Jochum Nicolay Müller

Jochum Nicolay Müller (born 1 February 1775 in Trondheim, Norway) was a Norwegian naval officer who, as a midshipman, excelled at mathematics. As a junior lieutenant he met Horatio Nelson, and as a captain commanded the Finnmark squadron. He finally rose to the rank of Vice Admiral in the independent Royal Norwegian Navy.

Jochum Nicolay Müller
Born(1775-02-01)1 February 1775
Trondheim
Died2 January 1848(1848-01-02) (aged 75)
Christiana, Norway (modern name Oslo)
Buried
Oslo, Norway
Allegiance Denmark and  Norway
Service/branch Royal Danish Navy and  Royal Norwegian Navy
Years of service1789 - 1841
RankVice Admiral
Battles/warsBattle of Copenhagen (1801)

Battle of Copenhagen (1807)

Finnmark Squadron

Career

J N Müller[1] joined the navy as a volunteer cadet in 1789, becoming a midshipman four years later. At the naval academy he won the Gerner medal for excellence in mathematics in 1795 and graduated as a junior lieutenant in 1796. He was second in command of the cutter Forsvar on the Norwegian coast, before undertaking a cruise to the Danish West Indies on the frigate Iris. In April 1801, as war between Denmark and Britain approached, he was in command of the small gunboat Hajen (the heron).

Battle of Copenhagen (1801)

During the Battle of Copenhagen (1801), the little Hajen was posted beside the blockship Dannebrog with its crew of 357 men. The Danish defence line withstood nearly four hours of intense bombardment from the British fleet, returning fire in good measure, until the Dannebrog had lost one third of its complement, caught fire, and exploded. Hajen received a good proportion of the shots aimed at the Dannebrog and eventually had to strike. Müller was taken prisoner and conveyed to Nelson's flagship, where he came face to face with Horatio Nelson, the enemy himself. Müller described the admiral as a small, gaunt man with a strong presence, wearing a green Russian-style (kalmyk) overcoat and a three-cornered hat. The resolute, near crazy, defence had made a deep impression on the attackers. A British captain vouchsafed to Müller that never had the British navy experienced such a warm reception - not from the Dutch, the French or the Spanish![2] Later that year he served in the cadet training ship Fredericksværn and was promoted to senior lieutenant in 1802. In 1806, as captain of the pilot boat Allart. he sailed to Saint Petersburg where the ship was donated to the Russian navy. There Müller met Czar Alexander I when the latter came aboard.

Second Battle of Copenhagen (1807)

Müller was in command of the gunboat Flensborg in September 1807, when the British seized it and many other vessels after the Danes capitulated following the second Battle of Copenhagen. Flensborg did not make it back to Britain; she was lost in the storm in the Kattegat.

Northern Norway showing Hammerfest, North Cape and the Nordkinn
Finnmark 1810 and 1811

After a spell in 1808 - 1810 in command of a gunboat division on the Norwegian border with Sweden, Müller was promoted to captain and given command of the brig Lougen, which was to sail with HDMS Langeland to the North Cape of Norway together with three newly completed Norwegian Gunships.[3] As commander of this Finnmark Squadron in 1810, he re-established Norway's control of the trade route to northern Russia, which British warships had interdicted. He was also instrumental in rebuilding the harbour defences at Hammerfest. While she was returning to Trondheim with eleven large ships taken as prizes in September, Lougen ran aground on an reef south of Bodø and was nearly lost.

In 1811 Müller was again in command of the Finnmark squadron, which in that year comprised four Norwegian gunships and five other armed vessels - but no brigs. Much of his work then consisted in improving the very elementary maps of the area, and charting the seaways around North Cape and the Nordkinn Peninsula.

Following his sojourn in the far north, Müller was severely affected by arthritis and on sick leave for much of 1812. When he returned to duty he was responsible in August 1813 for successfully escorting a regiment of soldiers over the Great Belt to the island of Langeland despite the British blockade.

After the war

One year after the Treaty of Kiel and the short war with Sweden, Müller sought release from his duties to the Danish King (Frederick VI), who was loath to lose such an effective officer. The King gave Müller permission to stay in Norway for two years, but this assignment was later made permanent.

In 1841 Müller reached the rank of Vice-Admiral in the Royal Norwegian Navy. He died on 2 January 1848 and is buried in Oslo, then known as Christiana.

Notes

    gollark: Also, you're hilariously wrong.
    gollark: You need to understand what you're actually doing.
    gollark: Nope.
    gollark: Yet according to you if I wrote it -6x² + 12x = 0 the answers would be different.
    gollark: Addition is commutative. Switching the order of the terms right cannot possibly change the solutions to the quadratic.

    References

    1. Topsøe-Jensen Vol II pp. 227 – 229
    2. Lyngby pp. 180 – 181
    3. Fra Krigens Tid
    Danish
    • Lyngby, Mentz, Nørby & Seerup (2010) "Danmarks Største Søhelte (Denmarks Biggest Naval Heroes) *
    • T. A. Topsøe-Jensen og Emil Marquard (1935) “Officerer i den dansk-norske Søetat 1660-1814 og den danske Søetat 1814-1932“. (Danish Naval Officers)
    • Fra Krigens Tid (From the wartime 1807-1814) edited by N A Larsen, Christiana 1878
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