|
Famous
Irish
Mariners
William Browne
Founder of the Argentine Navy

Admiral William Browne
1777-1857
William Browne was born in
Foxford, Co. Mayo, in 1777. At the age of nine he was taken to Philadelphia, and
on his father's death, went to sea as a cabin boy on an American ship.
He worked his way up from fo'castle to quarter deck and
arrived in Buenos Aires in the year 1812 as captain of his own ship.
For the next
two years he carried on trading ventures there. In 1814 the Patriot Government
asked him to fit out his squadron to fight the Spanish Navy which was then in
complete mastery of the seas of South America. Arming three old whaling ships he surprised and defeated a Spanish Squadron of nine vessels and then,
reinforced by three other armed merchant ships, he forced the main Spanish Fleet
of thirteen warships into action. He sank or captured them and returned to seal
the fate of Montevideo, the last stronghold of Spain on the Atlantic seaboard.
Subsequently he organised and commanded the Navy of the infant Republic of the
Argentine. Working in close co-ope- ration with General San Martin, the
Liberator of the Argentine, Chile and Peru, he routed the naval forces of the
enemy in the Pacific as well as in the Atlantic, while San Martin defeated their forces on land.
These two,
San Martin and Brown, established, by their
victories, the liberty of Argentina. After his defeat of the Spanish Fleet in
Rio de la Plata, he brought his ship around Cape Horn to the Pacific Coast where
he bombarded Callao and captured several Spanish ships off the coast of Peru.
He attacked the fortified sea port of Guayaquil almost single
handed and it was here his ship went aground and he was boarded by Spanish
Infantry. Brown, however sat over his powder magazine with a lighted torch in
his hand and gave the Spanish a choice of going shoreward or skyward. The Spaniards
took the safer course and Brown got away safely.
In 1826 the Republic was threatened by Brazil, and Brown won the decisive battle
of Juncal against heavy odds. He broke the Brazilian blockade of Buenos Aires
and destroyed the enemy in the Harbour of Montevideo with only two ships. He entered the Harbour
of Rio de Janiero and disorganised the enemy defences and shipping.
In 1842 in the war between Argentina and Uruguay Brown, now over sixty
years of age, destroyed the enemy's navy. It was during this battle that he
destroyed a naval detachment at Costa Brava, commanded by Garibaldi, who
afterwards won fame in Italy.
For nearly forty years he kept the flag of Argentina flying, winning notable
victories for his adopted country both in 1826 and 1842. In his old age he paid
a visit to his birthplace in Foxford, and to the home in which he was born. William Browne died in Argentina in 1857 and was buried in the Recoleta
Cemetary in Buenos Aires.
Click
here for Photos of the National ceremony held in Dublin
on the 22nd. June 2007
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Irish
Mariners
JOHN BARRY

FIRST COMMODORE OF THE
AMERICAN NAVY
John Barry, son of Catherine and John Barry of Tacumshane, Co.Wexford was born
in 1745 and received no formal education. He went to sea as a cabin boy at a
very early age and on a voyage to New England he decided to remain there. He
settled in Philadelphia in 1760 and as master of a merchant ship he acquired
considerable wealth. He was thus fully involved
in the life of his adopted country and when the revolution broke out he offered
his services to Congress.
In February, 1776 he was appointed to command the'Lexington', a brig armed with
sixteen 4-pounder guns and on April 17th he chanced to meet the English tender
'Edward' off the coast of Virginia. The 'Edward', which was only nominally a
man-of-war, was poorly equipped for the purpose of suppressing smuggling and was
inadequatey armed to take any effective actionagainst the attack of the Lexington'. She was overcome by Barryand the 'Edward" became the first ship of war in American Annals to be
captured by the American Navy.
In 1777, while awaiting the completion of the 'Effingham' Barry, at the head of
four boats captured an enemy man-of-war schooner in the Delaware after a
courageous action. Finding that the ice on the river and bay was preventing
sailing and being unwilling to remain inactive, he joined the army and fora short period he served as aide-de-camp to General Cadwalader and rendered
outstanding service in army action around Trenton.
