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1020  to the, and made a voyage, afterwards, to the West Indies. He next, between Nov. 1800 and the date of his promotion to the rank of Lieutenant 17 April, 1802, served, on the Western station, in the 36, Capt. Stair Douglas. During that period he was badly wounded by the bursting of a gun, and was in consequence confined for three months to the hospital at Plymouth. He was also, on one occasion, thrown overboard by the breaking of the spanker-boom, on which he happened to be standing when it caught the main-stay of a smuggling-vessel in her attempt to escape to leeward. Being, in Nov. 1802, appointed to the 36, Capts. Benj. Wm. Page and Peter Rainier, he assisted, during his proximate passage to the East Indies, at the capture of several French vessels, and at the detention of two others belonging to the Batavian Republic – one of them the De Haasje brig-of-war. On his arrival in India he aided at the taking, 5 Jan. and 4 Feb. 1804, of the privateers Les Frères Unis of 8 guns (pierced for 16) and 134 men, and Le Général de Caen, of 22 guns and 200 men. In 1806, Lieut. St. Clair was under the necessity of invaliding, at Bombay, from the effects of ill health produced by the fatigue he had undergone, as First of the, in the docking and refitting of that ship. On his arrival in England, which did not take place until after a lapse of nearly 14 months, he found that, including his passage-money, he had necessarily expended the sum of 250 guineas; no part whereof, although he exhibited the required documents, together with a certificate from the Commander-in-Chief, was at any time restored to him. Even the payment of the half-pay, to which he was for the time entitled, was for upwards of ten years withheld. After serving with Capt. Henry Folkes Edgell in the frigate, on the Home station, he was appointed, in April, 1810, to the  100, bearing the flag of Sir Jas. Saumarez in the Baltic; where, with the boats under his orders, he succeeded in boarding and carrying, sixty miles from the ship’s anchorage, two Danish privateers, six of whose people were killed and several wounded, with the loss to the British of not more than 1 man killed and another shot through both arms. For the conduct he displayed on this occasion he had the gratification of receiving the thanks of his Admiral publicly on the quarter-deck. On 21 March, 1812, about four months after he had invalided from the, he was nominated Acting-Commander of the sloop-of-war; in which vessel he made prize, in the vicinity of Möen Island, of L’Aimable d’Hervilly privateer, ran, in company with the  frigate, Capt. Wm. Bowles, through the Malmo passage without pilots, and united with the same ship in destroying seven large merchant-ships, in the face of 1500 soldiers posted on the cliffs near Stralsund. In 1813, having been confirmed in command of the sloop 20 Nov. 1812, Capt. St. Clair accompanied the  74, Capt. Sir Arch. Collingwood Dickson, and 15 Russian line-of-battle ships from the neighbourhood of Bornholm, through the Great Belt, to England. In Dec. of the same year he was directed by the Admiralty to carry on the port duties at Harwich, and to assume command there of a squadron of gun-brigs and cutters, and of as many as 20 sail of transports. While so employed he superintended the embarkation of H.R.H. the Comte d’Artois, H.S.H. the Hereditary Prince of Orange, the late Marquess of Londonderry, the present Earl of Ripon, and General Pozzo di Borgo – the former on their way to Holland in consequence of the revolution in that country, the others en route for the head-quarters of the Allied Sovereigns at Chatillon. In the early part of 1814 we find Capt. St. Clair serving with activity on the north coast of Spain, and acquiring the highest commendation of Rear-Admiral Chas. Vinicombe Penrose for his gallant and zealous behaviour during the operations on the river Gironde. After the grand review at Spithead, Capt. St. Clair, who on that occasion had the honour of dining with the Allied Sovereigns, proceeded off Cadiz, where he captured a large merchant-brig, and chased, but could not overtake, a corvette belonging to the United States. He was subsequently sent by Lord Exmouth to Tunis with despatches; was stationed off the island of Elba during its occupation by Napoleon Buonaparte; and, while cruizing in the Archipelago, captured two Greek pirates, and rendered essential service to the Captain, officers, and crew of the frigate when wrecked in Chismé harbour, 20 Feb. 1816. About this period Capt. St. Clair experienced a severe disappointment. Under an idea that the officer first on the Admiralty List for promotion (Capt. Chas. Hope Reid of the 18) had been promoted at home. Lord Exmouth had, from feelings of friendship, appointed him, in his stead, to the 64, guard-ship at Malta. Finding, however, that such was not the case, his Lordship, having no alternative, cancelled the arrangement he had made. Capt. St. Clair continued in consequence in the until paid off in 1817; and, unable to procure either promotion (although he had been about five years in command of a sloop-of-war) or further employment, accepted, 20 Nov. 1847, the rank he now holds.

The Captain is a Knight of the Order of the Sword of Sweden, and Magistrate and Deputy-Lieutenant for co. Gloucester. He married, in 1819, his cousin, Elizabeth Isabella, daughter of John Farhill, Esq., of Chichester, Tutor to H.R.H. the Duke of Kent, and grand-daughter of Sir Thos. Wilson, Kt.

 ST. JOHN. 

passed his examination 22 Sept. 1840; and after serving as Mate on the Brazil and Cape of Good Hope and Home stations in the ketch, Lieut.-Commander John Tyssen,  gunnery-ship, Capt. Sir Thos. Hastings, and 120, bearing the flag of Sir Chas. Rowley, was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant 19 Feb. 1846. His appointments have since been – 24 Feb. 1846, a second time, to the, Capt. Henry Ducie Chads – 4 April, 1847, to the 90, Capt. Chas. Howe Fremantle, in the Mediterranean – 5 Feb. 1848, as a Supernumerary, to his former ship the – and, 21 April following, to the  78, Capt. Robt. Lambert Baynes.

 ST. JOHN. 

entered the Navy, 6 July, 1799, as Ordinary, on board the gun-brig, Lieut.- Commander John Walsh, stationed in the North Sea. From March, 1800, until April, 1802, he served off Guernsey, in the Baltic, off Boulogne, and at Sheerness, as Midshipman, in the gun-brig, Lieut.-Commanders Wm. Henry Brown Tremlett, Wm. Davies, and John Gardner, and frigate, Capt. Geo. Reynolds; and after having been for some years employed on the Home and Mediterranean stations as Midshipman, Master’s Mate, and Acting-Lieutenant in the 74, Capt. Hon. Arthur Kaye Legge (part of the force engaged in Sir Robt. Calder’s action, 22 July, 1805, and at the passage of the Dardanells in Feb. 1807),  98, flag-ship of Lord Collingwood, and  98, Capt. Thos. Geo. Shortland, he was confirmed a Lieutenant, 20 Sept. 1808, in his former ship the, commanded at first by Capt. Legge and next by Capt. John Halliday. In that ship he accompanied the expedition of 1809 to the Walcheren, and then returned to the Mediterranean. He invalided in Jan. 1811, and was subsequently appointed – 27 April, in the same year, to the 74, Capts. John Nash, Chas. Philip Butler Bateman, Wm. Stewart, and Sir John Gore, with whom he was for upwards of two years employed (part of the time under his former Captain, then Rear-Admiral Legge) at the defence of Cadiz, off Toulon, and on the coast of Catalonia – 14 Jan. 1814, to the 