Edward Ellicott

{{short description|English naval officer during the French Revolutionary Wars and Napoleonic Wars}}

{{EngvarB|date=April 2022}}

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{{infobox person

|birth_name = Edward Ellicott

|image = Rear Admiral Edward Ellicott 1768–1847.jpg

|birth_date = {{birth date|1768|5|29|df=y}}

|birth_place = likely Cullompton, Devon, England

|death_date = {{death date and age|1847|1|24|1768|5|29|df=y}}

|death_place = Alcombe, Somerset, England

|nationality = British

|occupation = naval officer

|spouse = Ann Prudence Starey

|children = 1}}

Edward Ellicott (29 May 1768 – 24 January 1847){{Cite NBD1849 |wstitle= Ellicott, Edward |volume= 6.6 |last= O'Byrne|first= William Richard |author-link= William Richard O'Byrne| page= 332 |year=1849 |short=1}}Somerset Heritage Service; Taunton, Somerset, England; Somerset Parish Records, 1538-1914; Reference Number: D\P\du/2/1/17 was an English naval officer who attained the rank of rear admiral and was active in the French Revolutionary Wars and Napoleonic Wars.

Career

Ellicott entered the Royal Navy in 1781 as first-class volunteer, serving on board the Mackworth in the Channel Fleet. He became a midshipman in 1783, serving on a number of ships, and was promoted to acting lieutenant in 1793. In that year he commanded the cutter Penelope and in the following he was promoted to lieutenant in the Eurydice under Captain Francis Cole. He accompanied Cole into the frigate Révolutionnaire as first lieutenant and participated in the capture of the French frigate Unité on 13 April 1796.{{cite news|title=Services of Captains R.N.|newspaper=Naval & Military Gazette and Weekly Chronicle of the United Service|date=19 October 1839|page=6}} Under instruction from Sir Edward Pellew, Ellicott commanded the captured vessel to England. Cole cited him "for his very particular attention in keeping sight of the chase, and for his steady and manly conduct when close engaged."{{cite news|title=The London Gazette|issue=13887|pages=387–388|date=26 April 1796}}{{cite magazine|date=July–December 1847|title=Rear-Adm. Ellicott|page=432|magazine=The Gentleman's Magazine|location=London|publisher=John Bowyer Nichols and Son}}

In February 1797, under Lord Bridport, Ellicott assisted at the victory off Cape St. Vincent, Portugal.{{cite news|title=Death of Rear-Admiral Edward Ellicott|newspaper=Globe|date=28 January 1847|page=3}} He was lauded for his intrepid conduct during the mutiny in the Channel Fleet that same year.{{cite news|title=We have to announce...|newspaper=Dover Telegraph and Cinque Ports General Advertiser|date=13 February 1847|page=4}} In June he assumed the rank of commander. While on board the Perseus he was severely wounded in an engagement. In 1801 he served under Nelson in the latter's failed attempt to destroy a French flotilla in the port of Boulogne. Ellicott was continually in service under leading admirals,{{cite book|editor=John Burke, Esq.|title=The Patrician. Volume III|year=1847|publisher=E. Churton|place=London|page=298}} including John MacBride, Sir Richard Strachan and George Palmer.

In 1804, Ellicott was posted to the North Sea, taking charge of the bomb vessel Explosion. On 10 September 1807, while under his command, the Explosion was wrecked off the coast of Heligoland. A court-martial found the loss of the ship to have been caused by the ignorance of the pilot, acquitting Ellicott but recommending that he not "place such unlimited confidence in the abilities of his pilots in future."{{cite book|editor=John D. Byrn|title=Naval Courts Martial, 1793–1815|year=2009|publisher=Ashgate|place=Farnham and Burlington|page=520}} Immediately afterwards he was appointed to command the frigate Hebe,{{cite web|url=https://threedecks.org/index.php?display_type=show_crewman&id=6299|title=Edward Ellicott (d.1847)|website=Three Decks - Warships in the Age of Sail|accessdate=9 October 2022}} assisting at the bombardment of Copenhagen, finding himself in a hurricane while in port at Curaçao,{{cite news|title=We learn from the American Papers...|newspaper=Public Ledger and Daily Advertiser|date=4 January 1808|page=2}} and protecting convoys between Orkney and Sweden. For his eminent services in the Baltic, the King of Sweden decorated him with the order of the Knight of the Sword of Sweden. He obtained his post-captaincy in 1812 during his command of the Hebe,{{cite magazine|date=July–December 1812|title=Naval History of the Present Year, 1812|page=174|magazine=The Naval Chronicle, for 1812|location=London|publisher=Joyce Gold}} and in 1846 was promoted to the rank of retired rear admiral. Upon retirement, he drew a pension from the Navy as a Greenwich out-pensioner.{{cite news|title=Retired|newspaper=Naval & Military Gazette and Weekly Chronicle of the United Service|date=7 November 1846|page=6}}

