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William Hillary

Sir William Hillary, 1st Baronet (4 January 1771 – 5 January 1847) was a British militia officer, author and philanthropist, best known as the founder, in 1824, of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution.

Sir

William Hillary
Sir William Hillary
Born4 January 1771
Died5 January 1847 (1847-01-06) (aged 76)
NationalityEnglish
Occupations
  • Soldier
  • Author
  • Philanthropist
Known forFounder of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution
Spouse(s)Frances Elizabeth Disney Fytche (1st wife)
Emma Tobin (2nd wife)
Children2
RelativesMary Rolls (sister)

Life edit

Hillary's background was Quaker, from a Yorkshire family: he was the son of the merchant Richard Hillary and his wife, Hannah Wynne.[1] He left Liverpool at age 26, and travelled to Italy.[2] From his contacts there, he became equerry to Prince Augustus Frederick, the young son of George III, and spent two years in the post.[3]

While Hillary was in Naples, the Prince and Sir William Hamilton sent him on a mission to Malta.[4] There Hillary saw the election (July 1797) of the last of the Grand Masters of the Knights of Malta, Ferdinand von Hompesch zu Bolheim.[5] On this trip he also sailed round Malta and Sicily in an open boat.[6]

Hillary then travelled north with the incognito Prince, heading for Berlin. After a period there, he left the Prince's employ and returned to London in the autumn of 1799.[4]

Back in England, Hillary married in 1800. He had departed from Quaker beliefs, and his wife was not a Quaker. He had been left property by John Scott, his father's business partner and nephew; and then inherited West Indian estates from his elder brother Richard, who died in 1803. He quickly dissipated a large fortune, and had to sell properties including the old Yorkshire home of Rigg House.[7]

Hillary spent some £20,000, on creating the First Essex Legion of infantry and cavalry, recruited largely from the Dengie Hundred and present-day Maldon District areas in Essex, after the end in 1803 of the Peace of Amiens, and was given the title Lieutenant-Colonel Commandant. The force numbered 1,400. He was rewarded with a baronetcy in 1805.[8][9]

After experiencing financial troubles, Hillary settled at Fort Anne near Douglas, Isle of Man in 1808.[9]

The UCL Centre for the study of the legacies of British slavery lists Hillary as a known slave-owner in Jamaica.[10]

Family edit

 
The Hillary twins, double portrait by J. T. Mitchell

First marriage edit

Hillary married heiress Frances Elizabeth Disney Fytche on 21 February 1800; she was the daughter of Lewis Disney Fytche (originally Lewis Disney) of Danbury Place, Essex, and his wife Elizabeth, daughter of William Fytche. In the same year, their twins were born: a son Augustus William Hillary (d. 30 December 1855), and a daughter Elizabeth Mary.[3][11][12][13]

Circumstances of second marriage edit

In 1813, Hillary married a local Manx woman, Emma Tobin, daughter of Patrick Tobin,[14] or Amelia Toben of Kirk Braddan,[15] his first wife having died, according to the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, which is however contradicted by other sources.[3] Lady Hillary obtained a Scottish divorce from Sir William in 1812. Hillary's second marriage took place in Scotland, at Whithorn, then in Wigtonshire.[16] Lady Hillary, divorced from her husband by 1812, continued to live at Danbury Place until her father died, when she moved to Boulogne.[17]

After 1813 edit

Of the twin children:

  • Elizabeth Mary married Christopher Richard Preston, of Jericho House, Blackmore, Essex, in 1818.[18][19] Their son hyphenated his last name, becoming Charles Ernest Richard Preston-Hillary.[20]
  • Augustus William joined the 6th Dragoon Guards, and became 2nd Baronet on his father's death. In 1829 he married Susan Curwen Christian, the eldest daughter of John Christian of Ewanrigg or Unnerigg Hall, Cumberland.[21][22][23]

Elizabeth Mary in later life stayed with her mother. Augustus William spent time with his father; he was childless.[24]

According to Mary Hopkirk, writing in the Essex Review, Lady Hillary continued to live at Danbury Place until her father's death, in 1823; at which point she moved to Boulogne.[24] She met Frances D'Arblay in Paris in 1817, while on a continental voyage with her children. From Boulogne she moved to Blackmore, where she had property from her marriage settlement from her uncle Thomas Fytche, and a married daughter. She died in 1828.[16][24][25]

Emma Tobin died in 1845.[26]

Lifeboat promoter edit

Hillary witnessed the wreck of HMS Racehorse, in 1822, only two months after he had been a participant in the rescue of HMS Vigilant.[3][27] He drew up plans for a lifeboat service crewed by trained people, intended not only for the Isle of Man, but for all of the British coast. In February 1823 he published a pamphlet entitled An Appeal To The British Navy On The Humanity And Policy Of Forming A National Institution For The Preservation Of Lives And Property From Shipwreck. He proposed a national and voluntary organisation, and pointed out the potential of new techniques such as those introduced by William Congreve (rockets), Charles Cornwallis Dansey of the Royal Artillery (kites), Frederick Marryat (signal codes), and George William Manby (life-saving apparatus).[28]

 
12 Austin Friars, where the first London office of the National Institution for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck was set up in 1824

Initially Hillary received little response from the Admiralty. He appealed to London philanthropists including Thomas Wilson (MP for the City of London) and George Hibbert of the West Indies merchants, and his plans were adopted. The National Institution for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck was founded on 4 March 1824 at a second meeting in the London Tavern, Bishopsgate Street, London, with the king as Patron. Office premises were taken at 12 Austin Friars, in the City of London, and then moved in the same area.[29][30] The first of the new lifeboats to be built was stationed at Douglas.

St. George rescue and legacy edit

At the age of 60, Hillary took part in the rescue, in 1830, of the crew of the packet St George, which had foundered on Conister Rock at the entrance to Douglas harbour. He commanded the lifeboat, was washed overboard with others of the lifeboat crew, yet finally everyone aboard the St George was rescued with no loss of life.

