Faulknor family
The Faulknor family was an English family from Northamptonshire, of which several generations served as officers in the Royal Navy.
William Faulknor
William Faulknor (d. 25 February 1725) first appears as fourth lieutenant of the Royal William in 1695. On 17 March 1707, he was promoted to the rank of captain, and given command of the 80-gun ship of the line Torbay. He afterwards commanded a frigate, and in 1715 was appointed to command of the 80-gun Cumberland, flagship of Admiral Sir John Norris, commander of the Baltic fleet. In 1720 he commanded the 90-gun ship Sandwich. In 1722 he was, for a short time, Master Attendant of Woolwich Dockyard, then served as Lieutenant-Governor of Greenwich Hospital until his death on 25 February 1725 (N.S.)[1]
Samuel Faulknor (I)
Samuel Faulknor (d. 5 October 1744) was the son of William Faulknor. He commanded the 100-gun ship Britannia in 1736, and also the 100-gun Royal Sovereign before being appointed commander of the Victory, flagship of Admiral Sir John Norris, in early 1741. On 28 July 1744 Victory sailed with a fleet of British and Dutch ships from St. Helen's for Lisbon. During the voyage they captured six French ships. On 3 October the fleet was dispersed in a gale, and on the next night Victory was lost with her entire crew.[1] It was believed that Victory struck the Casquets rocks off Alderney, but in 2009 a wreck identified as Victory was found by Odyssey Marine Exploration nearly 62 miles (100 km) from where the ship was supposed to have sunk.[2]
Samuel Faulknor (II)
Samuel Faulknor (d. 28 May 1760) was the son of Samuel Faulknor. He distinguished himself as the commander of the sloop Vulture in 1746, and was afterwards made post. On 21 April 1746, Faulknor was appointed to the 20-gun frigate Amazon, and afterwards the frigate Fox, in which he sailed to Jamaica. During a hurricane on 11 September 1751, the Fox was lost, but Faulknor, and the greater part of his crew were saved. He returned to England in mid-1752, and was first appointed to the 20-gun ship Hind, and then to the Lyne, also of 20 guns, in early 1755. Within months he took command of the 60-gun Windsor, and distinguished himself on various occasions, particularly on 17 April 1758, when he chased two French frigates, and three storeships, until he captured the Grand St. Pierre; and on 27 March 1759, off Lisbon, he attacked four large French ships, and took the East Indiaman Duc de Chartres. He died on 28 May 1760.[1]
Robert Faulknor the elder
Robert Faulknor the elder (d. 9 May 1769) was also the son of Samuel Faulknor. Robert entered the Navy while still a boy, and in 1741, aged only 15, served during the siege of Carthagena. He was seriously wounded there—sixteen splinters of bone were taken from his ankle—but was promoted to lieutenant soon afterwards. He later served in the Battle of Minorca on 20 May 1756, and was a witness at Admiral Byng's subsequent court-martial. Soon after Faulknor was promoted to the rank of commander in a sloop-of-war, and in 1757, was advanced to post-rank, and commanded the 68-gun ship Marlborough, for a short time. In August 1761 Faulknor was in command of the seventy-four Bellona, and sailing in company with the frigate Brilliant (36) off Vigo, northern Spain, when they engaged the French seventy-four Courageux, and the 36-gun frigates Malicicuse and Ermine. Bellona fought and captured Courageux in a fierce action lasting just 55 minutes, while Brilliant engaged the frigates. Faulknor was appointed to command the Kent in 1763. In poor health after a fall from a horse whilst hunting, he then lived in Bath, and afterwards in Dijon, central France, where he died on 9 May 1769.[1]
Jonathan Faulknor the elder
Jonathan Faulknor (d. 24 June 1795) was another son of Samuel Faulknor. He was promoted to lieutenant on 24 August 1753, and to commander on 28 September 1758, and commanded the bomb ketch Furnace, under Commodore Keppel, in the Gorée expedition. On 9 July 1759, he appears as captain of the 20-gun ship Mercury in the West Indies. In 1767 he was appointed to command of the 74-gun ship Superb, flagship of Rear-Admiral Sir John Moore. Faulknor was next appointed to the 74-gun Royal Oak in 1777; and in 1778 sailed under the flag of Admiral Keppel, as second captain of the 104-gun Victory. In 1782 he was appointed to the 98-gun Princess Royal, and sailed with Lord Howe's fleet to the relief of Gibraltar. He afterwards continued in the Princess Royal as a guardship at Portsmouth; and was appointed to the 74-gun Triumph on the same service. Faulknor was promoted to the rank of rear-admiral of the white on 24 September 1787; rear-admiral of the red on 21 September 1790; vice-admiral of the blue, 1 February 1793; vice of the white, 12 April 1794; vice of the red, 12 July 1794; and finally admiral of the blue on 1 June 1795. On receiving his last promotion, he travelled to London from his home in Havant to be presented to the King. On the morning of 23 June 1795 he was struck with a fit of apoplexy, and died the next day.[1]
Robert Faulknor the younger
Robert Faulknor the younger (1763–1795) was the son of Robert Faulknor the elder. He entered the Navy in 1777 and served under William Cornwallis in several ships during the American War, receiving promotion to lieutenant in 1780. After several periods on half-pay he was appointed commander of the 16-gun sloop Zebra on the outbreak of the French Revolutionary War in 1793. After an attack on Fort Royal, Martinique, Faulknor was made post and given command of the 28-gun frigate Undaunted. He then took part in the invasion of Guadeloupe. Faulknor was in command of the frigate Blanche when she captured the French frigate Pique on 6 January 1795. Faulknor was killed during the action.[1]
Jonathan Faulknor the younger
Jonathan Faulknor the younger was the son of Jonathan Faulknor the elder. In 1789 he married Rebecca, daughter of Lieutenant-General Horatio Spry (1730–1811) of the Cornish Spry family. He died in 1809 with the rank of rear-admiral of the red. He was the father of Commander Jonathan Faulknor, R.N., and Lieutenant Augustus Spry Faulknor, and the grandfather of Colonel Jonathan Augustus Spry Faulknor.
Family tree
Captain William Faulknor (d. 1725) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Captain Samuel Faulknor (d. 1744) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Captain Samuel Faulknor (d. 1760) | Captain Robert Faulknor the elder (1726–1769) | Admiral Jonathan Faulknor (d. 1795) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Captain Robert Faulknor the younger (1763–1795) | Rear Admiral Jonathan Faulknor the younger (d. 1809) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Commander Jonathan Faulknor | Lieutenant Augustus Spry Faulknor | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
References
- Campbell, John (1813). Naval History of Great Britain, including the history and lives of the British Admirals. London: John Stockdale. Retrieved 25 April 2011.
- Broad, William J. (2 February 2009). "Company Says It's Found 1744 Wreck of Famed British Warship". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.