal Navy. As such he took active steps to enforce the provisions of Treaty of Paris (1763) restricting French access to their specific fishing rights.[2] He also sought to restrict further settlement of Newfoundland, so to encourage the British-based industry.[8]

Palliser remained Governor of Newfoundland until 1768. In 1770 Commodore Palliser was appointed Comptroller of the Navy,[2] and in that same year was elected an elder brother of the Trinity House, which oversees British lighthouses and provides general expertise to the government on naval matters.[5]

In 1773 Palliser was made Baronet.[2] In 1774 he was elected to Parliament for the Borough of Scarborough.[9] On 31 March 1775 he achieved flag rank when promoted to rear-admiral.[2][10] Under the Earl of Sandwich he joined the Board of Admiralty as First Naval Lord in April 1775[11] and received the sinecure of Lieutenant-General of Marines. Palliser was promoted to vice-admiral on 29 January 1778.[12] He stood down from the Admiralty Board in September 1779.[13]

Palliser's Act edit

Newfoundland Fisheries Act 1775
Act of Parliament
 
Long titleAn act for the encouragement of the Fisheries carried on, from Great Britain, Ireland, and the British Dominions in Europe, and for securing the return of the fishermen, sailors, and others employed in the said fisheries, to the ports thereof, at the end of the fishing season.
Citation15 Geo. 3. c. 31
Dates
Royal assent26 May 1775
Other legislation
Repealed byStatute Law Revision Act 1871
Status: Repealed

With his involvement in fisheries and seamen training, in 1775 Palliser initiated legislation to encourage and regulate ship fisheries in Newfoundland. The act is commonly known as Palliser's Act (15 Geo. 3. c. 31),[14] but also called the Newfoundland Fisheries Act 1775; its long title is An act for the encouragement of the Fisheries carried on, from Great Britain, Ireland, and the British Dominions in Europe, and for securing the return of the fishermen, sailors, and others employed in the said fisheries, to the ports thereof, at the end of the fishing season.[8]

Historian Sean Cadigan, author of Hope and Deception in Conception Bay (1995), has since linked Palliser's Act with the high-valuation of women's labour in 18th Century Newfoundland. Given that Palliser's Act required producers to pre-pay their labourers for the fishing season, producers developed little incentive to hire outside of their families: hired labour was high risk because pre-paid wages reduced producers' margin for gain (or loss). As such, Palliser's Act inspired the merger of household labour with the market, making women's work essential to the economic success of the colony.[15]

Service during the American War of Independence and controversy with Admiral Keppel edit

 
Depiction of the Battle of Ushant in 1778 by Théodore Gudin, c. 1848

In 1778 Palliser was appointed to the Channel Fleet under Admiral Augustus Keppel.[2] On 27 July 1778 in the First Battle of Ushant, the Channel Fleet fought an inconclusive battle with the French fleet. The battle's outcome led to personal acrimony between Palliser and Keppel, resulted in their individual courts martial and increased divisiveness in the Navy. Palliser was forced to resign from Parliament and his other posts.[2]

The July 1778 Battle of Ushant came about when the British fleet found that it had become located between the French ships and their home ports. Seeing the sudden advantage, Keppel ordered that a battle line be formed and an attack made. Palliser's ship HMS Formidable was badly damaged in the ensuing fray, and when Keppel hoisted the signal to reform the battle line, Palliser's division was some distance away, so a frigate was dispatched to give the instruction. Due to the battle damage, Palliser's division was unable to comply until later in the evening, when it was too late to continue the battle, and the French withdrew to Brest.[2] Both sides later claimed victory, and Keppel issued a dispatch which commended all his officers for their conduct in the action.[5]