Following the heroic rescue, the Master of the St George, Lieut. John Tudor (RN), wrote to Sir William expressing the gratitude of himself and his crew.[31]

My Dear Sir – Allow me to return you (in the name of the crew of the St. George and myself) our most grateful thanks for the very great personal exertions of yourself, Lieut. Robinson (RN)., Mr William Corlett and the Life Boat's crew during the gale of yesterday morning.

I want words, Sir, to express to you what we then felt, and what we shall ever feel, for the noble and determined manner in which you persevered in coming to our assistance, after we had considered it our duty to warn you off, for, the vessel having bilged, the severity of the gale, the position of the wind, and the time of the tide, there did not appear to us (amongst the heavy breakers then rolling upon Conister) the slightest chance of escape for you, and which, from the crippled state of the life boat when she afterwards left the wreck, was so nearly proving to be the case. Trusting, Sir, that you may long live to preside over an establishment your philanthropy gave birth to, and in which your humanity has always placed you amongst the foremost and most active of its members – I have the honor to remain Your obliged, grateful, and

Most obedient servant

— Lieutenant John Tudor (RN). Douglas, November 21st, 1830.

At a Meeting of the Committee of the Isle of Man District Association of the Royal National Institution, for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck, held at the Courthouse, Douglas, 27 November 1830, presided over by the chairman, High Bailiff James Quirk Esq, it was agreed unanimously that the following report be transmitted to the Secretary of the Royal National Institution:[32]

That the thanks of this meeting be presented to Sir William Hillary, Lieut. Robinson, William Corlett Esq, and the crew of the life boat, for their very gallant and meritorious exertions in saving the lives of the crew of the St. George.

For the saving of the 22 crew members on board the St. George, Sir William and Lieut. Robinson both received the Institution's Gold Medal (the second of three Sir William was to receive).[33] William Corlett and Issac Vondy both received Silver Medals with a purse of 20 guineas also distributed to the crew in recognition of their gallantry.[33]

 
Memorial erected along the Loch Promenade in Douglas recounting the rescue of the crew of the St George

Tower of Refuge edit

The incident prompted Hillary to set up a scheme to build the Tower of Refuge on Conister Rock. The structure, designed by architect John Welch, was completed in 1832 and still stands at the entrance to Douglas harbour; it was the subject of a poem by William Wordsworth.[34]

Douglas Breakwater edit

As well as the Tower of Refuge, Hillary was instrumental in recommendations for the construction of a Breakwater at Douglas, to afford the harbour greater shelter and to provide a haven to ships plying the Irish Sea.[35] Hillary had written a paper on the proposal before 1835, when formal proposals were put forward, and design plans drawn up by Sir John Rennie. Construction was long delayed,[36] and it was not until 1862 when work finally started.

 
Sir William Hillary Statue. Douglas Head, Isle of Man

Knight Hospitaller edit

Hillary belonged to the precursor in the United Kingdom of the Order of Saint John, created a Knight (K.J.J.) in 1838.[37] This group has been described by Jonathan Riley-Smith as consisting of "romantics and fraudsters". It failed to obtain recognition from the Order of Malta (the "Sovereign Order" of which it was putatively a part, or langue), leading to a break in relations in 1858. A fresh start was made in 1871, and a Royal Charter for the new group was obtained in 1888.[5]

Hillary was one of the founders of the Order, and pressed for Sir Sidney Smith to be given a major post. After Smith died in 1840 he took on the roles himself.[38] He became a Knight Grand Cross (G.C.J.J.) of the order,[39] and at the time of his death held the position of Lieutenant Turcopolier.[40]

What Hillary envisaged was a Christian reoccupation of Palestine, led by the Order of Malta.[41] The background was of a revolt in Syria against Ibrahim Pasha, and a British naval intervention under Charles Napier on behalf of the Ottoman Empire in 1840, leading to the occupation of Beirut and Acre.[5] Illness confined Hillary to his home on the Isle of Man, and in 1841 he began to sell off his possessions; but he kept up a correspondence on his ideas with Sir Richard Broun, 8th Baronet, secretary of the order.[42]

Hillary wrote on the project in the Morning Herald for 25 November 1841, as an "Address", published also as a pamphlet.[43] Hopes were placed in a German translation of the pamphlet by Robert Lucas Pearsall of the Order, in Karlsruhe. When Frederick William IV of Prussia indicated that the concept of a sovereign state under the order was unacceptable, the idea had to be dropped, though a similar plan in Algeria was mooted in 1846.[44]

Death and burial edit

 
Tomb of Sir William Hillary, St George's Churchyard, Douglas, Isle of Man

Hillary died at Woodville, near Douglas, Isle of Man, on 5 January 1847. He was buried in St. George's Churchyard, Douglas.[3][45]

Smelt Monument edit

Following the death of Lieutenant Governor Cornelius Smelt in 1832, Sir William was instrumental in the erection of a monument commemorating Governor Smelt. The Smelt Monument was designed by John Welch and is situated in the market square, Castletown, Isle of Man, facing Castle Rushen.[46]

Memorials and awards edit

 
Sir William Hillary Statue. Douglas Head, Isle of Man

There are three memorials to Sir William Hillary in Douglas, Isle of Man:

  • Sunken Gardens, Loch Promenade, with inscription.[47]
  • St George's Church, with inscription added at the time of restoration by the RNLI, after World War I[48][49][50]
  • Douglas Head, with inscription.[51]

In his lifetime, Hillary was awarded a gold medal by the Institution he had founded, in 1824. In 1825, he suggested his part in the wreck of the City of Glasgow (see List of shipwrecks in 1825) merited a further award; but was rebuffed. Further awards were made to him in 1828, for aid to the Fortrondoert, and in 1830.[52] In 1938, the king, George VI, asked for a modification of the original RNLI medal by William Wyon, from 1824. The obverse from that time onwards had shown the head of the sovereign; but it was then replaced by Hillary's head, as founder, engraved by Allan G. Wyon.[53]

