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Sir Thomas Masterman Hardy 1769-1839 |
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| Lieutenant | 10 Nov 1793 |
| Commander | 10 Jul 1797 |
| Captain | 20 Oct 1798 |
| The Nile - 1 August 1798 | |
| color="#ffff00" Copenhagen - 1 Apr 1801 | |
| Trafalgar -21 Oct 1805 | |
| Cre Bt | 4 Feb 1806 |
| KCB | 2 Jan 1815 |
| CRM | 19 Jul 1821 |
| R.Adm - Blue | 27 May 1825 |
| R.Adm - White | 22 Jul 1830 |
| FSL | Nov 1830 |
| GCB | 10 Sep 1831 |
| GGH | Apr 1834 |
| V.Adm - Blue | 10 Jan 1837 |
| Died | 20 Sep 1839 |
Sir
Thomas Masterman Hardy,1769-1839, vice-admiral, second son of Joseph Hardy of
Portisham in Dorsetshire, and his wife, Nanny, the daughter of Thomas Masterman
of Kingston in Dorsetshire, was born on 5 Apri11769. In 1781 he entered the navy
on board the Helena brig with Captain Francis Roberts, but left her in
Apri11782, and for the next three years was at school, though borne on the books
of the Seaford and Carnatic guardships. He was afterwards for some few years in
the merchant service, but in February 1790 was appointed to the Hebe with
Captain Alexander Hood. From her he was moved to the Tisiphone sloop with
Captain Anthony Hunt, whom he followed to the Amphitrite frigate in May 1793,
and in her went out to the Mediterranean. On 10 Nov. 1793 he was promoted to be
lieutenant of the Meleager frigate with Captain Charles Tyler, attached during
the following years to the squadron off Genoa under the immediate orders of
Captain Nelson, whose acquaintance, it has been suggested, Hardy then first
made. In June 1794 Captain Cockburn succeeded to the command of the Meleager,
and in August 1796, on being transferred to the Minerve, took Hardy with him.
Hardy was still in the Minerve in December 1796, when Nelson hoisted his broad
pennant on board her, and in her encounter with the Sabina. When the Sabina
struck her colours, Lieutenants Culverhouse and Hardy were sent to her with the
prize crew; and the gallant way in which they afterwards drew the Spanish
squadron away from the Minerve, defending the prize till her masts went by the
board, elicited from Nelson a warm eulogium (NICOLAS, ii. 315). Culverhouse and
Hardy became prisoners of war, but were at once exchanged for Don Jacobo Stuart,
the captain of the Sabina, and rejoined the Minerve at Gibraltar on her return
from Elba. On 10 Feb. 1797, as the frigate was passing through the Straits with
the Spanish fleet in chase, Hardy jumped into the jolly-boat to save a drowning
man. The boat was carried by the current towards the leading Spanish ship. 'By
God,' said Nelson, 'I'll not lose Hardy! Back the mizen topsail!' The bold
measure caused the Spaniard to hesitate and to shorten sail, and enabled the
boat to reach the frigate in safety (DRINKWATER.BETHUNE, Narrative of the
Battle of St. vincent, p. 14). The Minerve rejoined the fleet three
days afterwards, and had a frigate's share in the Battle of St. Vincent on the
14th. In the following May the Lively and Minerve, looking into the bay of Santa
Cruz, discovered there a French brig of war, the Mutine, which it was determined
to cut out. This was done on the 29th by the boats of the frigates under the
command of Hardy, who was at once promoted by Lord St. Vincent to the command of
the prize (JAMES, ii. 62). In 1798 Hardy, in the Mutine, joined Nelson near Elba
on 5 June, announcing the near approach of the reinforcement under Captain
Troubridge, and continuing with the squadron was present at the
Battle of the Nile; immediately after which he was promoted to the Vanguard,
Nelson's flagship, in the room of Captain Berry, sent home with despatches. In
the Vanguard, and afterwards in the Foudroyant, Hardy continued with Nelson at
Naples and Palermo till October 1799, when he was relieved by Berry and
appointed to the Princess Charlotte frigate, in which he returned to England. In
1801 he was again with Nelson as flag-captain in the San Josef, and afterwards
up the Baltic in the St. George; and though the ship's size and draught of water
prevented her taking part in the Battle of Copenhagen,
Hardy accompanied Nelson onto the Elephant as a volumteer and rendered
characteristically fine service. He was personally employed the night before the
battle in sounding close up to and round the enemy's ships. It is said that the
soundings as he reported them to Nelson proved to be correct, and that it was in
consequence of deviating from the channel traced by him, in deference to the
advice of the pilots, that some of the ships took the ground. On Nelson being
