Henry Edward Napier
Henry Edward Napier (5 March 1789 – 13 October 1853) was a British naval officer and historian.
Henry Edward Napier | |
---|---|
Henry Edward Napier | |
Born | 5 March 1789 |
Died | 13 October 1853 64) London, England | (aged
Allegiance | United Kingdom |
Service/ | Royal Navy |
Years of service | 1803–1830 |
Rank | Captain |
Commands held |
|
Battles/wars | Napoleonic Wars |
Family background
He was the fifth son of Colonel the Honourable George Napier, and his second wife, Lady Sarah Lennox, seventh daughter of the 2nd Duke of Richmond, and one of the famed Lennox sisters. His brothers included General Sir Charles James Napier, Commander-in-Chief, India and conqueror of Sindh; Lieutenant-General Sir George Thomas Napier, Governor and Commander of the Cape of Good Hope; and General Sir William Francis Patrick Napier, Lieutenant Governor of Guernsey, and author of the History of the Peninsular War.[1]
Naval career
Napier entered the Royal Naval Academy at Portsmouth Dockyard on 5 May 1803, and on 20 September 1806 joined the 74-gun Spencer, as a first-class volunteer. In her under the Captains the Honourable Robert Stopford and John Quilliam, he visited the Cape of Good Hope, and as a midshipman took part in the Bombardment of Copenhagen, also assisting in the destruction of Fleckeroe Castle, on the coast of Norway. From December 1808 until September 1811 he served in the East Indies aboard the frigate Clorinde under Captain Thomas Briggs; the 74-gun Russell, flagship of Vice-Admiral William O'Bryen Drury, and the frigate Diomede, Captain Hugh Cook. He was appointed acting-lieutenant of the Diomede on 31 October 1809, receiving his commission on 4 May 1810.[1]
In 1812–13 he served aboard the 74-gun Chatham, Captain Graham Moore, and the frigates Minerva, Captain Richard Hawkins, and Nymphe, Captain Farmery Predam Epworth, on the North Sea and North American stations. On 7 June 1814, he was promoted to commander aboard the 18-gun sloop Goree at Bermuda; and soon after appointed to the brig-sloop Rifleman, employed in protecting merchant vessels in the Bay of Fundy. In August 1815 Napier went on half-pay, having declined accepting a piece of plate that had been voted to him for his care in the conduct of convoys between the port of Saint John, New Brunswick and Castine, Maine. His last appointments were to the Jaseur at Halifax from January 1821 to July 1823, and to the Pelorus at Plymouth, for a brief period in 1826. He was promoted to captain on 31 December 1830.[1]
Writing career
Napier was elected a fellow of the Royal Society on 18 May 1820. His chief work was the Florentine History from the earliest Authentic Records to the Accession of Ferdinand the Third, Grandduke of Tuscany, in six volumes, published in 1846–47.[2]
Personal life
On 17 November 1823 he married his first cousin, Lady Caroline Bennet (died on 5 September 1836 in Florence). Lady Bennet was the illegitimate daughter of his uncle Charles Lennox, 3rd Duke of Richmond. They had five children:
- Augusta Sarah (b. 1826)
- Charles George (b. 1829)
- Adelaide Harriet Sophia (1831-1832)
- Arthur Lennox (1833-1839)
- Richard Henry (b. 1836)
Napier died at 62 Cadogan Place, London, on 13 October 1853.[2]
References
- O'Byrne, William Richard (1849). John Murray – via Wikisource. . .
- Boase, George Clement (1894). . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. 40. London: Smith, Elder & Co.