Works edit

  • Appeal to the British nation, on the humanity and policy of forming a national institution, for the preservation of lives and property from shipwreck (1823)[45]
  • Plan for the construction of a steam life boat: also for the extinguishment of fire at sea, &c. (1825)[45]
  • Suggestions for the improvement and embellishment of the metropolis (1825), proposing a metropolitan board for London[45]
  • A Sketch of Ireland in 1824 (2nd edition 1825)[45][54]
  • The National Importance of a Great Central Harbour for the Irish Sea, accessible at all times to the largest vessels proposed to be constructed at Douglas, Isle of Man (1826)[45]
  • A Letter to the Trustees of the Academic Fund (1830)[45]
  • Observations on the Proposed Changes in the Fiscal and Navigation Laws of the Isle of Man addressed to the Delegates from that Island to His Majesty's Government (1837)[45]
  • The Naval Ascendancy of Britain (1838)[55]
  • A Letter to the Shipping and Commercial Interests of Liverpool on Steam Life and Pilot Boats (1839)[45]
  • Suggestions for the Christian Occupation of the Holy Land, as a Sovereign State, by the Order of St. John of Jerusalem (1840)[56]
  • An Address to the Knights of St John of Jerusalem, on the Christian Occupation of the Holy Land, as a Sovereign State under their Dominion (1841)[56]
  • A Letter to the Right Honourable Lord John Russell, Her Majesty's Secretary of State for the Home Department, on the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck (1842)[57]
  • A Report of Proceedings at a Public Meeting held at the Court House, Douglas (1842)[45]
  • The National Importance of a Great Central Harbour of Refuge for the Irish Sea, proposed to be constructed at Douglas Bay, Isle of Man (4th edition 1842)[58]

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ For an account of his family background, see Journal of the Friends Historical Society vol. 60, No.3 pp. 157–179 "Quakers of Countersett and their legacy" by Christopher Booth
  2. ^ Janet Gleeson (15 February 2014). The Lifeboat Baronet: Launching the RNLI. History Press Limited. pp. 43 and 46. ISBN 978-0-7509-5471-6.
  3. ^ a b c d e Oxford Dictionary of National Biography article by Thomas Seccombe, ‘Hillary, Sir William, first baronet (1770–1847)', rev. Sinéad Agnew, 2004; online edn, May 2005 [1] accessed 8 June 2007
  4. ^ a b Janet Gleeson (15 February 2014). The Lifeboat Baronet: Launching the RNLI. History Press Limited. pp. 53 and 57–8. ISBN 978-0-7509-5471-6.
  5. ^ a b c Elizabeth Siberry (1 January 2000). The New Crusaders: Images of the Crusades in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries. Ashgate. p. 82. ISBN 978-1-85928-333-2.
  6. ^ Oliver Warner (25 April 1974). The life-boat service: a history of the Royal National Life-boat Institution, 1824-1974. Cassell. p. 6.
  7. ^ "Quakers of Countersett and their legacy", p. 167
  8. ^ Edward Arthur Fitch (1952). The Essex Review. Vol. 61. pp. 11–2.
  9. ^ a b Lee, Sidney, ed. (1901). "Hillary, William (1771-1847)" . Dictionary of National Biography (1st supplement). Vol. 2. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  10. ^ Sir William Hillary 1st bart: Profile & Legacies Summary, UCL Centre for the study of the legacies of British slavery. Retrieved: 1 September 2023.
  11. ^ John Debrett; William Courthope (1835). Debrett's Baronetage of England: with alphabetical lists of such baronetcies as have merged in the peerage, or have become extinct, and also of the existing baronets of Nova Scotia and Ireland. J. G. & F. Rivington. p. 321.
  12. ^ Edward Cave; John Nichols (1847). The Gentleman's Magazine, and Historical Chronicle, for the Year ... Edw. Cave. p. 423.
  13. ^ John Burke (1835). "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland". p. 187. Retrieved 10 August 2015.
  14. ^ John Burke (1832). A General and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerage and Baronetage of the British Empire. H. Colburn and R. Bentley. p. 613.
  15. ^ The Royal Kalendar and Court and City Register for England, Scotland, Ireland and the Colonies: For the Year ... 1825. W. March. 1825. p. 93.
  16. ^ a b Fanny Burney (1972). The Journals and Letters of Fanny Burney (Madame D'Arblay): Bath 1817-1818 (Letters 1086-1179). Clarendon Press. p. 525 note 9. ISBN 978-0-19-811498-7.
  17. ^ The Essex Review. Vol. 57. 1948. p. 11.
  18. ^ Debrett, John (1819). "Debrett's baronetage, knightage, and companionage". Internet Archive (4 ed.). p. 1101. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
  19. ^ "Blackmore Priory or Jericho Priory, Essex". Retrieved 18 August 2015.
  20. ^ Arthur Charles Fox-Davies (1929). "Armorial Families: a Directory of Gentlemen of Coat-Armour". p. 592. Retrieved 14 August 2015.
  21. ^ Charles Roger Dod (1855). Dod's Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage, of Great Britain and Ireland. S. Low, Marston & Company. p. 309.
  22. ^ The Gentleman's Magazine. W. Pickering. 1847. p. 423.
  23. ^ E. Walford (1882). The county families of the United Kingdom. Рипол Классик. p. 311. ISBN 978-5-87194-361-8.
  24. ^ a b c Hopkirk, Mary (January 1948). "Danbury Place-Park-Palace in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries". The Essex Review. LVII: 8–13.
  25. ^ "Seax – Catalogue: D/DC 22/55 Marriage Settlement". Retrieved 18 August 2015.
  26. ^ C. R. Benstead (28 October 2011). Shallow Waters. A&C Black. p. 75. ISBN 978-1-4482-0608-7.
  27. ^ "Source 8: HMS Vigilant, rnli.org instructional materials" (PDF). Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  28. ^ Oliver Warner (25 April 1974). The life-boat service: a history of the Royal National Life-boat Institution, 1824-1974. Cassell. pp. 4–5.
  29. ^ Oliver Warner (25 April 1974). The life-boat service: a history of the Royal National Life-boat Institution, 1824-1974. Cassell. pp. 7–8.
  30. ^ "1824: Our foundation". RNLI. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
  31. ^ Manks Advertiser. Tuesday 23 November 1830
  32. ^ Manks Advetiser. Tuesday November 30th, 1830.
  33. ^ a b Manx Sun Tuesday December 28th, 1830
  34. ^ Complete Poetry of William Wordsworth; full-text poems of William Wordsworth, at everypoet.com
  35. ^ Manx Sun. Friday October 2nd, 1835
  36. ^ Manx Sun. Saturday August 7th, 1858
  37. ^ Sir Richard Brown (1857). Synoptical Sketch of the Illustrious & Sovereign Order of Knights of Hospitallers of St. John of Jerusalem: And of the Venerable Langue of England. Order. p. 69.
  38. ^ Elizabeth Siberry (1 January 2000). The New Crusaders: Images of the Crusades in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries. Ashgate. p. 76. ISBN 978-1-85928-333-2.
  39. ^ Robert Bigsby (1869). Memoir of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem: from the capitulation of Malta in 1798 to the present period; and presenting a more detailed account of its sixth or British branch, as reorganized in 1831. With an appendix containing notices of the Order, etc. R. Keene. p. 116.
  40. ^ Sir Richard Brown (1857). Synoptical Sketch of the Illustrious & Sovereign Order of Knights of Hospitallers of St. John of Jerusalem: And of the Venerable Langue of England. Order. p. 25.
  41. ^ Jonathan Simon Christopher Riley-Smith (2008). The Crusades, Christianity, and Islam. Columbia University Press. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-231-14624-1.
  42. ^ Elizabeth Siberry (1 January 2000). The New Crusaders: Images of the Crusades in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries. Ashgate. pp. 77 and 79. ISBN 978-1-85928-333-2.
  43. ^ Robert Bigsby (1869). Memoir of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem: from the capitulation of Malta in 1798 to the present period; and presenting a more detailed account of its sixth or British branch, as reorganized in 1831. With an appendix containing notices of the Order, etc. R. Keene. p. 112.
  44. ^ Elizabeth Siberry (1 January 2000). The New Crusaders: Images of the Crusades in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries. Ashgate. pp. 79 and 81. ISBN 978-1-85928-333-2.
  45. ^ a b c d e f g h i j George William Wood. "Manx Quarterly #14 pp127/131 – Sir William Hillary". Retrieved 11 August 2015.
  46. ^ Isle of Man Examiner, Thursday, 15 December 1960; Page: 7
  47. ^