Ellicott lived for many years in Alcombe, Somerset,{{cite web|url=https://collections.britishart.yale.edu/catalog/orbis:9571333|title=Ellicott, Elizabeth, ca. 1823-1887, An illustrated history of the county of Somerset, 1862|website=Yale Center for British Art|accessdate=9 October 2022}} and died there in 1847 shortly after retiring. He was buried in the churchyard of the Priory Church of St George, Dunster.

Family

Edward Ellicott was baptised in Cullompton, Devon, the son of Robert Ellicott.Cullompton - Baptisms (July 1754 - December 1777). Devon Record Office 2404A/PR4 and 2404A/PR5.{{cite magazine|date=1806|title=Marriages and Deaths of Remarkable Persons|page=1168|magazine=The Gentleman's Magazine and Historical Chronicle. For the Year MDCCCVI|location=London|publisher=J. Nichols and Son}} At the age of 53, he married the London-born Ann Prudence Starey (1788–1865){{Cite web |date=30 December 1788 |title=Saint Mary Colechurch, London: Register of baptisms and burials 1671-1715. {{!}} London Metropolitan Archives |url=https://search.lma.gov.uk/scripts/mwimain.dll/144/LMA_OPAC/web_detail?SESSIONSEARCH&exp=refd%20P69/MRY8/A/002/MS04439 |access-date=2023-04-24 |website=search.lma.gov.uk |ref=P69/MRY8/A/002/MS04439}} in Croydon on 1 August 1821.Ancestry.com. England & Wales Marriages, 1538-1988 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2008. From about the age of four, Ann’s family home was Croydon Palace where her father Samuel had established a bleaching business.{{Cite news |date=19 March 1792 |title=Sales by auction |pages=4 |work=The Times}}{{Cite book |url=https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/D202178 |title=Will of Samuel Starey of Croydon , Surrey |date=1810-02-17 |publisher=The National Archives |location=Great Britain |ref=PROB 11/1508/321}} As the oldest daughter, Ann likely helped run the household so her mother Elizabeth and two elder brothers could run the business following the death of their father on 28 October 1809.{{Cite book |last=Ward |first=Jesse W |url=https://archive.org/details/croydoninpasthis00croy/page/10/mode/2up |title=Croydon in the past |date=1883 |publisher=Croydon Advertiser |others=Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center |location=Great Britain |pages=10}}{{Cite book |last=Thornhill |first=Lilian |url=https://cnhss.co.uk/booksproceedings/ |title=From Palace to washouse |publisher=Croydon Natural History and Scientific Society |year=1987 |location=Great Britain}}

Edward and Ann had an only daughter, Elizabeth (1822–1888), who after her father's death wrote the manuscript Some Events in the life of the late Rear Adml Ellicott,{{cite web|url=https://collections.nmrn.org.uk/Details/museum/96285|title=Object number RNM 1987/282|website=National Museum of the Royal Navy|accessdate=9 October 2022}} as well as writing An illustrated history of the county of Somerset. His sister Lucy Ellicott (c. 1785–1807) was married to George Caunter, a one-time lieutenant in the Royal Marines who became acting superintendent of Penang.London Metropolitan Archives; London, England; Reference Number: P69/AND1/A/01/Ms 4504/2

References

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Category:Royal Navy rear admirals

Category:1768 births

Category:1847 deaths