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Hugh Robert Entwistle
Hugh Robert Entwistle (d 1867)
was the second son of John Entwistle (b.1744) of
Foxholes, Rochdale, Lancashire, and his wife
Ellen, daughter of Hugh Lyle of Coleraine, Northern
Ireland.
Hugh's brother John
Entwistle (1784 -1837) was later MP for Rochdale,
High Sheriff of Lancashire 1824 and J.P. for
Lancashire, Cheshire and the North Riding of York.
He married Ellen Smith co-heiress of Thomas Smith
of Castleton Hall.
A younger brother Robert
Entwistle (b. 1788) was Lieutenant Colonel of the
Lancashire Militia. A younger sister Elizabeth
married Robert Peel in 1805. Robert belonged to
the Peel family of Manchester and was cousin to
Sir Robert Peel the MP, whose son
Robert Peel was later to become Prime Minister
and repealer of the
Corn Laws.
Hugh married Mary Anne Royds,
daughter of James Royds of Mount Falinge, Rochdale
11 October 1824. Mary came from a Rochdale family
of some substance as her father James Royds was a
deputy-lieutenant of the county, and had Arms
confirmed to him in 1828. In Baines'
"Lancashire" we find that James Royds of Mount
Falinge gave land at Spotland Bridge for the building of a church, a
vicarage and a Sunday school.
Hugh Robert Entwistle joined
the Navy 7th May 1799, joining the frigate "Amethyst", a ship
on which he continued to serve until 1805, the
year of the Battle of Trafalgar.
In 1805, in time for the
Battle of Trafalgar (21st October 1805) he joined
the crew of the Bellerophon (Billy Ruffian),
having been variously rated as volunteer, AB
midshipman. He is listed on the Trafalgar honour
Role as AB (Able Seaman).
Don't be fooled by the apparent lowly rank of
'able seaman' - in this case it was
meaningless.
During the 18th century the individual ship's
Captain was allowed to have a small number of
youngsters under his wing who were basically
'under training', all being destined for
commissions. It was common for Captains to
have more young men than (official) places, so
they simply placed them on the ship's books in
whatever rating took their fancy.
In an analysis of officers in 1848 it was
found that 1,203 officers out of 3,467 had
served time carried as a rating; the rate of
'Able Seaman' was the most popular; others
were borne under such ranks as 'Servants' or
'volunteers'.
As an example, Horatio Nelson was officially
carried onboard the frigate 'Seahorse' in 1779
as an Able Seaman.
Entwistle then would never have actually
served as an 'able seaman', it was an
administrative cloak used to mask 'young
gentlemen'. Onboard 'Bellerophon' apart from
Entwistle, George Hughes, later to become an
Admiral, was also listed as an 'Able Seaman'.
[Source: David J Hepper, Forum of the Historical Maritime
Society] |
The order of seniority
in
naval ranks in Nelson's day.
Reading from left to right, this is the ascending
order of seniority:
Midshipman > Lieutenant > Commander* > Captain >
Commodore* > Rear Admiral > Vice Admiral > Admiral
Ranks marked * were "appointments" made by Fleet
Commanders and notified to the Admiralty with the
recommendation that the appointee should be
promoted to the next rank. |
Entwistle is recorded as
being one of the prize crew that boarded the
captured Spanish ship "Bahama".
He was promoted to
Lieutenant 28th January 1806 and appointed to the
sloop "Paulina" in which he served for the next
six years, seeing service in the
Mediterranean and the Copenhagen expedition. Later
he served in the "Warspite" (1812) "Bucephalus"
(1814) in which he saw service at New Orleans, and
"Madagascar" (1815).
He was placed on half pay
20th August 1816 after which time he was not
employed again by the Navy. He was placed on the
Retired List 8th January 1839 with the rank of
Commander. [O'Byrne's 'Naval Biographical Dictionary']
An 1851 Census has Hugh
living at Marlbro Grange, Llanbleddian, Glamorgan,
South Wales:
Glamorgan
Ref:HO107/2461 f.472 p.1 s.4 Marlbro Grange,
Llanbleddian
Hugh ENTWISTLE Head Mar 65 Magistrate And Retired
Naval Commander. Farmer 142 Acres. Employing 10
Labourers YKS Leeds
Mary Anne ENTWISTLE Wife Mar 57 LAN Rochdale
Edwards NICHOLAS Srvnt Unm 31 General Servant GLA
Llampha
Mary JENKINS Srvnt Unm 52 General Servant GLA
Penmark
Elizabeth LEWIS Srvnt Unm 34 General Servant GLA
Llangan |
So Hugh had an illustrious
career in the Navy, crewed some of the more
illustrious ships, rose through the ranks, married a local Rochdale girl
from a family of some substance, and farmed and
retired as a Naval Commander in South Wales.
