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East Indies and China Station

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Commander-in-Chief, East Indies and China
Active1831–1865
CountryUnited Kingdom
BranchRoyal Navy
TypeNaval formation
Garrison/HQHong Kong
Military unit

TheCommander-in-Chief, East Indies and China was aformation of theRoyal Navy from 1831 to 1865.[1] Its navalarea of responsibility was theIndian Ocean and the coasts ofChina and its navigable rivers.[2]

The Commander-in-Chief was appointed in 1831; the appointment ceased to exist when it was separated into theEast Indies Station and theChina Station in 1865.[1]

At the age of 67,Charles Austen was advanced to rear-admiral on 9 November 1846,[3] and was appointed commander-in-chief for the East Indies and China on 14 January 1850, hoisting his flag the following day.[3] He commanded the British expedition during theSecond Anglo-Burmese War but died ofcholera atProme on 7 October 1852, at the age of 73.[3][4] On 30 April 1852 Austen had been thanked for his services in Burma by theGovernor-General of India, theMarquess of Dalhousie, who subsequently also formally recorded his regret for Austen's death.[4]

In December 1852Fleetwood Pellew returned to active service with his appointment as Commander-in-Chief, East Indies and China.[5][6] His appointment caused some concern, with questions raised over the suitability of sending Pellew, considering his age and past background, and the unhealthy climate and tense diplomatic situation following the outbreak of theSecond Anglo-Burmese War.[5] Pellew raised his flag aboardHMS Winchester in April 1853, and by September 1854 he was offHong Kong.[5] Here he seems to have decided that he would not allow shore leave until the dangerous season for fevers and infections had passed, but neglected to make his reasoning known to his men.[5] The crew were apparently in a mutinous mood, so Pellew ordered them to beat to quarters. When they refused, he sent the officers onto the lower deck to force them up at sword point. Several of the crew were wounded and the nascent mutiny was quashed.[5] The news of these events was poorly received in Britain,The Times included several leading articles drawing attention to the mutiny on theWinchester, and the one on theResistance many years before.[5] Pellew was duly recalled by theAdmiralty, never to serve at sea again.[5]

James Stirling's final command was as Commander-in-Chief, China and the East Indies, and his flag, asRear Admiral of the White, was hoisted aboardWinchester on 11 May 1854. Shortly afterwards news arrived that war had been declared onRussia (theCrimean War). Stirling was anxious to prevent Russian ships from sheltering inJapanese ports and menacing allied shipping and, after lengthy negotiations through theNagasaki Magistrate, concluded theAnglo-Japanese Friendship Treaty.[7] In November 1854, with Hong Kong GovernorJohn Bowring, Stirling led a fleet up thePearl River toCanton to support theViceroy of Liangguang (modern dayGuangdong andGuangxi)Ye Mingchen and his forces besieged by theTiandihui army. The fleet carried weapons and ammunition, food andQing reinforcements.[8]

In August 1855, during the Crimean War,Winchester andBarracouta entered and first charted the waters ofPeter the Great Gulf, while searching for theRussian squadron commanded byVasily Zavoyko.[9]

"In 1856 [Stirling] was recalled because he had failed in the primary naval duty of finding and destroying the Russian squadron - partly, perhaps, because of his preoccupation with the self-imposed task of negotiating with Japan."[10]

Under Rear AdmiralMichael Seymour's command after 1856, his ships were involved in operations arising from the attack on the British coasterArrow.[11] During theSecond Opium War or "Arrow War," in China, Seymour commanded theBattle of the Bogue in November 1856, helped destroy the Chinese fleet in theBattle of Fatshan Creek in June 1857,[11]captured Canton in December,[11] and in 1858 hecaptured the forts on the Baihe (Hai River),[11] compelling the Chinese government to consent to theTreaty of Tientsin.[11]

Commanders-in-Chief

[edit]

Commanders-in-Chief included:[1]
NoN = died in post

References

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  1. ^abc"William Loney RN".Archived from the original on 2011-05-11. Retrieved2010-10-17.
  2. ^"Royal Navy foreign stations".Archived from the original on 2010-10-07. Retrieved2010-10-17.
  3. ^abcThe Gentleman's Magazine. p. 438.
  4. ^ab"RN Officer's Service Records—Image details—Austen, Charles John, Rear Admiral".DocumentsOnline.The National Archives. Retrieved6 November 2008.
  5. ^abcdefgLaughton (1895). "Pellew, Sir Fleetwood Broughton Reynolds (1789-1861)".Dictionary of National Biography. p. 271.
  6. ^Dodsley.TheAnnual Register. p. 483.
  7. ^W. G. Beasley,The Language Problem in the Anglo-Japanese Negotiations of 1854
  8. ^Jaeyoon, Kim (2009). "The Heaven and Earth Society and the Red Turban Rebellion in Late Qing China". p. 26.CiteSeerX 10.1.1.554.2585.
  9. ^Khen, G. V. (30 March 2020)."History of Peter The Great Bay discovery and oceanographic surveys in the Japan Sea until the middle 20th century".Izvestiya Tinro.200 (1):3–23.doi:10.26428/1606-9919-2020-200-3-23.S2CID 240890815. Retrieved19 January 2022.
  10. ^W.G. Beasley (1995) [first published by Luzac & Co., 1951]. "Chapter V: The Stirling Convention:1854-1855".Great Britain and the Opening of Japan, 1834-1858. Japan Library paperback. pp. 113–144.ISBN 1-873410-43-3. For the Russian squadrons, see The First Pacific War: Britain and Russia, 1854-1856, John D. Grainger.
  11. ^abcdeLaughton, J. K. "Seymour, Sir Michael (1802–1887)".Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004 ed.). Oxford University Press.doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/25178.
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