Palliser heard rumours that Keppel had intimated in private conversations that Palliser's absence had been the cause of the inconclusive outcome, so Palliser wrote a paper defending his actions. An anonymous letter to a London newspaper accused Palliser of disobedience in the battle, and he called on Keppel to refute the allegation. When no public refutation was forthcoming, Palliser demanded that a court martial be held to try Keppel on charges of "misconduct and neglect of duty" (which carried a death sentence if proved). Keppel's court martial was held at Portsmouth in January 1779, and he was acquitted after 27 days, the court finding that the charges against him had been brought with malicious intent and were unfounded. The court-martial outcome meant ruin for Palliser. He was defended by Lord Sandwich, but still had to resign from Parliament and as Lieutenant-General of the Marines. He then demanded that a court martial be convened against him so that he could present his version of events during his defence. The court martial was convened, and he was acquitted after 21 days. However, he was censured in that he had failed to inform his superior officer of the battle damage in a timely manner.[2]

After his acquittal Palliser hoped to be reinstated as Lieutenant-General of Marines. Instead, in 1780 he was appointed Governor of Greenwich Hospital by Lord Sandwich, and was again elected to Parliament for Huntingdon (1780–1784). On 24 September 1787 he was promoted to full admiral.[16]

Association with James Cook edit

 
James Cook's 1775 Chart of Newfoundland

James Cook, a fellow Yorkshireman, first served under Palliser as Master's Mate of HMS Eagle from 1755 to 1758. Palliser would have supported his elevation to Master in 1757. Both were present at the siege of Quebec where Cook charted the approach to the city and the landing area. Following the Treaty of Paris, Cook was charged with surveying Newfoundland. As Governor, Palliser actively supported Cook's work and assisted in the publication of his acclaimed map of Newfoundland. During his term as Comptroller, Palliser supported Cook's first command of exploration in 1768, and his subsequent voyages. Cook named Cape Palliser, Palliser Bay and Palliser Isles after his "worthy friend". On Cook's death, Palliser erected a memorial to Cook at the Vache, his estate near Chalfont St Giles in Buckinghamshire.[17]

Death edit

Palliser died on 19 March 1796 at the Vache, and was buried on 26 March 1796 at the parish church of St Giles[18] where there is a memorial to him.[5] The Palliser Baronetcy passed to his great-nephew Hugh Palliser Walters who assumed by Royal Licence dated 18 January 1798 the surname and arms of Palliser.[19] Palliser's illegitimate son George Thomas inherited the estate of the Vache.[5]

Notes edit

a. ^ Some sources use the Old Style dating system, in use in Britain until 1752, for Palliser's birth. As under this system the new year did not begin until 25 March, Palliser's birth was recorded as being in 1722. The article Admiral Sir HUGH PALLISER, Bt 1723–1796, taken from Charnock, J. Biographia navalis . . from 1660 to the present time (6 volumes), states that Palliser was born "on 26 February 1722" (although the title of the article indicates he was born in 1723). The , provides a biography, Biography: Hugh Palliser, which states that Palliser "was born on 26th February 1723". The Government House website, accessed 6 August 2009, provides a biography, Palliser, Sir Hugh (1722–1796). It states that Palliser "was born ... on February 22, 1722. The Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online, accessed 6 August 2009 provides a biography, which states: PALLISER (Pallisser), Sir HUGH, "b. 22 Feb. 1722/23". Contemporary scholarship by the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography places his birth date as 26 February 1723.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Hugh Palliser". Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online. Retrieved 23 July 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Hugh Palliser". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/21165. Retrieved 23 July 2017. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  3. ^ Dictionary of Canadian Biography states " . he was promoted lieutenant in September 1741." Royal Naval Museum states "He was promoted to Lieutenant in September 1741." Government House states "In 1741, he became lieutenant." Biographia navalis . . states that Palliser was made lieutenant in 1742
  4. ^ Winfield 2007, p. 273
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Charnock, John (1794–98). "Biographia navalis". Retrieved 24 July 2017.
  6. ^ Robson 2009, page 22
  7. ^ Andersen, Dan (1991). "Linieskibet "Grønland". Historien bag en konvoj i Middelhavet 1761". Marinehistorisk Tidsskrift. 24 (3): 23–31.
  8. ^ a b "Palliser, Sir Hugh (1722–1796)". Government House. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
  9. ^ "PALLISER, Sir Hugh, 1st Bt. (1723–96), of Chalfont St. Giles, Bucks. ". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 3 December 2017.
  10. ^ "No. 11549". The London Gazette. 1 April 1775. p. 1.
  11. ^ Rodger, p. 69
  12. ^ "No. 11844". The London Gazette. 27 January 1778. p. 2.
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on 7 October 2014. Retrieved 4 September 2009.
  14. ^ Douglas Hay, Paul Craven, Ed.Masters, Servants, and Magistrates in Britain and the Empire, 1562—1955, p.153, 174
  15. ^ Cadigan, p. 83-99
  16. ^ "No. 12924". The London Gazette. 25 January 1778. p. 446.
  17. ^ Memorial M1775 9 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine, public memorials to seafarers and victims of maritime disaster 14 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine, National Maritime Museum
  18. ^ Chalfont St Giles parish registers, transcription, Society of Genealogists shelf mark BU R/9.
  19. ^ Betham, William (1803). The Baronetage of England (Vol 3). London. pp. 399–402.