Barry's
success was rewarded by his appointment as commander of the twenty-eight guns
frigate, 'Effingham'. The frigate was then being built at Philadelphia and was
burned by the English in May 1778 before she was ready to put to sea.
A few months later Barry was assigned to the 'Raleigh' which had thirty-two guns
and sailed from Boston on 25th September. He was almost at once sighted by the
50-gun ship 'Experiment' under the command of Sir James Wallace. Under
pressure from the enemy Barry was obliged to run his ship ashore in Penobscot
Bay.
The English took possession of the 'Raleigh' and added her to the British Navy
in which the name has been perpetuated to the present time.
Early in 1781 he was appointed to the 'Alliance', a frigate of
thirty-two guns, which had just returned from a very remarkable voyage round the
coast of Great Britain as one of the squadron of ships under the command of Paul
Jones.
Barry sailed for France carrying on board Col. Henry Laurens of South Carolina,
the new representative of the United States at the Court of Versailles. On the
return journey the 'Alliance' left Lorient on 31st March and engaged in a fierce
battle with the English privateer 'Atalanta' and her consort, the Trespassy'. In
the encounter Barry was severely wounded in the shoulder from a burst of
grapeshot. On his return to America Barry received a hero's welcome as he
brought with him the two enemy vessels which he had captured.
On 21st December of the same year he sailed again in the 'Alliance' from Boston,
with the Marquis de Lafayette and the Comte de Noailles on board, both of whom
were returning to France on important public business. On the return voyage
Barry captured a number of enemy vessels including a vessel of the same size as
the 'Alliance' but this was re-taken by an English force of superior strength.
Barry continued to serve with distinction during the war and he is reputed to
have rejected the most tempting offers from the British Government and refused
to turn traitor to the cause of his adopted country. After the cessation of
hostilities he was employed by the United States Government to superintend the
building of the frigate 'United States'. He retained command of this vessel
until after the accession of Mr. Thomas Jefferson to the office of President
when the 'United States' was laid-up.
When, in 1794 the American Navy was reorganised on something like its present
footing, Barry was placed at the head of the fleet as commodore, a position
which he held until his death at Philadelphia on 13th September, 1803.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Captain
Robert Halpin
One of the most famous ships of
all time was the "Great Eastern", a vessel which, for fifty years after her
launching on 31st January 1858, was the largest ship in the world. Forever
associated with that famous vessel and with the historic laying of world wide
telegraphic cables is the name of
Robert Halpin of Wicklow.
Great Eastern at north wall Dublin 1886
Robert Halpin was born in Wicklow on 17th March, 1836 and went to sea at the
very tender age of 10. Just twelve years later he was made master of a
Belfast-built steamship, "The Circassion".
Six years later, in 1864, he was appointed first mate of the
"Great Eastern". This huge vessel was built at the Isle of Dogs on the
Thames. She was 692 feet long, had two sets of
engines with a strength of eleven thousand horse power and was designed to carry
4,000 passengers. She was described by some of the writers of her day as
"The Wonder of the Seas". She had six masts and carried 6,500 sq.
yards of sail in addition to
two 58 foot paddle wheels. As a passenger ship she was a complete failure but
she was subsequently to become a very successful cable-laying vessel and laid
the first cable between
Valentia, Co. Kerry and Newfoundland in 1866.
In 1869
Robert Halpin was appointed master of the "Great Eastern" and laid
cables from Brest to Newfoundland and from Bombay to Aden and Suez. In the years
1873 and 1874 Captain Halpin made two further Atlantic cable voyages and
connected Madeira with Brazil. Subsequently he sailed south and laid cable
linking Australia, New Zealand and the Dutch East Indies.
