Charles Bethune

Charles Ramsay Drinkwater Bethune CB (27 December 1802 – 14 February 1884) was a British officer of the Royal Navy. He rose to the rank of Admiral during his career.[1]

Charles Bethune
Birth nameCharles Ramsay Drinkwater Bethune
Born27 December 1802
Little Ealing, Middlesex
Died14 February 1884 (aged 81)
Queensberry Place, South Kensington
Buried
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service/branch Royal Navy
Years of service1815–1870
RankAdmiral
Commands heldHMS Conway
Battles/warsFirst Opium War
AwardsCompanion of the Bath

Early life

Charles Bethune when young

Born at Little Ealing, Middlesex, the son of Colonel John Drinkwater and Eleanor Congalton, he assumed the name of Bethune in 1837, when his mother inherited the estates of her brother, George Congalton-Bethune.

Military career

Bethune served with the Royal Navy from the age of 13 and commanded HMS Conway [2] in Australasia and the Far East from 1836 to 1842. He reported the Conway Reef in 1838. He served in the First Opium War and was appointed a Companion of the Bath in 1841, for his services.

In 1845 he was sent to Borneo by the Admiralty to report on the best location for a British base against piracy. In the course of this mission he painted a number of watercolour views in Sarawak which were published in 1847 in James Augustus St. John's [3] Views in the Eastern Archipelago.

Funerary monument, Brompton Cemetery, London

In 1846 he joined the Council of the newly formed Hakluyt Society, for which he subsequently edited two volumes. (The first edited volume, written by Sir John Hawkins, was published in 1847, and the second edited volume, written by Antonio Galvano, was published in 1862.[4]) In 1851, on the death in India of his elder brother John Elliot Drinkwater Bethune, he became 24th Laird of Balfour.

He was promoted Admiral 2 April 1866.[5]

He died in 1884 and is buried in Brompton Cemetery, London.

Family

In 1846, he had married Frances Cecilia (1819–1888), only child of Henry Edward Staples, and they had six children. Of his sons, Edward Cecil Bethune (1855–1930) became a Lieutenant-General in the British Army, Henry Leonard Drinkwater Bethune (1858–1939) became a Captain in the Royal Navy and Francis John Brownlow Bethune (1860–1954) became a King's Counsel in Australia. His eldest daughter, Mary Frances Drinkwater Bethune (1847–1929), in 1867 married John George Frederick Hope-Wallace (1839–1900), son of the Honourable James Hope and his wife Lady Mary Frances Nugent, and had seven children.

References

  1. "Biography of Charles Ramsay Drinkwater-Bethune R.N." pdavis.nl. Retrieved 10 September 2016.
  2. "HMS Conway". hmsconway.org. Retrieved 26 July 2014.
  3. "Views in the Eastern Archipelago". scribd.com. Retrieved 26 July 2014.
  4. "Publications of the Hakluyt Society, First Series, Part 1. Compiled by P. E. H. Hair, Nos.1–50 (1847–1873)". Archived from the original on 1 October 2016. Retrieved 28 September 2016.
  5. "No. 23094". The London Gazette. 3 April 1866. p. 2190.
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