Page:Royal Naval Biography Marshall v3p2.djvu/392

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commanders.
369


FRANCIS ALEXANDER HALLIDAY, Esq.
[Commander.]

Was made a lieutenant in 1801, and commander Aug. 29th, 1808. He lost the Ferret sloop, near Leith, in 1812; and died at Caen, in Normandy, July 25th, 1830.



HENRY CLEMENTS THOMPSON, Esq.
Knight of the Swedish Military Order of the Sword.
[Commander.]

Lost an arm during the French revolutionary war; obtained the rank of lieutenant in 1802; commanded the boats of the Merlin sloop, Captain Edward P. Brenton, at the destruction of a French privateer, near Gravelines, Oct. 27th, 1803; and was presented with the Order of the Sword, by Gustavus Adolphus IV., for his distinguished services on the Baltic station, in Aug. 1808. His promotion to the rank of commander took place on the 19th of the ensuing month.

In consequence of interesting himself too arduously in the election contests of Grantham and Barnstaple, in which Sir Manasseh Lopez was also concerned, this officer latterly became greatly embarrassed in his circumstances, and was obliged at length to seek relief under the Insolvent Debtors’ Act. He was accordingly committed to the King’s Bench Prison, on the 11th Mar. 1824; and he died there, of apoplexy, on the 22d May following.



WILLIAM RUSSELL, Esq.
[Commander.]

Obtained the rank of lieutenant in 1793; and commanded the boats of the Flora frigate. Captain Robert Gambier Middleton, at the capture of the French national brig Mondovi, of 18 guns and 68 men, in the harbour of Cerigo, May 13th, 1798. He became a commander in Oct. 1808; and died at Kennington, co. Surrey, May 16th, 1828, in the 65th year of hie age.