During his career as an ocean cable layer. Captain Halpin was responsible for
the laying of 26,000 miles of cable and when in 1874 the Telegraph Construction
Company launched a specially built cable-ship, "The Faraday", the
"Great Eastern" became obsolete. It was decided that the huge ship
should be laid up at Milford Haven and Captain Halpin was in command on her
final
voyage from London to Milford Haven, a trip which took three days. There, for
the last time, Robert Halpin walked down the "Great Eastern's" ladder
and ended a partnership which had made shipping history. At present a number of
souvenirs of the "Great Eastern" and Captain Halpin are in the safe
keeping of the Maritime Institute of Ireland and included in these is his
uniform:
(Clement
McGann-Maritime Institute of Ireland)
Robert Halpin was a small man, but was nevertheless very powerful and weighed 15
stone. He was very popular with his crew and was very concerned for their
welfare. On one occasion in 1866 on board the vessel a sailor coming down from a
high mast in a gale became terrified as he gazed down on the open paddle engine
hatch. He was 80 feet aloft and Halpin called out "Hold on, I'm coming
up". He climbed up the stay and clinging with arm and leg placed the man's
legs around his neck and brought him safely down to the deck.
As master of the "Great Eastern" he showed exceptional qualities of
courage and seamanship and gained for himself the respect and admiration of his
fellow mariners and of some of
the leading figures of his day. Among these was Jules Verne, who sailed with him
on board the "Great Eastern" in 1867. Verne described Halpin as
"a skilful, energetic seaman; he gave orders in a clear, decided tone, the
bosun repeating them with a voice like the roaring of a lion". Apart from
the great writer many other contemporaries were generous in their praise of the
Wicklow seafarer and today in his home town a monument stands to remind its
citizens of the great achievement of Robert Halpin and of the honour he brought
to his place of birth.
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JOHN
HOLLAND
1841-1914

John
Philip Holland was born in Co.Clare Ireland in 1841.
Having
survived the famine he joined the Christian Brothers in 1858, at the age of 17.
There he met a monk who was already working on a way to propel submarines by
electricity.
In
early 1873 Holland left the Christian Brothers and sailed to America. Arriving
in Boston he met with Irish Americans and secured funding for his submarine
known as the Fenian Ram. Powered by an internal combustion engine and armed with
a single missile tube the trials were very successful.
The Fenian Ram
Holland II

The
Fenian Ram at the New York
State Marine School (1916-1927)
US Navy Photo
~~~
John
Holland’s First Submarine
|
Length
|
14 feet 6
inches
|
|
Beam
|
3 feet 0
inches
|
|
Depth
|
2 feet 6
inches
|
|
Displacement
|
2.25 tons
|
| Holland
I

|
Holland
I Model |
Drawn
from memory by William Dunkerly
Published
in the
Paterson
Sunday Chronicle in 1916
|
Unfortunately some of his backers thought that the U.S. government were about to
claim it, (and without telling Holland) and in an attempt to hide it from them
they damaged her and she never sailed again. Holland
decided to start building submarine torpedo boats for the U.S. navy. After
nearly 15 years of planning and different designs the navy bought his sixth one
in 1900.
Named Holland VI it was judged to be the Worlds first successful submarine.
Holland died in 1914.
The USS
Holland
Holland VI
|
 |
 |
 |
To
learn more about John
Philip Holland please click here:
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Peter Campbell
|

Peter Campbell
(1780-c1832)
(Centro de Estudios Históricos, Navales y Marítimos
del
Uruguay
)
|
Peter Campbell (1780-c1832), naval officer and founder
of the Uruguayan navy, was born in
Ireland
in 1780. Little is known about
Campbell
's early years in
Ireland
, except that he was probably apprenticed as a tanner. He enlisted in the 71st
Highland Regiment, one of the divisions that in July 1805 sailed for the
Cape of Good Hope
. In 1806 these troops invaded
Buenos Aires
under William Carr Beresford. After the British campaigns failed in their
attempt and the regiment withdrew,
Campbell
was one of the soldiers who managed to remain in the River Plate. He joined the
patriot ranks as a guerrilla leader, harassing Spanish forces both on land and
on the
Paraná river
. He was notorious for his dexterity in gaucho-style duel, wielding a
long knife in one hand and using a poncho wrapped around the other arm as a
protective measure. He carried two riding pistols, a sabre, and a large knife in
a leather sheath for his personal protection, and was assisted by a
Tipperary-born gaucho known as 'Don Eduardo'.