    Sir William Hillary & his volunteer crew go to the aid of the stricken St. George 20th November 1830

  48. ^

    TO THE HONOURED MEMORY OF/LIEUT. COLONEL SIR WILLIAM HILLARY, BT./OF YORKSHIRE, ESSEX AND THE ISLE OF MAN/ LIEUTENANT TURCOPOLIER OF THE ORDER OF THE KNIGHTS OF ST JOHN OF JERUSALEM./BORN 1771. DIED 1847/SOLDIER, AUTHOR, PHILANTHROPIST./HE FOUNDED IN THE YEAR 1824 THE ROYAL NAVAL LIFE BOAT INSTITUTION/AND IN 1832 BUILT THE TOWER OF REFUGE IN DOUGLAS BAY./FEARLESS HIMSELF IN THE WORK OF RESCUE FROM SHIPWRECK HE HELPED SAVE 509 LIVES/AND WAS THREE TIMES AWARDED THE GOLD MEDAL OF THE INSTITUTION FOR GREAT GALLANTRY./WHAT HIS WISDOM PLANNED AND POWER ENFORCED/MORE POTENT STILL HIS GREAT EXAMPLE SHOWED.

  49. ^ Maritime Memorials
  50. ^ Oliver Warner (25 April 1974). The life-boat service: a history of the Royal National Life-boat Institution, 1824-1974. Cassell. p. 116.
  51. ^

    Sir William Hillary, Bt.

    This statue was unveiled on 21 September 1999 by H.R.H. Prince Michael of Kent K.C.V.O.
    In the presence of Members of the Douglas Corporation.

    Sir William Hillary 1771-1847
    Founder of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution.
    A soldier who was created a Baronet on 8 November 1805 for his services to king and country.
    He settled at Fort Anne, Douglas in 1806 where he witnessed a large number of wrecks on the rocks in Douglas Bay.

    He died on 5 January 1847 and is buried at St. George's Church, Douglas.

    "Followed to the grave by crowds who had witnessed his heroism and self-devotion in saving the life of many a shipwrecked mariner".

    The Unique Tower of Refuge in Douglas Bay was planned by him in 1832 to save life and is a fitting and lasting memorial.

    "SON TROAILTEE-VARREY AYNS DANJEYR"

    This statue of Sir William Hillary by Amanda L. Barton of Kirk Michael was commissioned by Graham Ferguson Lacey of Bishopscourt and donated by him to the Borough of Douglas.

    It was erected on Douglas Head at the expressed wish of the Mayor of Douglas, Mr Councillor John Morley, J.P. who died on 3 September 1999.

  52. ^ Oliver Warner (25 April 1974). The life-boat service: a history of the Royal National Life-boat Institution, 1824-1974. Cassell. pp. 11–2.
  53. ^ Oliver Warner (25 April 1974). The life-boat service: a history of the Royal National Life-boat Institution, 1824-1974. Cassell. p. 141.
  54. ^ Abraham John Valpy (1825). The Pamphleteer. A.J. Valpy. p. v.
  55. ^ William Hillary (1838). The Naval Ascendancy of Britain. J. Mortimer.
  56. ^ a b S.J. Allen; Emilie Amt (21 April 2014). The Crusades: A Reader (Second ed.). University of Toronto Press. p. 551. ISBN 978-1-4426-0625-8.
  57. ^ William Harrison (1861). Bibliotheca Monensis: a bibliogr. account of works relating to the Isle of Man. p. 137.
  58. ^ William Harrison (1861). Bibliotheca Monensis: a bibliogr. account of works relating to the Isle of Man. p. 138.