Sources edit

  • Cadigan, Sean (1995). Hope and Deception in Conception Bay. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0802075680.
  • Charnock, J. Biographia navalis, V. pp. 483–96.
  • Hunt, R.M. (1844). The life of Sir Hugh Palliser. London.
  • Robson, John (2009). Captain Cook's War and Peace: The Royal Navy Years 1755–1768. University of New South Wales Press. p. 22. ISBN 9781742231099.
  • Rodger, N.A.M. (1979). The Admiralty. Offices of State. Lavenham: T. Dalton Ltd. ISBN 0900963948.
  • Winfield, Rif (2007). British Warships of the Age of Sail 1714–1792: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates. Seaforth. ISBN 9781844157006.

External links edit

  • Palliser's monument to Cook, Chalfont St.Giles
  • Will of Hugh Palliser
  • Biography at Government House The Governorship of Newfoundland and Labrador
  • "Hugh Palliser". Dictionary of Canadian Biography (online ed.). University of Toronto Press. 1979–2016.
  • Text of Palliser's Act, (15 Geo. 3. c. 31)
Military offices
Preceded by Comptroller of the Navy
1770–1775
Succeeded by
Preceded by First Naval Lord
1775–1779
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor, Greenwich Hospital
1780–1796
Succeeded by
Parliament of Great Britain
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Scarborough
1774–1779
With: The Earl of Tyrconnel
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Huntingdon
1780–1784
With: The Lord Mulgrave
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Commodore Governor of Newfoundland
1764–1768
Succeeded by
Baronetage of Great Britain
New title Baronet
(of The Vache)
1773–1796
Succeeded by
Hugh Palliser