Campbell
rose to prominence as a superb guerrilla fighter, serving under José Artigas,
the caudillo of a region which encompassed the present-day Argentine
provinces of Entre Ríos and
Corrientes
, and much of
Uruguay
, a man regarded as one of
Uruguay
's founding fathers. Peter Campbell played a prominent role in the affairs of
Corrientes
province, and for a period after 1819 acted as its deputy governor. He had a
notable influence on the tactics employed by the local military forces, first
against the Spaniards during the War of Independence, and later against
Buenos Aires
in the civil wars that followed Argentine sovereignty.
Peter Campbell was responsible for establishing a regiment of
mounted Tapé indigenous people, who were feared both as a cavalry and infantry
force because their tactics were so difficult to counteract. Armed with rifles
with long bayonets attached to them, his indigenous force was trained to charge
the enemy on horseback at great speed before dismounting and opening fire with
their rifles.
Campbell
's military prowess and organisational ability were not confined to terra firma.
In 1814 he began putting together a squadron of river vessels to support Artigas
on the Paraná. In 1818 Peter Campbell took charge of the second squadron of the
Uruguayan naval forces, based in Goya and Esquina. He became naval
commander-in-chief of the region and the scourge of the Paraguayan dictator
Francia's river fleet. On
21 August 1818
Artigas appointed
Campbell
as the first naval commander of the patriot fleet. It is on the basis of this
appointment that the Irishman is acknowledged as the founder of the Uruguayan
navy. In September 1818 Peter Campbell managed to seize two vessels carrying
arms for the Paraguayan army. Between January and March 1819, together with the
land forces of governor López,
Campbell
besieged the town of
Capilla del Rosario
. On
10 March 1919
the Uruguayan army won the Battle of Barrancas against the army of
Buenos Aires
. Advancing on the Argentine city, the combined federalist forces defeated the porteños
at Cepeda (
1 February 1820
) and San Nicolás (
13 February 1820
).
However, in the final naval battle against Monteverde on
30 July 1820
, Artigas was defeated by Ramírez, a rival warlord from Entre Ríos province.
Campbell, who initially succeeded in escaping, was captured and banished in
shackles to
Paraguay
. The dictator Francia, instead of putting his former foe to death, spared
Campbell
's life, possibly out of respect for his adversary's courage and military
prowess. Peter Campbell was allowed to settle in the Paraguayan town of
Neembucú
, where he returned to his former trade of tanner. There is disagreement over
the location and date of his death, which occurred around 1832. After his burial
place in Villa del Pilar was discovered in 1961, his remains were handed over to
Uruguay
for reinterment in
Montevideo
on
18 May 1961
, as befitted the founder of that country's navy.
Edmundo Murray 2006
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Thomas Charles
James Wright (1799-1868)
He was an officer in Simón Bolívar's
army and founder of the Ecuadorian naval school, was born on
26 January 1799
in Queensborough,
Drogheda
,
County
Louth
, the son of Thomas Wright and Mary Montgomery. In 1810 Thomas was sent to the
naval college at
Portsmouth
, and two years later joined the H.M.S. Newcastle under the command of
George Stewart. He sailed in that vessel to serve with the squadron under
Borlase Warren, engaged in blockading the Atlantic coast of the
United States
. He was promoted and went home on leave in 1817. Dating from that time Thomas
Wright seems to have been under the influence of the same radical and republican
ideas that had inspired the French Revolution.
In November 1817 Wright enlisted as officer in
the British Legion of Bolívar. He sailed on the brigantine Dowson with
200 other volunteers and valuable ammunition, and after a series of delays,
dangers, and adventures landed on
Margarita
Island
off the Venezuelan coast on
3 April 1818
. Nine years later, Wright and another Irishman, Harris, were the only survivors
of the thirty-two officers who had left on the Dowson.
At Angostura (present-day Ciudad Bolívar),
Wright first met Simón Bolívar, for whom he quickly developed boundless
admiration. His first action was at Trapiche de Gamarra on
27 March 1819
. His victory there inspired Bolívar to undertake his audacious
New Granada
campaign and the march across the
Andes
.