Further reading edit

  • R. Kelly, For those in peril: the life and times of Sir William Hillary, the founder of the RNLI (1979)
  • Gleeson, Janet (2014) The Lifeboat Baronet – Launching the R.N.L.I.. (Stroud: The History Press). ISBN 978-0-7524-9001-4

External links edit

Baronetage of the United Kingdom
New creation Baronet
(of Danbury Place)
1805–1847
Succeeded by
Augustus Hillary

william, hillary, english, physician, physician, baronet, january, 1771, january, 1847, british, militia, officer, author, philanthropist, best, known, founder, 1824, royal, national, lifeboat, institution, sirsir, born4, january, 1771died5, january, 1847, 184. For the English physician see William Hillary physician Sir William Hillary 1st Baronet 4 January 1771 5 January 1847 was a British militia officer author and philanthropist best known as the founder in 1824 of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution SirWilliam HillarySir William HillaryBorn4 January 1771Died5 January 1847 1847 01 06 aged 76 Douglas Isle of ManNationalityEnglishOccupationsSoldierAuthorPhilanthropistKnown forFounder of the Royal National Lifeboat InstitutionSpouse s Frances Elizabeth Disney Fytche 1st wife Emma Tobin 2nd wife Children2RelativesMary Rolls sister Contents 1 Life 2 Family 2 1 First marriage 2 2 Circumstances of second marriage 2 3 After 1813 3 Lifeboat promoter 3 1 St George rescue and legacy 3 2 Tower of Refuge 3 3 Douglas Breakwater 4 Knight Hospitaller 5 Death and burial 6 Smelt Monument 7 Memorials and awards 8 Works 9 Notes and references 10 Further reading 11 External linksLife editHillary s background was Quaker from a Yorkshire family he was the son of the merchant Richard Hillary and his wife Hannah Wynne 1 He left Liverpool at age 26 and travelled to Italy 2 From his contacts there he became equerry to Prince Augustus Frederick the young son of George III and spent two years in the post 3 While Hillary was in Naples the Prince and Sir William Hamilton sent him on a mission to Malta 4 There Hillary saw the election July 1797 of the last of the Grand Masters of the Knights of Malta Ferdinand von Hompesch zu Bolheim 5 On this trip he also sailed round Malta and Sicily in an open boat 6 Hillary then travelled north with the incognito Prince heading for Berlin After a period there he left the Prince s employ and returned to London in the autumn of 1799 4 Back in England Hillary married in 1800 He had departed from Quaker beliefs and his wife was not a Quaker He had been left property by John Scott his father s business partner and nephew and then inherited West Indian estates from his elder brother Richard who died in 1803 He quickly dissipated a large fortune and had to sell properties including the old Yorkshire home of Rigg House 7 Hillary spent some 20 000 on creating the First Essex Legion of infantry and cavalry recruited largely from the Dengie Hundred and present day Maldon District areas in Essex after the end in 1803 of the Peace of Amiens and was given the title Lieutenant Colonel Commandant The force numbered 1 400 He was rewarded with a baronetcy in 1805 8 9 After experiencing financial troubles Hillary settled at Fort Anne near Douglas Isle of Man in 1808 9 The UCL Centre for the study of the legacies of British slavery lists Hillary as a known slave owner in Jamaica 10 Family edit nbsp The Hillary twins double portrait by J T MitchellFirst marriage edit Hillary married heiress Frances Elizabeth Disney Fytche on 21 February 1800 she was the daughter of Lewis Disney Fytche originally Lewis Disney of Danbury Place Essex and his wife Elizabeth daughter of William Fytche In the same year their twins were born a son Augustus William Hillary d 30 December 1855 and a daughter Elizabeth Mary 3 11 12 13 Circumstances of second marriage edit In 1813 Hillary married a local Manx woman Emma Tobin daughter of Patrick Tobin 14 or Amelia Toben of Kirk Braddan 15 his first wife having died according to the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography which is however contradicted by other sources 3 Lady Hillary obtained a Scottish divorce from Sir William in 1812 Hillary s second marriage took place in Scotland at Whithorn then in Wigtonshire 16 Lady Hillary divorced from her husband by 1812 continued to live at Danbury Place until her father died when she moved to Boulogne 17 After 1813 edit Of the twin children Elizabeth Mary married Christopher Richard Preston of Jericho House Blackmore Essex in 1818 18 19 Their son hyphenated his last name becoming Charles Ernest Richard Preston Hillary 20 Augustus William joined the 6th Dragoon Guards and became 2nd Baronet on his father s death In 1829 he married Susan Curwen Christian the eldest daughter of John Christian of Ewanrigg or Unnerigg Hall Cumberland 21 22 23 Elizabeth Mary in later life stayed with her mother Augustus William spent time with his father he was childless 24 According to Mary Hopkirk writing in the Essex Review Lady Hillary continued to live at Danbury Place until her father s death in 1823 at which point she moved to Boulogne 24 She met Frances D Arblay in Paris in 1817 while on a continental voyage with her children From Boulogne she moved to Blackmore where she had property from her marriage settlement from her uncle Thomas Fytche and a married daughter She died in 1828 16 24 25 Emma Tobin died in 1845 26 Lifeboat promoter editHillary witnessed the wreck of HMS Racehorse in 1822 only two months after he had been a participant in the rescue of HMS Vigilant 3 27 He drew up plans for a lifeboat service crewed by trained people intended not only for the Isle of Man but for all of the British coast In February 1823 he published a pamphlet entitled An Appeal To The British Navy On The Humanity And Policy Of Forming A National Institution For The Preservation Of Lives And Property From Shipwreck He proposed a national and voluntary organisation and pointed out the potential of new techniques such as those introduced by William Congreve rockets Charles Cornwallis Dansey of the Royal Artillery