hugh, palliser, admiral, baronet, february, 1723, march, 1796, royal, navy, officer, captain, eagle, engaged, defeated, french, aquitain, ushant, 1757, during, seven, years, went, serve, commodore, governor, newfoundland, then, controller, navy, then, first, n. Admiral Sir Hugh Palliser 1st Baronet 26 February 1723 a 19 March 1796 was a Royal Navy officer As captain of the 58 gun HMS Eagle he engaged and defeated the French 50 gun Duc d Aquitain off Ushant in May 1757 during the Seven Years War He went on to serve as Commodore Governor of Newfoundland then Controller of the Navy and then First Naval Lord During the American Revolutionary War he came into a famous dispute with Augustus Keppel over his conduct as third in command of the Channel Fleet at the inconclusive Battle of Ushant in July 1778 the dispute led to Palliser being court martialled although he was subsequently acquitted In retirement Palliser became Governor of Greenwich Hospital AdmiralSir Hugh PalliserBtPalliser c 1775Born26 February 1723 1723 02 26 Kirk Deighton West Riding of Yorkshire EnglandDied19 March 1796 1796 03 20 aged 73 Chalfont St Giles Buckinghamshire EnglandAllegianceKingdom of Great BritainService wbr branchKingdom of Great BritainYears of service1735 1796RankAdmiralCommands heldHMS WeazelHMS CaptainHMS SutherlandHMS SheernessHMS YarmouthHMS SeahorseHMS BristolHMS EagleHMS ShrewsburyHMS GuernseyNewfoundland StationComptroller of the NavyLord Commissioner of the AdmiraltyGreenwich HospitalBattles warsWar of the Austrian Succession Battle of Toulon Seven Years War Raid on St Malo Battle of the Plains of Abraham American War of Independence Battle of Ushant Contents 1 Early life 2 Seven Years War 3 Governor of Newfoundland and subsequent service 4 Palliser s Act 5 Service during the American War of Independence and controversy with Admiral Keppel 6 Association with James Cook 7 Death 8 Notes 9 References 10 Sources 11 External linksEarly life editPalliser was the only son of Hugh Palliser and Mary Robinson 1 and was born at Kirk Deighton in the West Riding of Yorkshire now in North Yorkshire The family had estates in Yorkshire and Ireland His parents died when he was still young so he and his sisters were probably raised by relatives on his mother s side He entered the navy in 1735 as a midshipman on HMS Aldborough commanded by his uncle Nicholas Robinson 1 He followed his uncle to HMS Kennington in 1737 and then to HMS Tiger and HMS Essex 2 nbsp A model of the hull of HMS Captain after her 1708 rebuild Palliser passed his lieutenant s examination on 12 May 1741 and was promoted to the rank on 18 September 1741 3 He continued to serve aboard Essex at first under Robinson and after he was superseded under Captain Richard Norris the son of Sir John Norris In February 1746 he was placed in command of HMS Weazel 4 On 25 November 1746 he was appointed post captain in HMS Captain sailing for the West Indies with the broad pennant of Commodore Edward Legge Legge died on 19 September 1747 and Palliser transferred to HMS Sutherland Six months later an accidental fire in that ship s arms chest wounded Palliser a ball entered his back and exited his groin another ball struck his right hip a third ball struck his left shoulder Two other men were killed in the explosion Palliser returned to England to recover but remained lame in his left leg and suffered perpetual and sometimes excruciating pain to which his death was eventually attributed 5 He returned to active service in December 1748 and was appointed to command the frigate HMS Sheerness sailing her to the East Indies to bring news of the treaty of Aix la Chapelle which concluded Britain s role in the War of the Austrian Succession Palliser was then part of Edward Boscawen s squadron on the Coromandel coast from July 1749 returning to Britain to pay off Sheerness in April 1750 As an alternative to half pay he took up appointment as captain of HMS Yarmouth the guardship at Chatham Shortly afterwards he was moved to the much smaller 20 gun HMS Seahorse 2 A difficulty arose when Scottish authorities accused a sailor from Seahorse of circulating a forged letter of indenture in order to receive greater pay The sailor took refuge aboard the ship and Palliser refused to hand him over Palliser was thereupon arrested in the sailor s place and held for several days in the Tolbooth Jail in Edinburgh He was eventually released by order of the Scottish Lords of Session who invoked their authority to supersede that of the judge of the vice admiralty court in Edinburgh who had sought to commit Palliser for trial 5 In early 1753 he was appointed captain of the 50 gun HMS Bristol but soon afterwards returned to command a convoy comprising Seahorse and Nightingale with orders to protect transports being used to move two British Army regiments to the Colonies