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Sir Philip Charles Calderwood Henderson Durham 1763-1845 |
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| Lieutenant | 26 Dec 1782 |
| Commander | 12 Nov 1790 |
| Captain | 24 Jun 1793 |
|
wounded |
|
| R.Adm - Blue | 31 Jul 1810 |
| R.Adm - White | 12 Aug 1812 |
| R.Adm - Red | 4 Jun 1814 |
| KCB | 2 Jan 1815 |
| Kt (France) | 1815 |
| V.Adm - Blue | 12 Aug 1819 |
| V.Adm - White | 19 Jul 1821 |
| V.Adm - Red | 27 May 1825 |
|
M.P. Queesborough |
1830 |
| Admiral - Blue | 22 Jul 1830 |
| GCB | 1 Dec 1830 |
|
M.P. Devises |
1834-1836 |
| Admiral - White | 10 Jan 1837 |
| Admiral - Red | 23 Nov 1841 |
| Died | 2 Apr 1845 |
Sir Philip
Charles Henderson Calderwood Durham, 1763-1845, admiral, third son of James
Durham of Largo in Fife, and his wife Ann, daughter and heiress of Thomas
Calderwood of Polton [see Calderwood, Margaret], entered the navy on 1 May 1777,
on board the Trident, under the protection of Captain John Elliot [q.v.]. In
her, in the following year, he went to North America, where he had the
misfortune to come under the command of Captain Molloy, who was even then known
as a harsh and tyrannical officer, but whose name received a still more
unfavourable prominence after the battle of 1 June 1794. Under such a captain,
and with the ship's company on the verge of mutiny, young Durham's position for
the next twelve months was far from comfortable; and in June 1779 he procured
his discharge and returned to England, arriving in time to be taken by Captain
Elliot into the Edgar, in which he was present at the defeat of Langara and the
relief of Gibraltar. He continued in the Edgar till July 1781, when he was
appointed acting lieutenant of the Victory, and was selected by Rear-admiral
Kempenfelt to assist with the signals [see Kempenfelt, Richard]. With Kempenfelt
he continued during the year, was present at the capture of a French convoy on
12 Dec.; and the following year, still an acting-Iieutenant, followed him to the
Royal George. When that ship went down at Spithead, on 29 Aug. 1782, Durham was
officer of the watch, and, being on deck at the time, was among the saved. The
story of this terrible accident is told, according to the finding of the
court-martial, in Barrow's 'Life of Lord Howe' (p. 139). That finding is quite
in accordance with the evidence before the court, the witnesses being unanimous
in their statements that the larboard port sills were a good foot out of the
water, and that though there was a great deal of water on the lower deck, it did
not come in through the port. The ship foundered because she was rotten, and a
great piece of her bottom fell out (Minutes of the Court-martia/); and
the popular story of her being unduly heeled, and of a squall striking her while
in that situation, is distinctly contradicted by the evidence of qualified
observers, given on oath within a few days of the event. After being nearly an
hour in the water, Durham was picked up by a boat and taken on board the
Victory, from which he was shortly afterwards appointed to the Union of 90 guns.
In her he was present at the relief of Gibraltar by Lord Howe, and in the
subsequent encounter with the combined fleet off Cape Spartel. The Union was
then detached to the West Indies, where, on 26 Dec., Durham was confirmed in the
rank of lieutenant, and appointed to the Raisonnable of 64 guns, in which he
returned to England at the peace. In the following year he was appointed to the
Unicorn frigate, under orders for the coast of Africa. His health at the time
prevented his sailing in her; and the next two years he spent in France,
learning the language and mixing freely in society.
On his return
to England he was appointed to the Salisbury with Commodore Elliot, then going
out as governor of Newfoundland. He was afterwards, in 1790, Elliot's signal
lieutenant in the Barfleur, and on 12 Nov. was promoted to the command of the
Daphne of 20 guns, for a passage to the West Indies, when he was transferred to
the Cygnet sloop, which he brought home in December 1792. He was immediately
afterwards appointed to the Spitfire of 20 guns, in which he put to sea on 12
Feb. 1793; and on the 13th fell in with and captured the Afrique, a French
privateer, the first prize brought in in that war. He continued cruising with
good success; and on 24 June 1793 was posted to the Narcissus frigate, from
which, in October, he was moved to the Hind. In the following spring he was sent
out to the Mediterranean with convoy, returning a few months later. This
homeward convoy numbered 157 ships, the charge of which, by the accidents of the
voyage, fell altogether on Durham. He had the good fortune to bring them all
safely into the Downs, a service which the admiralty, acting on the
recommendation forwarded from Lloyd's, acknowledged by appointing him (30 Oct.