kites Frederick Marryat signal codes and George William Manby life saving apparatus 28 nbsp 12 Austin Friars where the first London office of the National Institution for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck was set up in 1824Initially Hillary received little response from the Admiralty He appealed to London philanthropists including Thomas Wilson MP for the City of London and George Hibbert of the West Indies merchants and his plans were adopted The National Institution for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck was founded on 4 March 1824 at a second meeting in the London Tavern Bishopsgate Street London with the king as Patron Office premises were taken at 12 Austin Friars in the City of London and then moved in the same area 29 30 The first of the new lifeboats to be built was stationed at Douglas St George rescue and legacy edit Main article St George Rescue At the age of 60 Hillary took part in the rescue in 1830 of the crew of the packet St George which had foundered on Conister Rock at the entrance to Douglas harbour He commanded the lifeboat was washed overboard with others of the lifeboat crew yet finally everyone aboard the St George was rescued with no loss of life Following the heroic rescue the Master of the St George Lieut John Tudor RN wrote to Sir William expressing the gratitude of himself and his crew 31 My Dear Sir Allow me to return you in the name of the crew of the St George and myself our most grateful thanks for the very great personal exertions of yourself Lieut Robinson RN Mr William Corlett and the Life Boat s crew during the gale of yesterday morning I want words Sir to express to you what we then felt and what we shall ever feel for the noble and determined manner in which you persevered in coming to our assistance after we had considered it our duty to warn you off for the vessel having bilged the severity of the gale the position of the wind and the time of the tide there did not appear to us amongst the heavy breakers then rolling upon Conister the slightest chance of escape for you and which from the crippled state of the life boat when she afterwards left the wreck was so nearly proving to be the case Trusting Sir that you may long live to preside over an establishment your philanthropy gave birth to and in which your humanity has always placed you amongst the foremost and most active of its members I have the honor to remain Your obliged grateful andMost obedient servant Lieutenant John Tudor RN Douglas November 21st 1830 At a Meeting of the Committee of the Isle of Man District Association of the Royal National Institution for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck held at the Courthouse Douglas 27 November 1830 presided over by the chairman High Bailiff James Quirk Esq it was agreed unanimously that the following report be transmitted to the Secretary of the Royal National Institution 32 That the thanks of this meeting be presented to Sir William Hillary Lieut Robinson William Corlett Esq and the crew of the life boat for their very gallant and meritorious exertions in saving the lives of the crew of the St George For the saving of the 22 crew members on board the St George Sir William and Lieut Robinson both received the Institution s Gold Medal the second of three Sir William was to receive 33 William Corlett and Issac Vondy both received Silver Medals with a purse of 20 guineas also distributed to the crew in recognition of their gallantry 33 nbsp Memorial erected along the Loch Promenade in Douglas recounting the rescue of the crew of the St GeorgeTower of Refuge edit Main article St Mary s Isle The incident prompted Hillary to set up a scheme to build the Tower of Refuge on Conister Rock The structure designed by architect John Welch was completed in 1832 and still stands at the entrance to Douglas harbour it was the subject of a poem by William Wordsworth 34 Douglas Breakwater edit Main article Douglas Harbour As well as the Tower of Refuge Hillary was instrumental in recommendations for the construction of a Breakwater at Douglas to afford the harbour greater shelter and to provide a haven to ships plying the Irish Sea 35 Hillary had written a paper on the proposal before 1835 when formal proposals were put forward and design plans drawn up by Sir John Rennie Construction was long delayed 36 and it was not until 1862 when work finally started nbsp Sir William Hillary Statue Douglas Head Isle of ManKnight Hospitaller editHillary belonged to the precursor in the United Kingdom of the Order of Saint John created a Knight K J J in 1838 37 This group has been described by Jonathan Riley Smith as consisting of romantics and fraudsters It failed to obtain recognition from the Order of Malta the Sovereign Order of which it was putatively a part or langue leading to a break in relations in 1858 A fresh start was made in 1871 and a Royal Charter for the new group was obtained in 1888 5 Hillary was one of the founders of the Order and pressed for Sir Sidney Smith to be given a major post After Smith died in 1840 he took on the roles himself 38 He became a Knight Grand Cross G C J J of the order 39 and at the time of his death held the position of Lieutenant Turcopolier 40 What Hillary envisaged was a Christian reoccupation of Palestine led by the Order of Malta 41 The background was of a revolt in Syria against Ibrahim Pasha and a British naval intervention under Charles Napier on behalf of the Ottoman Empire in 1840 leading to the occupation of Beirut and Acre 5 Illness confined Hillary to his home on the Isle of Man and in 1841 he began to sell off his possessions but he kept up a correspondence on his ideas with Sir Richard Broun 8th Baronet secretary of the order 42 Hillary wrote on the project in the Morning Herald for 25 November 1841 as an Address published also as a pamphlet 43 Hopes were placed in a German translation of the pamphlet by Robert Lucas Pearsall of the Order in Karlsruhe When Frederick William IV of Prussia indicated that the concept of a sovereign state under