immediately prior to what would become the Seven Years War against France Palliser sailed in January 1755 directing the convoy in a long southern arc across the Atlantic as far as the Tropic of Cancer This represented a substantial deviation from the traditional and more direct easterly route but enabled the convoy to travel in calmer weather and avoid the risk of losing transports to storms The unorthodox navigation won Palliser some praise from British authorities 5 Seven Years War editFurther information Great Britain in the Seven Years War The ongoing friction between Britain and France ignited into open warfare in 1755 In October of that year Palliser was placed in command of the 58 gun HMS Eagle 6 That ship engaged and defeated the French 50 gun Duc d Aquitain off Ushant on 30 May 1757 After that battle Eagle returned to port for repairs and Palliser moved to command of the 74 gun HMS Shrewsbury part of the Channel Fleet under George Anson 2 In that ship in July 1758 he grounded and captured several French ships near Brest In 1759 Palliser participated in the successful British capture of Quebec City commanding the seamen who landed and took possession of Lower Town 1 In 1760 Palliser was sent to the Mediterranean Sea 2 to chase a small French squadron which had slipped out of the port at Toulon He bottled the French boats up at several ports in Turkey In 1761 Palliser captured a Danish merchant ship from a small convoy off Sardinia escorted by the Dano Norwegian ship of the line HDMS Gronland in a shrewd operation where no shots were fired It was a precarious operation as Denmark Norway was neutral in the war but Palliser had intelligence information informing him that the Danish ships were in fact shipping goods from the Levant to Marseilles for French merchants a practice which ended after the incident 7 In 1762 Palliser commanded a four ship armada dispatched to retake St John s Newfoundland but the area was already in British control when he arrived following the Battle of Signal Hill 1 Governor of Newfoundland and subsequent service editIn 1764 Palliser was named Governor and Commander in Chief at Newfoundland He had under his command the 50 gun HMS Guernsey and several frigates His forces encountered a similar French force which was ostensibly regulating their remaining fishing grounds in the area but Palliser perceived that they had altered their maps to show they controlled more area than had been agreed upon in the negotiations which ended the conflict in this area The French minister in London used this clash to complain to the British government against Palliser but he was able to produce sufficient maps and supporting material to convince his superiors of his correct actions 5 Palliser actively supported the fisheries as a source of trained seamen for the Royal Navy As such he took active steps to enforce the provisions of Treaty of Paris 1763 restricting French access to their specific fishing rights 2 He also sought to restrict further settlement of Newfoundland so to encourage the British based industry 8 Palliser remained Governor of Newfoundland until 1768 In 1770 Commodore Palliser was appointed Comptroller of the Navy 2 and in that same year was elected an elder brother of the Trinity House which oversees British lighthouses and provides general expertise to the government on naval matters 5 In 1773 Palliser was made Baronet 2 In 1774 he was elected to Parliament for the Borough of Scarborough 9 On 31 March 1775 he achieved flag rank when promoted to rear admiral 2 10 Under the Earl of Sandwich he joined the Board of Admiralty as First Naval Lord in April 1775 11 and received the sinecure of Lieutenant General of Marines Palliser was promoted to vice admiral on 29 January 1778 12 He stood down from the Admiralty Board in September 1779 13 Palliser s Act editNewfoundland Fisheries Act 1775Act of Parliament nbsp Parliament of Great BritainLong titleAn act for the encouragement of the Fisheries carried on from Great Britain Ireland and the British Dominions in Europe and for securing the return of the fishermen sailors and others employed in the said fisheries to the ports thereof at the end of the fishing season Citation15 Geo 3 c 31DatesRoyal assent26 May 1775Other legislationRepealed byStatute Law Revision Act 1871Status Repealed With his involvement in fisheries and seamen training in 1775 Palliser initiated legislation to encourage and regulate ship fisheries in Newfoundland The act is commonly known as Palliser s Act 15 Geo 3 c 31 14 but also called the Newfoundland Fisheries Act 1775 its long title is An act for the encouragement of the Fisheries carried on from Great Britain Ireland and the British Dominions in Europe and for securing the return of the fishermen sailors and others employed in the said fisheries to the ports