1794) to the Anson of 46 guns, one of the largest frigates then in the navy. He
commanded her for the next six years, during which time he was present at the
action off Isle Groix and Lorient, 23 June 1795; was with Sir John Borlase
Warren [q.v.] in his expedition to Quiberon Bay, in July 1795, and again on the
coast of Ireland in September and October 1798, taking part in the defeat and
capture of the French squadron off Tory Island on 12 Oct. (JAMES, Naval
Historv, (1860), ii. 140), a service for which he, together with the other
captains present, received the thanks of parliament and a gold medal. In
February 1801 Durham was moved into the Endymion of 40 guns, which was paid off
at the peace. In April 1803 he was appointed to the Windsor Castle, but was
presently moved into the Defiance of 74 guns, in which he took part in Calder's
action off Cape Finisterre, 22 July 1805 [see Calder, Sir Robert]. The ship was
then sent home to be refitted, but was hurried out to join Nelson off Cadiz.
When Calder was ordered home for his trial, he was permitted to name such
captains as he desired for witnesses, who thereupon received leave to accompany
him to England [cf. Brown, William, d. 1814]. Durham was one of those so
selected, but finding that his going home was optional, he decided to stay. He
had thus his share in the glories of Trafalgar, where he was slightly wounded;
and being ordered home directly afterwards, arrived in England in time to give
evidence on Calder's court-martial. He was next appointed to the Renown, which
during 1806 formed part of the Channel fleet, and for a short time carried Lord
St. Vincent's flag. Afterwards she was sent to join Collingwood in the
Mediterranean, and continued there till 1810, during the latter part of which
period Durham wore a broad pennant, and on 26 Oct. 1809 was engaged, in company
with Rear-admiral Martin, in the destruction of two French ships, near Cette
[see Collingwood, Cuthbert, Lord].
On 31 July 1810 he was
promoted to be a rear-admiral. During 1811 he commanded a squadron in the North
Sea, and had struck his flag only a few days when he was ordered to go to
Portsmouth, take command of such ships as he chose, and sail at once in quest of
a French squadron that had put to sea from Lorient. The cruise was but a short
one, for the French returned to port, and Durham, bringing his ships back to
Portsmouth, struck his flag. He next had command of a squadron in Basque Roads,
and in December 1813 was sent out as commander-in-chief of the Leeward Islands
station, with his flag in the Venerable. On the outward voyage he fell in with
and cleverly captured two large French frigates, Alcmene and Iphigenie, on 16
and 20 Jan. 1814. Afterwards he cleared the West Indies of American cruisers;
and in June and August 1815 co-operated in the reduction of Martinique and
Guadeloupe, at which place the last French flag was struck to Durham, as the
first had been. The following year he returned to England. On 2 Jan. 1815 he had
been nominated a K.C.B.; he was now created a knight grand cross of the order of
Military Merit of France, the only English officer, it is said, who received
that distinction. On 12 Aug. 1819 he was promoted to be vice-admiral, on 22 July
1830 to be admiral, and on 17 Nov. 1830 was made a G.C.B. He was M.P. for
Queenborough in 1830 and for Devizes 1834-6. From March 1836 to April 1839 he
was commander-in-chief at Portsmouth. He commanded a squadron off Brighton on
Queen Victoria's visit in 1837.
He married in
1799 the Lady Charlotte Matilda Bruce, daughter of the Earl of Elgin, and,
secondly, in 1817 Anne Isabella, only daughter and heiress of Sir John
Henderson, bart., of Fordel in Fife. On the occasion of this marriage he took
the additional name of Henderson, and afterwards, on succeeding, by the death of
his brother in 1840, to the Polton estate, took also the name of Calderwood.
Lady Durham died suddenly towards the close of 1844. Shortly after her death,
Sir Philip started on a tour abroad, but bronchitis, caught during his winter
journey, proved fatal, and he died at Naples on 2 Apri11845. He had no children,
and his estates passed to his niece, daughter of his brother Thomas, wife of
Robert Dundas of Arniston. A full-length portrait of Durham, presented by Mr. G.
J. W. Murray, is in the Painted Hall at Greenwich.
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