the order was unacceptable the idea had to be dropped though a similar plan in Algeria was mooted in 1846 44 Death and burial edit nbsp Tomb of Sir William Hillary St George s Churchyard Douglas Isle of ManHillary died at Woodville near Douglas Isle of Man on 5 January 1847 He was buried in St George s Churchyard Douglas 3 45 Smelt Monument editMain article Smelt Monument Following the death of Lieutenant Governor Cornelius Smelt in 1832 Sir William was instrumental in the erection of a monument commemorating Governor Smelt The Smelt Monument was designed by John Welch and is situated in the market square Castletown Isle of Man facing Castle Rushen 46 Memorials and awards edit nbsp Sir William Hillary Statue Douglas Head Isle of ManThere are three memorials to Sir William Hillary in Douglas Isle of Man Sunken Gardens Loch Promenade with inscription 47 St George s Church with inscription added at the time of restoration by the RNLI after World War I 48 49 50 Douglas Head with inscription 51 In his lifetime Hillary was awarded a gold medal by the Institution he had founded in 1824 In 1825 he suggested his part in the wreck of the City of Glasgow see List of shipwrecks in 1825 merited a further award but was rebuffed Further awards were made to him in 1828 for aid to the Fortrondoert and in 1830 52 In 1938 the king George VI asked for a modification of the original RNLI medal by William Wyon from 1824 The obverse from that time onwards had shown the head of the sovereign but it was then replaced by Hillary s head as founder engraved by Allan G Wyon 53 Works editAppeal to the British nation on the humanity and policy of forming a national institution for the preservation of lives and property from shipwreck 1823 45 Plan for the construction of a steam life boat also for the extinguishment of fire at sea amp c 1825 45 Suggestions for the improvement and embellishment of the metropolis 1825 proposing a metropolitan board for London 45 A Sketch of Ireland in 1824 2nd edition 1825 45 54 The National Importance of a Great Central Harbour for the Irish Sea accessible at all times to the largest vessels proposed to be constructed at Douglas Isle of Man 1826 45 A Letter to the Trustees of the Academic Fund 1830 45 Observations on the Proposed Changes in the Fiscal and Navigation Laws of the Isle of Man addressed to the Delegates from that Island to His Majesty s Government 1837 45 The Naval Ascendancy of Britain 1838 55 A Letter to the Shipping and Commercial Interests of Liverpool on Steam Life and Pilot Boats 1839 45 Suggestions for the Christian Occupation of the Holy Land as a Sovereign State by the Order of St John of Jerusalem 1840 56 An Address to the Knights of St John of Jerusalem on the Christian Occupation of the Holy Land as a Sovereign State under their Dominion 1841 56 A Letter to the Right Honourable Lord John Russell Her Majesty s Secretary of State for the Home Department on the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck 1842 57 A Report of Proceedings at a Public Meeting held at the Court House Douglas 1842 45 The National Importance of a Great Central Harbour of Refuge for the Irish Sea proposed to be constructed at Douglas Bay Isle of Man 4th edition 1842 58 Notes and references edit For an account of his family background see Journal of the Friends Historical Society vol 60 No 3 pp 157 179 Quakers of Countersett and their legacy by Christopher Booth Janet Gleeson 15 February 2014 The Lifeboat Baronet Launching the RNLI History Press Limited pp 43 and 46 ISBN 978 0 7509 5471 6 a b c d e Oxford Dictionary of National Biography article by Thomas Seccombe Hillary Sir William first baronet 1770 1847 rev Sinead Agnew 2004 online edn May 2005 1 accessed 8 June 2007 a b Janet Gleeson 15 February 2014 The Lifeboat Baronet Launching the RNLI History Press Limited pp 53 and 57 8 ISBN 978 0 7509 5471 6 a b c Elizabeth Siberry 1 January 2000 The New Crusaders Images of the Crusades in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries Ashgate p 82 ISBN 978 1 85928 333 2 Oliver Warner 25 April 1974 The life boat service a history of the Royal National Life boat Institution 1824 1974 Cassell p 6 Quakers of Countersett and their legacy p 167 Edward Arthur Fitch 1952 The Essex Review Vol 61 pp 11 2 a b Lee Sidney ed 1901 Hillary William 1771 1847 Dictionary of National Biography 1st supplement Vol 2 London Smith Elder amp Co Sir William Hillary 1st bart Profile amp Legacies Summary UCL Centre for the study of the legacies of British slavery Retrieved 1 September 2023 John Debrett William Courthope 1835 Debrett s Baronetage of England with alphabetical lists of such baronetcies as have merged in the peerage or have become extinct and also of the existing baronets of Nova Scotia and Ireland J G amp F Rivington p 321 Edward Cave John Nichols 1847 The Gentleman s Magazine and Historical Chronicle for the Year Edw Cave p 423 John Burke 1835 A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland p 187 Retrieved 10 August 2015 John Burke 1832 A General and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerage and Baronetage of the British Empire H Colburn and R Bentley p 613 The Royal Kalendar and Court and City Register for England Scotland Ireland and the Colonies For the Year 1825 W March 1825 p 93 a b Fanny Burney 1972 The Journals and Letters of Fanny Burney Madame D Arblay Bath 1817 1818 Letters 1086 1179 Clarendon Press p 525 note 9 ISBN 978 0 19 811498 7 The Essex Review Vol 57 1948 p 11 Debrett John 1819 Debrett s baronetage knightage and companionage Internet Archive 4 ed p 1101 Retrieved 12 August 2015 Blackmore Priory or Jericho Priory Essex Retrieved 18 August 2015 Arthur Charles Fox Davies 1929 Armorial Families a Directory of Gentlemen of Coat Armour p 592 Retrieved 14 August 2015 Charles Roger Dod 1855 Dod s Peerage Baronetage and Knightage of Great Britain and Ireland S Low Marston amp Company p 309 The Gentleman s Magazine W Pickering 1847 p 423 E Walford 1882 The county families of the United Kingdom Ripol Klassik p 311 ISBN 978 5 