Wright played important roles in the battles of
Pantano de Vargas and Gamesa in July 1819, and in the decisive victory at Boyacá
in August of the same year, after which he was promoted to captain. In 1820 he
was sent back with his Rifles regiment to the coastal plain to operate in the
jungle east of the
Magdalena
against the Spanish forces based on
Santa Marta
. The battle at Ciénaga de
Santa Marta
on
10 November 1820
resulted in the fall of this town. Conveyed by sea to
Maracaibo
, the Rifles participated on
21 June 1821
in Bolívar's decisive victory at Carabobo.
Cartagena
was taken and the Rifles were brought in boats up the
Magdalena
en route to Popayán. They formed part of the contingent led by Bolívar in the
second of his legendary Andean campaigns. After winning the battle at Bomboná
on
7 April 1822
, Wright was twice mentioned in Bolívar's order of the day for his exceptional
skill and courage. From February 1822 Wright was acting lieutenant-colonel, a
rank which was confirmed early in 1823, when he was serving under
Sucre
, who joined forces with Bolívar at
Quito
,
Ecuador
.
Wright was sent to
Guayaquil
in order to improvise a naval force and patrol northwards between that
Ecuadorian city and Panamá. In September 1824, after Bolívar's great victory
at Junín and
Sucre
's at Ayacucho, the Spanish made their last bid to turn the tide and sent a
fleet to break the republican blockade in the Peruvian stronghold of
Callao
. Wright had had a busy year assuring supplies by sea for Bolívar's and
Sucre
's armies. He had greatly impressed Bolívar, who had appointed him commodore of
the Pacific squadron that joined the patriot naval force off
Callao
. Trying to force their way out, the royalist ships became closely engaged with
the blockaders. The brigantine
Chimborazo
sustained three water-line hits and was in collision with the ship of the line
Asia
, but by virtue of his consummate skill Wright manoeuvred himself free and
avoided being driven ashore. In January 1826
Callao
capitulated and Spanish rule in
South America
was ended. Meanwhile Wright on the
Chimborazo
had ferried Bolívar from port to port all along the liberated Pacific coast as
far as the Chilean border.
Thomas Wright settled in
Guayaquil
in 1826, and founded the nautical school that is still functioning there. In
1828 the Peruvian government sent the corvette Libertad to blockade
Guayaquil
. Wright had studied intimately the unique swells and currents of the
Gulf
of
Guayaquil
and he used his knowledge to drive off the Libertad. Wright's Guayaquileña
suffered sixty casualties out of the ninety-six men onboard.
Wright took part at sea and land in the fighting
that ended with the delimitation of the Ecuador-Peru boundary, and he was
specially commended by
Sucre
after the victory at Portada de Tarqui.
Ecuador
achieved independence on
8 August 1830
, and Wright became one of the new republic's leading citizens. He married María
de
los Angeles
Victoria
Rico, the niece of Vicente Rocafuerte, president of
Ecuador
in 1835-1839 and 1843-1845. Wright converted to Roman Catholicism before the
wedding. After María's death, Wright took her sister Pepita as his second wife.
He was then commander of the Ecuadorian navy and governor of
Guayaquil
. His courage during a yellow fever epidemic in 1840 was remarkable.
A military plot in 1845 overthrew the liberal regime
supported by Wright and he went into exile in
Chile
for fifteen years. In
Chile
he met and exerted a great influence upon the Ecuadorian exile Eloy Alfaro, who
would be president in 1897-1913. Wright returned to
Ecuador
in 1860 and was involved in various liberal conspiracies against the despot
Moreno
. With his house still surrounded by police, Thomas Wright died on
10 December 1868
.
Edmundo
Murray 2006
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Sir
Frances Beaufort (1774
- 1857)

Francis Beaufort was
born in 1774 in
County
Meath
to the Rector of Navan the Reverend
Daniel Augustus Beaufort. At the age of 13yrs he began his career at sea by
joining the British Navy as a cabin boy. Three years later he recognised the
value of being weather wise and started to keep weather comments in his journals
this he did until his death in 1857. In 1805 Beaufort was given his first
command HMS Woolwich and ordered to carry out a hydrographic survey of the
Rio de la Plata
area of
South America
. It was during these years he developed
his Wind Force Scale and Weather Notation coding, which he used in his journals.
