Henry Killigrew (Royal Navy officer)

Admiral Henry Killigrew (c. 1652 – 9 November 1712) was a Royal Navy officer who rose to the rank of Admiral of the Blue and was appointed a Lords Commissioner of the Admiralty and member of the Board of Admiralty. After retiring from the Royal Navy he pursued a career in politics and later became a Member of Parliament.[1]

Henry Killigrew
Bornc.1652
Died9 November 1712
Allegiance Kingdom of Great Britain
Service/branch Royal Navy
Years of service1666–1694 (RN)
1702-1708 (MP)
RankAdmiral of the Blue
Battles/warsSt. James's Day Battle
Battle of Schooneveld
Battle of Solebay
Battle of Texel

Henry Killgrew entered the navy in 1666 at the rank of Lieutenant assigned to HMS Cambridge. He took part in the St. James's Day Battle. From 1667 until 1691 he remained in his rank serving on board HMS Sapphire and then HMS Constant Warwick.[2] He was promoted to Captain on 9 January 1671 and took command of HMS Forester (1657) and took part at the Battle of Solebay. In June 1673 he was appointed Captain of HMS Bonaventure until August 1673 during this period he took part in the first and second Battles of Schooneveld and the Battle of Texel. On 17 August 1673 he was appointed Captain of HMS Monck until 6 April 1674. From 14 June 1674 until 16 May 1689 he was appointed Captain and Commanding Officer of ten more ships.[3] In 1686 he appointed to the temporary rank of Commodore.[4]

Promotion to flag rank

In June 1689 Killgrew was promoted Vice-Admiral of the Blue as flag officer of HMS Kent. On 17 February 1690 he advanced to Vice-Admiral of the Red and in May 1690 he was given command of the second rate HMS Duke.[5] On 3 June 1690 he was promoted to Admiral of the Blue. In May 1692 he and his ship were present at the Battle of Barfleur he remained in command of HMS Duke until 1692. On 15 April 1693. He was suspected of Jacobite sympathies and not given a sea command after 1693 instead the First Lord of the Admiralty moved him to the Admiralty when he was appointed a Lords Commissioner of the Admiralty and served on the Board of Admiralty until 2 May 1694 after which he retired from the navy and moved into politics.[6]

Political career

He served as a Member of Parliament for Stockbridge from 1702 to 1705 and for St Albans from 1705 to 1708, initially as a member of the Parliament of England, and then (following the Acts of Union in 1707) as a member of the Parliament of Great Britain.

Family

He was the son of the playwright Henry Killigrew. He married Lucy, the daughter of Thomas Jervoise of Herriard, Hampshire, with whom he had a son and 3 daughters.

gollark: Also, you're doing fake loading bars in startup, which is basically evil.
gollark: Onto what seems to break it, it looks like the paste you download as `/os/google/google` or whatever is no longer available, and your downloader program does not actually detect this.
gollark: I'm still looking at the other files, since there are a lot.
gollark: <@514040045120913410> That is... kind of bad, some offense.Firstly, the indents. Secondly, using `shell.run` to download files and whatnot is kind of inelegant and probably slow. Thirdly, I don't think it's an "OS" particularly.
gollark: Not without a modified client which is against the ToS.

References

  1. "KILLIGREW, Henry (c.1652-1712), of St. Julians, nr. St. Albans, Herts". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 23 April 2016.
  2. Harrison, Simon (2010–2018). "Henry Killigrew (1652-1712): Event History". threedecks.org. S. Harrison. Retrieved 24 February 2019.CS1 maint: date format (link)
  3. Harrison
  4. Harrison
  5. Harrison
  6. Harrison
Parliament of England
Preceded by
Frederick Tylney
Anthony Burnaby
Member of Parliament for Stockbridge
1702–1705
With: Anthony Burnaby
Succeeded by
Sir John Hawles
Sir Edward Lawrence
Preceded by
George Churchill
John Gape
Member of Parliament for St Albans
1705–1707
With: George Churchill
Succeeded by
Parliament of Great Britain
Parliament of Great Britain
Preceded by
Parliament of England
Member of Parliament for St Albans
1707–1708
With: George Churchill
Succeeded by
John Gape
Joshua Lomax
Military offices
Preceded by
The Earl of Pembroke
Colonel of the 2nd Maritime Regiment
1691–1693
Succeeded by
The Lord Berkeley of Stratton


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