87194 361 8 a b c Hopkirk Mary January 1948 Danbury Place Park Palace in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries The Essex Review LVII 8 13 Seax Catalogue D DC 22 55 Marriage Settlement Retrieved 18 August 2015 C R Benstead 28 October 2011 Shallow Waters A amp C Black p 75 ISBN 978 1 4482 0608 7 Source 8 HMS Vigilant rnli org instructional materials PDF Retrieved 9 September 2015 Oliver Warner 25 April 1974 The life boat service a history of the Royal National Life boat Institution 1824 1974 Cassell pp 4 5 Oliver Warner 25 April 1974 The life boat service a history of the Royal National Life boat Institution 1824 1974 Cassell pp 7 8 1824 Our foundation RNLI Retrieved 12 August 2015 Manks Advertiser Tuesday 23 November 1830 Manks Advetiser Tuesday November 30th 1830 a b Manx Sun Tuesday December 28th 1830 Complete Poetry of William Wordsworth full text poems of William Wordsworth at everypoet com Manx Sun Friday October 2nd 1835 Manx Sun Saturday August 7th 1858 Sir Richard Brown 1857 Synoptical Sketch of the Illustrious amp Sovereign Order of Knights of Hospitallers of St John of Jerusalem And of the Venerable Langue of England Order p 69 Elizabeth Siberry 1 January 2000 The New Crusaders Images of the Crusades in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries Ashgate p 76 ISBN 978 1 85928 333 2 Robert Bigsby 1869 Memoir of the Order of St John of Jerusalem from the capitulation of Malta in 1798 to the present period and presenting a more detailed account of its sixth or British branch as reorganized in 1831 With an appendix containing notices of the Order etc R Keene p 116 Sir Richard Brown 1857 Synoptical Sketch of the Illustrious amp Sovereign Order of Knights of Hospitallers of St John of Jerusalem And of the Venerable Langue of England Order p 25 Jonathan Simon Christopher Riley Smith 2008 The Crusades Christianity and Islam Columbia University Press p 58 ISBN 978 0 231 14624 1 Elizabeth Siberry 1 January 2000 The New Crusaders Images of the Crusades in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries Ashgate pp 77 and 79 ISBN 978 1 85928 333 2 Robert Bigsby 1869 Memoir of the Order of St John of Jerusalem from the capitulation of Malta in 1798 to the present period and presenting a more detailed account of its sixth or British branch as reorganized in 1831 With an appendix containing notices of the Order etc R Keene p 112 Elizabeth Siberry 1 January 2000 The New Crusaders Images of the Crusades in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries Ashgate pp 79 and 81 ISBN 978 1 85928 333 2 a b c d e f g h i j George William Wood Manx Quarterly 14 pp127 131 Sir William Hillary Retrieved 11 August 2015 Isle of Man Examiner Thursday 15 December 1960 Page 7 Sir William Hillary amp his volunteer crew go to the aid of the stricken St George 20th November 1830 TO THE HONOURED MEMORY OF LIEUT COLONEL SIR WILLIAM HILLARY BT OF YORKSHIRE ESSEX AND THE ISLE OF MAN LIEUTENANT TURCOPOLIER OF THE ORDER OF THE KNIGHTS OF ST JOHN OF JERUSALEM BORN 1771 DIED 1847 SOLDIER AUTHOR PHILANTHROPIST HE FOUNDED IN THE YEAR 1824 THE ROYAL NAVAL LIFE BOAT INSTITUTION AND IN 1832 BUILT THE TOWER OF REFUGE IN DOUGLAS BAY FEARLESS HIMSELF IN THE WORK OF RESCUE FROM SHIPWRECK HE HELPED SAVE 509 LIVES AND WAS THREE TIMES AWARDED THE GOLD MEDAL OF THE INSTITUTION FOR GREAT GALLANTRY WHAT HIS WISDOM PLANNED AND POWER ENFORCED MORE POTENT STILL HIS GREAT EXAMPLE SHOWED Maritime Memorials Oliver Warner 25 April 1974 The life boat service a history of the Royal National Life boat Institution 1824 1974 Cassell p 116 Sir William Hillary Bt This statue was unveiled on 21 September 1999 by H R H Prince Michael of Kent K C V O In the presence of Members of the Douglas Corporation Sir William Hillary 1771 1847 Founder of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution A soldier who was created a Baronet on 8 November 1805 for his services to king and country He settled at Fort Anne Douglas in 1806 where he witnessed a large number of wrecks on the rocks in Douglas Bay He died on 5 January 1847 and is buried at St George s Church Douglas Followed to the grave by crowds who had witnessed his heroism and self devotion in saving the life of many a shipwrecked mariner The Unique Tower of Refuge in Douglas Bay was planned by him in 1832 to save life and is a fitting and lasting memorial SON TROAILTEE VARREY AYNS DANJEYR This statue of Sir William Hillary by Amanda L Barton of Kirk Michael was commissioned by Graham Ferguson Lacey of Bishopscourt and donated by him to the Borough of Douglas It was erected on Douglas Head at the expressed wish of the Mayor of Douglas Mr Councillor John Morley J P who died on 3 September 1999 Oliver Warner 25 April 1974 The life boat service a history of the Royal National Life boat Institution 1824 1974 Cassell pp 11 2 Oliver Warner 25 April 1974 The life boat service a history of the Royal National Life boat Institution 1824 1974 Cassell p 141 Abraham John Valpy 1825 The Pamphleteer A J Valpy p v William Hillary 1838 The Naval Ascendancy of Britain J Mortimer a b S J Allen Emilie Amt 21 April 2014 The Crusades A Reader Second ed University of Toronto Press p 551 ISBN 978 1 4426 0625 8 William Harrison 1861 Bibliotheca Monensis a bibliogr account of works relating to the Isle of Man p 137 William Harrison 1861 Bibliotheca Monensis a bibliogr account of works relating to the Isle of Man p 138 Further reading editR Kelly For those in peril the life and times of Sir William Hillary the founder of the RNLI 1979 Gleeson Janet 2014 The Lifeboat Baronet Launching the R N L I Stroud The History Press ISBN 978 0 7524 9001 4External links editWorks by William Hillary at Project Gutenberg Works by or about William Hillary at Internet ArchiveBaronetage of the United KingdomNew creation Baronet of Danbury Place 1805 1847 Succeeded byAugustus Hillary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Hillary amp oldid 1183386323, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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