All of this leaves many
unanswered questions about Hugh and his life - and did he
have any children?
We also have listed on the
Trafalgar Honour Role one Robert Entwistle,
Royal Marine, of Turton, Lancashire
and on the Lancashire Militia Records at the
GMPRO we have Nathaniel Entwistle, Manchester,
Lancahsire, Silk Weaver, 19, 20 July 1779 -
Discharged and pensioned 24 August 1782
If anyone has
any further information on either of these men's
lives, please contact the
author.
HMS Bellorophon
The 74 gun 3rd rate squared
rigged ship of
the line, in Nelson's day, was one of several
hundred ships of all sizes built in England (on
the Medway in this case). Most were held in
reserve in case of war, particularly
with France and Spain, both at home, where there
were threats of invasion, and far away in the
Americas. Her construction required
something more than 3,000 oak trees.
She was named the
Bellerophon after the mythical Greek hero who
tamed the winged horse Pegasus. But sailors had
great problems pronouncing the name, as may be
imagined, and so Christened her the "Billy
Ruffian".
She achieved great fame
when, in 1815, Napoleon surrendered to here
captain shortly after the battle of Waterloo, but
by then she already had a long and distinguished
record, some of which Hugh Entwistle had witnessed
and taken a part in, and had earned her the
title "the bravest of the brave".
Perhaps more than any other ship of
her day the Bellerophon was a reflection of the
history of her times, particularly the long
conflict between Britain and France, starting in
1793 seven years after the Bellerophon was
launched, and ending at Waterloo some 22 years
later. The Bellerophon was there at the beginning,
she was miraculously still there at the end, and
she played a key role in the years in between.
She was the first ship to
engage the enemy at the opening sequence of The
Battle of the Glorious 1st of June, the start of
the naval war against Revolutionary France. She
was with the squadron led by Nelson which hunted
down and destroyed the French fleet in the
Mediterranean at the Battle of the Nile. Here she
was extensively damaged, losing all three masts
and suffering the highest casualties of any of the
British ships when she engaged the huge French
flagship L'Orient.
The annihilation of the
French Navy at The Battle of the Nile effectively
left Napoleon's army stranded in Egypt.
At Trafalgar the
Bellerophon's captain
received a fatal shot from a French sniper in the
rigging of an opposing ship, just one hour before
the same fate befell Nelson himself. Her first
lieutenant quickly took command and fought off
four enemy ships, before capturing a prize to be
towed off to Gibraltar - it appears Hugh Entwistle
took part in this action, boarding and capturing
the "Bahama", a large Spanish ship.
HMS Bellerophon later spent
months basking in the tropical sun as part of a
squadron on the Jamaica Station defending the West
Indian colonies, before finally helping to put an
end to Napoleon's ambitious plan to invade England
and to march on London.
Finally, capturing Napoleon
in his attempt to escape to America, the Bellerophon's captain Maitland brought him back to
England, before transferring him to HMS
Northumberland for his long sail to the South
Atlantic - he never set foot on English soil.
Napoleon told captain
Maitland that "If it had not been for you English,
I should have been Emperor of the East; but
wherever there is water to float a ship, we are
sure to find you in our way."
Anyone interested in the
full story of the Bellerophon can read about it in
Billy Ruffian, The
Bellerophon and the Downfall of Napoleon, The
biography of a ship of the line 1782 - 1836 by
David Cordingley.
If you really want to know what life was like in
Nelson's day aboard a ship like this, see the
recently released film
Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World
staring Russell Crowe.
Hugh Robert Entwistle (see
also
Entwistles of Repute) -
On the Trafalgar Roll (compiled from awards
lists):
Hugh
Entwistle, Able Seaman Ship: Bellerphon,
74 guns, Capt. John Cooke with 27 crew killed at
Trafalgar; 123
injured. The
Bellerophon fought at the
Battles of the Glorious 1st of June, The Nile and Trafalgar and was
responsible for carrying Napoleon Bonaparte part
way to
exile in St Helena. In fact she brought Napoleon
back to England where he was transferred to HMS
Northumberland for the journey to the South
Atlantic. Hugh Robert Entwistle was from Rochdale
and Leeds,
Yorkshire. see also:
www.unepassion.be
©Tom W Entwistle
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| Napoleon on board the
Belleropon Painting by Sir William
Quiller-Orchardson in the Tate Gallery, London |
HMS Bellerophon by W. Mitchell |
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