thereof at the end of the fishing season 8 Historian Sean Cadigan author of Hope and Deception in Conception Bay 1995 has since linked Palliser s Act with the high valuation of women s labour in 18th Century Newfoundland Given that Palliser s Act required producers to pre pay their labourers for the fishing season producers developed little incentive to hire outside of their families hired labour was high risk because pre paid wages reduced producers margin for gain or loss As such Palliser s Act inspired the merger of household labour with the market making women s work essential to the economic success of the colony 15 Service during the American War of Independence and controversy with Admiral Keppel edit nbsp Depiction of the Battle of Ushant in 1778 by Theodore Gudin c 1848 In 1778 Palliser was appointed to the Channel Fleet under Admiral Augustus Keppel 2 On 27 July 1778 in the First Battle of Ushant the Channel Fleet fought an inconclusive battle with the French fleet The battle s outcome led to personal acrimony between Palliser and Keppel resulted in their individual courts martial and increased divisiveness in the Navy Palliser was forced to resign from Parliament and his other posts 2 The July 1778 Battle of Ushant came about when the British fleet found that it had become located between the French ships and their home ports Seeing the sudden advantage Keppel ordered that a battle line be formed and an attack made Palliser s ship HMS Formidable was badly damaged in the ensuing fray and when Keppel hoisted the signal to reform the battle line Palliser s division was some distance away so a frigate was dispatched to give the instruction Due to the battle damage Palliser s division was unable to comply until later in the evening when it was too late to continue the battle and the French withdrew to Brest 2 Both sides later claimed victory and Keppel issued a dispatch which commended all his officers for their conduct in the action 5 Palliser heard rumours that Keppel had intimated in private conversations that Palliser s absence had been the cause of the inconclusive outcome so Palliser wrote a paper defending his actions An anonymous letter to a London newspaper accused Palliser of disobedience in the battle and he called on Keppel to refute the allegation When no public refutation was forthcoming Palliser demanded that a court martial be held to try Keppel on charges of misconduct and neglect of duty which carried a death sentence if proved Keppel s court martial was held at Portsmouth in January 1779 and he was acquitted after 27 days the court finding that the charges against him had been brought with malicious intent and were unfounded The court martial outcome meant ruin for Palliser He was defended by Lord Sandwich but still had to resign from Parliament and as Lieutenant General of the Marines He then demanded that a court martial be convened against him so that he could present his version of events during his defence The court martial was convened and he was acquitted after 21 days However he was censured in that he had failed to inform his superior officer of the battle damage in a timely manner 2 After his acquittal Palliser hoped to be reinstated as Lieutenant General of Marines Instead in 1780 he was appointed Governor of Greenwich Hospital by Lord Sandwich and was again elected to Parliament for Huntingdon 1780 1784 On 24 September 1787 he was promoted to full admiral 16 Association with James Cook edit nbsp James Cook s 1775 Chart of Newfoundland James Cook a fellow Yorkshireman first served under Palliser as Master s Mate of HMS Eagle from 1755 to 1758 Palliser would have supported his elevation to Master in 1757 Both were present at the siege of Quebec where Cook charted the approach to the city and the landing area Following the Treaty of Paris Cook was charged with surveying Newfoundland As Governor Palliser actively supported Cook s work and assisted in the publication of his acclaimed map of Newfoundland During his term as Comptroller Palliser supported Cook s first command of exploration in 1768 and his subsequent voyages Cook named Cape Palliser Palliser Bay and Palliser Isles after his worthy friend On Cook s death Palliser erected a memorial to Cook at the Vache his estate near Chalfont St Giles in Buckinghamshire 17 Death editPalliser died on 19 March 1796 at the Vache and was buried on 26 March 1796 at the parish church of St Giles 18 where there is a memorial to him 5 The Palliser Baronetcy passed to his great nephew Hugh Palliser Walters who assumed by Royal Licence dated 18 January 1798 the surname and arms of Palliser 19 Palliser s illegitimate son George Thomas inherited the estate of the Vache 5 Notes edita Some sources use the Old Style dating system in use in Britain until 1752 for Palliser s birth As under this