In
1811 Beaufort captained HMS Fredrikssteen on a hydrographic and patrol cruise to
the
Eastern
Mediterranean
.
It was here in 1812 that a shore party engaged in astronomical observations had
to be rescued, Beaufort lead the rescue party and on the way back to the ship
was hit in the groin by a musket ball. This effectively ended his seafaring
career but he remained in the navy until he was 81yrs old. 1829 saw Beaufort
appointed "Hydrographer to the Admiralty". From this position, he
planned hydrographic studies for numerous Navy expeditions including the famous
H.M.S. Beagle, commanded by Robert Fitzroy. In 1838 Beaufort's Wind Force Scale
was introduced by the British Navy for all log entries, adding to Beaufort's
Weather Notation, which was introduced in 1833.
Beaufort was promoted to Rear Admiral in 1846 by the Admiralty. Bestowed the
title Knight Commander of the
Bath
in 1848. Only in 1855 after 68 years before the flag, Sir Francis Beaufort
retired from the Admiralty. He died in 1857, yet his work of a life times
achievements continued to receive the honours and recognition they deserve up to
the present day.
Beaufort Scale of Wind
|
Force
|
Description
|
knots
|
km/hr
|
Sea
Wave height
|
|
0
|
Calm
|
<1
|
<1
|
Sea
like mirror
|
(metres)
|
|
1
|
Light
air
|
1-3
|
1-5
|
Ripples
|
0.1
(0.1)
|
|
2
|
Light
breeze
|
4-6
|
6-11
|
Small
wavelets
|
0.2
(0.3)
|
|
3
|
Gentle
breeze
|
7-10
|
12-19
|
Large
wavelets, crests begin to break
|
0.6
(1)
|
|
4
|
Moderate
breeze
|
11-16
|
20-28
|
Small
waves becoming longer, frequent white horses
|
1
(1.5)
|
|
5
|
Fresh
breeze
|
17-21
|
29-38
|
Moderate
waves, many white horses, chance of spray
|
2
(2.5)
|
|
6
|
Strong
breeze
|
22-27
|
39-49
|
Large
waves, white foam crests, probably some spray
|
3
(4)
|
|
7
|
Near
gale
|
28-33
|
50-61
|
Sea
heaps up, streaks of white foam
|
4
(5.5)
|
|
8
|
Gale
|
34-40
|
62-74
|
Moderately
high waves of greater length
|
5.5
(7.5)
|
|
9
|
Strong
gale
|
41-47
|
75-88
|
High
waves, dense streaks of foam,
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
spray
may reduce visibility
|
7
(10)
|
|
10
|
Storm
|
48-55
|
89-102
|
Very
high waves, long overhanging crests,
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
visibility
affected
|
9
(12.5)
|
|
11
|
Violent
storm
|
56-63
|
103-117
|
Exceptionally
high waves, long white foam patches
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
cover
sea
|
11.5
(16)
|
|
12
|
Hurricane
|
64+
|
117&
over
|
Air
filled with foam and spray, sea completely white
|
14
(-)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
'Speed
= mean speed at a standard height of 10 meters.
'Wave
height is only intended as a guide to what may be expected in the open sea.
Bracketed figures indicate the probable maximum wave height.
BACK
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Bartholomew
Hayden, (1792-1857)
|

Bartholomew Hayden (1792-1857),
navy officer in Brazil
|
Hayden,
Bartholomew
(1792-1857), navy officer in Brazil, was born in County Tipperary on 22 February
1792, the son of John and Joanna Hayden. Like many young men of his age,
Hayden joined the armed forces of King George III of Great Britain during the
Napoleonic Wars and served in the Royal Navy as a Midshipman for twelve years,
from 1803 to 1815. Following the British victory over Napoleon, the Royal Navy
was demobilised and reduced to a fraction of its former strength. There were
jobs available for just 15 per cent of its former officers, but Hayden was one
of the fortunate ones. In 1817, he was appointed senior Midshipman to the
frigate HMS Andromache which was sent to South America as part of the
squadron defending British interests during the wars of independence from Spain
which were commencing in the Pacific.