relieved by Vice-admiral Pole, Hardy remained in the St. George, and returned in
her to England. He was then appointed to the Isis, and in the following spring
to the Amphion, in which, in May 1803, he took Nelson out to the Mediterranean,
turned over with him to the Victory in July, and continued as fiag-captain
during the long blockade of Toulon and the pursuit of the combined fleet to the
West Indies. He was still in command of the Victory when Nelson again embarked
on board her on 14 Sept. 1805, and in the absence of a captain of the fleet
acted virtually in that capacity during the remaining weeks of Nelson's command
and in the Battle of Trafalgar. With Captain
Blackwood he was a witness to Nelson's last will, was walking with
Nelson on the Victory's quarter-deck when the admiral received his mortal wound,
and was frequently in attendance on him during his dying hours till within a few
minutes of his death. The body was sent home in the Victory , and at the funeral
on 9 Jan. 1806 Hardy bore the 'banner of emblems.' On 4 Feb. he was created a
baronet, and in the spring was appointed to the Triumph, which he commanded for
three years on the North American station under the command of Sir George
Cranfield Berkeley , whose daughter, Anne Louisa Emily, he married at Halifax in
December 1807. In May 1809 he was appointed to the Barfleur, in which Berkeley
hoisted his flag as commander-in-chief at Lisbon, and, continuing in that post
till September 1812, in 1811 the rank of commodore in the Portuguese navy was
conferred on him. In August 1812 he was appointed to the Ramillies, in which he
was again sent to the North American station. On 25 June 1813, while in command
of a squadron off New London, he captured a schooner, reported by the boarding
officer to be laden with provisions. Her crew had escaped in their boat,
expecting the vessel to be taken alongside the Ramillies. Hardy, possibly in
recollection of an attempt made thirty-seven years before, ordered her to be
secured alongside another prize, and while this was being done she blew up,
killing the lieutenant in charge and ten seamen. It was known afterwards that
she was really laden with powder, and fitted with a clockwork mechanism to
ignite it. In January 1815 Hardy was nominated a K.C.B.; he returned to England
in June, and in July 1816 was appointed to the command of the Princess Augusta
yacht, which he held for three years. On 12 Aug. 1819 he was appointed commodore
and commander-in-chief on the South American station, with his broad pennant in
the Superb. The war of independence then raging and the different interests at
stake made the command one of considerable difficulty and delicacy, and the tact
which Hardy displayed won him the approval not only of the admiralty, but of the
public. He did not return to England till the beginning of 1824.
On
27 May 1825 he became a rear-admiral, and in December 1826, with his flag in the
Wellesley, escorted the expeditionary force to Lisbon. On his return he took
command of an experimental squadron, with his flag on board the Sibylle, and
afterwards on board the Pyramus. By a curious coincidence, on 21 Oct. 1827 he
struck his flag, nor was he employed again at sea. In November 1830 he joined
the board of admiralty as first sea lord under Sir James Graham, and on 13 Sept.
1831 was nominated to the dignity of a G.C.B. In April 1834 he was appointed
governor of Greenwich Hospital, the king sanctioning the appointment on the
express understanding that in the event of a war he should return to active
service. The rest of his life, spent in this peaceful retirement, was devoted to
the interests of the pensioners under his care, and many improvements were made
in the regulations respecting them, one of the most characteristic of which was
the abolishing the yellow coat with red sleeves, which was worn as a punishment
for being drunk on a Sunday, and which Hardy considered degrading to an old
sailor, and out of all proportion to the offence. He became a vice-admiral on 10
Jan. 1837, and died 20 Sept. 1839. His remains were buried in the mausoleum of
the hospital old cemetery, where, notwithstanding recent alterations, they still
remain. His widow, with three daughters, survived him; but having no male issue
the baronetcy became extinct. His portrait, the gift of Lady Hardy, is in the
Painted Hall at Greenwich, and there is also a monument to his memory in the
hospital chapel. A memorial pillar has been erected on the crest of the Black
Down, above Portisham, visible from the sea.