system the new year did not begin until 25 March Palliser s birth was recorded as being in 1722 The article Admiral Sir HUGH PALLISER Bt 1723 1796 taken from Charnock J Biographia navalis from 1660 to the present time 6 volumes states that Palliser was born on 26 February 1722 although the title of the article indicates he was born in 1723 The Royal Naval Museum website accessed 6 August 2009 provides a biography Biography Hugh Palliser which states that Palliser was born on 26th February 1723 The Government House website accessed 6 August 2009 provides a biography Palliser Sir Hugh 1722 1796 It states that Palliser was born on February 22 1722 The Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online accessed 6 August 2009 provides a biography which states PALLISER Pallisser Sir HUGH b 22 Feb 1722 23 Contemporary scholarship by the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography places his birth date as 26 February 1723 References edit a b c d Hugh Palliser Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online Retrieved 23 July 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l Hugh Palliser Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press 2004 doi 10 1093 ref odnb 21165 Retrieved 23 July 2017 Subscription or UK public library membership required Dictionary of Canadian Biography states he was promoted lieutenant in September 1741 Royal Naval Museum states He was promoted to Lieutenant in September 1741 Government House states In 1741 he became lieutenant Biographia navalis states that Palliser was made lieutenant in 1742 Winfield 2007 p 273 a b c d e f g h Charnock John 1794 98 Biographia navalis Retrieved 24 July 2017 Robson 2009 page 22 Andersen Dan 1991 Linieskibet Gronland Historien bag en konvoj i Middelhavet 1761 Marinehistorisk Tidsskrift 24 3 23 31 a b Palliser Sir Hugh 1722 1796 Government House Retrieved 24 July 2017 PALLISER Sir Hugh 1st Bt 1723 96 of Chalfont St Giles Bucks History of Parliament Online Retrieved 3 December 2017 No 11549 The London Gazette 1 April 1775 p 1 Rodger p 69 No 11844 The London Gazette 27 January 1778 p 2 Sainty JC Lord High Admiral and Commissioners of the Admiralty 1660 1870 Office Holders in Modern Britain Volume 4 Admiralty Officials 1660 1870 1975 pp 18 31 Archived from the original on 7 October 2014 Retrieved 4 September 2009 Douglas Hay Paul Craven Ed Masters Servants and Magistrates in Britain and the Empire 1562 1955 p 153 174 Cadigan p 83 99 No 12924 The London Gazette 25 January 1778 p 446 Memorial M1775 Archived 9 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine public memorials to seafarers and victims of maritime disaster Archived 14 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine National Maritime Museum Chalfont St Giles parish registers transcription Society of Genealogists shelf mark BU R 9 Betham William 1803 The Baronetage of England Vol 3 London pp 399 402 Sources editCadigan Sean 1995 Hope and Deception in Conception Bay University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0802075680 Charnock J Biographia navalis V pp 483 96 Hunt R M 1844 The life of Sir Hugh Palliser London Robson John 2009 Captain Cook s War and Peace The Royal Navy Years 1755 1768 University of New South Wales Press p 22 ISBN 9781742231099 Rodger N A M 1979 The Admiralty Offices of State Lavenham T Dalton Ltd ISBN 0900963948 Winfield Rif 2007 British Warships of the Age of Sail 1714 1792 Design Construction Careers and Fates Seaforth ISBN 9781844157006 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hugh Palliser Palliser s monument to Cook Chalfont St Giles Will of Hugh Palliser Biography at Government House The Governorship of Newfoundland and Labrador Hugh Palliser Dictionary of Canadian Biography online ed University of Toronto Press 1979 2016 Text of Palliser s Act 15 Geo 3 c 31 Military offices Preceded byGeorge Cockburne Comptroller of the Navy1770 1775 Succeeded byMaurice Suckling Preceded byAugustus Hervey First Naval Lord1775 1779 Succeeded byRobert Man Preceded bySir Charles Hardy Governor Greenwich Hospital1780 1796 Succeeded byViscount Hood Parliament of Great Britain Preceded bySir James Pennyman BtThe Earl of Tyrconnel Member of Parliament for Scarborough1774 1779 With The Earl of Tyrconnel Succeeded byThe Earl of TyrconnelCharles Phipps Preceded byGeorge WombwellThe Lord Mulgrave Member of Parliament for Huntingdon1780 1784 With The Lord Mulgrave Succeeded bySir Walter RawlinsonLauncelot Brown Political offices Preceded byThomas Graves Commodore Governor of Newfoundland1764 1768 Succeeded byJohn Byron Baronetage of Great Britain New title Baronet of The Vache 1773 1796 Succeeded byHugh Palliser Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hugh Palliser amp oldid 1221210967 Service during the 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