In
February 1821, Hayden moved to the HMS Conway, commanded by Captain Basil
Hall FRS, as Second Master (that is,, Assistant Navigating Officer) when the two
ships were in Peru. Hall was an enterprising and scientifically minded officer
who on his return published a popular two-volume book detailing the Conway's
activities in South America.
Hayden
never did return home. Knowing that he lacked the necessary 'pull' to secure a
further appointment in the navy, he resigned and, with the help of friends,
purchased a brig called the Colonel Allen to pursue a career as a trader.
Fortuitously, when Admiral Lord Thomas Cochrane, following his victories over
the Spanish as Vice Admiral of Chile, was looking for a ship to take him to
Brazil, Colonel Allen was the vessel he chose. The Brazilian war of
independence against Portugal was then reaching a climax. The Prince Regent, Dom
Pedro, had raised the standard of revolt against Portugal and been proclaimed
Emperor a year earlier, but enemy garrisons still occupied half of the country,
and unless Brazil's newly formed navy could seize command of the sea, chances of
success looked bleak. The Brazilian Government was desperately seeking ships and
experienced officers and Hayden offered his services. His ship was purchased,
converted into a man-of-war and renamed Bahia, while Hayden himself was
appointed to the Brazilian Navy with the rank of Commander (Capitão-Tenente).
In
that capacity, Hayden served with Cochrane, by now commander-in-chief of the
Brazilian Navy, in his successful campaign against Portugal. Hayden was present
when the enemy were driven from their principal base of Bahia in 1823 and back
to Portugal, and he was active in the suppression of the dangerous republican
rebellion in the north-east the following year. In command of the brig Pirajá
during Brazil's two year war
against Buenos Aires from 1826 to 1828, Hayden captured
the Argentine privateer Libertad del Sur and was promoted to Captain of
Frigate as a consequence. Then, transferring to the corvette Liberal in
the inshore squadron blockading Buenos Aires, he took part in the minor battles
of Quilmes and Monte Santiago, both of which inflicted serious damage on the
Argentine naval forces led by a fellow Irishman, Commodore William Brown. With
the termination of the War, Hayden was posted to the corvette Animo Grande
as commander of the Brazilian Naval Division of the East, which was deployed off
Angola with orders to help suppress the slave trade.
In
June 1829, Hayden married Anna da Fonseca Costa in Rio de Janeiro, a marriage
which produced five children. However the achievement of external peace was
balanced by a sequence of internal rebellions within Brazil. In an optimistic
moment following independence, the power of the central government had been
deliberately weakened. Now, only the loyalty of the armed forces kept the
country united. As commander of the frigates Imperatriz
and Campista, Hayden was prominent in the suppression of the 'Cabanos'
rebellion which afflicted Pará in 1835-1836. As a reward, he was promoted to
full Captain (Capitão-de-Mar-e-Guerra) in October 1836. In 1839, Hayden was
given leave of absence from the navy to join a steam packet company as commander
of the paddle steamer Maranhão. He returned to the navy in 1840 in
command of the training ship Campista. He formally retired from service
in 1842.
The
spat of regional rebellions which had afflicted Brazil during the 1830s had,
however, convinced the young Emperor Pedro II that a strong central government
was needed and that an efficient and modern navy was vital to Brazil's internal
security. Hayden's technical expertise was obviously valuable at a time when the
Brazilian navy was taking on the challenges of steam power and new advances in
weaponry. In 1849, he was therefore restored to the Active List in the rank of
Commodore (Chef-de-Divisão) and in 1851 became a member of the influential
Naval Armaments Commission. Now aged sixty-six, Hayden's health began to
deteriorate. He was granted sick leave to return to Europe temporarily in 1856
but was unable to return, dying at Portsmouth in southern England on 17
September 1857.
©Brian
Vale 2006
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