Page:A Naval Biographical Dictionary.djvu/1077

Rh  Shipley, was Dean, and his great-grandfather, Jonathan Shipley, Bishop, of St. Asaph. One of his brothers, Reginald Yonge Shipley, is an officer in the 5th Fusiliers.

This officer entered the Navy in 1837; and as a reward for having passed the test examination at the Royal Naval College, was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant 28 June, 1845. Since 31 Dec. following he has been employed in the Pacific in the 18, Capt. Henry John Worth.

 SHIPLEY. 

entered the Navy, 17 Nov. 1801, as Fst.-cl. Vol., on board the 20, Capt. Patrick Campbell, on the Home station; where he served, from Oct. 1802 until Aug. 1805, as Midshipman and Master’s Mate, in the  16, Capt. Edw. Bass; and where, in Sept. of the latter year, he joined the 74, Capt. Geo. Hopewell Stephens. After he had been for two years and a half employed in the North Sea, Baltic, and Channel in the 32, Capts. Geo. M‘Kinley, Lord Viscount Falkland, and Hon. Geo. Poulett, 18, Capt. Geo. Chas. Mackenzie, and again, Capts. Hon. G. Poulett and John Thicknesse, part of the time as Acting-Lieutenant, he became attached in that capacity, 18 Jan. and 13 Aug. 1809, to the 18, Capt. Martin White, and  36, Capt. Zachary Mudge. He was nominated, 3 Jan. 1810, Acting-Master of the 18, Capt. Corbet Jas. D’Auvergne; was advanced to his present rank by commission dated 17 April in the same year; and was next, from 19 of that month until April, 1811, and from Oct. in the latter year until Sept. 1814, employed in the Baltic and on various parts of the Home station in the 64, Capt. Robt. Honyraan, and 74, Capt. Hugh Downman. He has since been on half-pay.

Lieut. Shipley married, first, in June, 1819, Jemima, only child of Mr. Bradney, of Hilton, co. Salop; and secondly, in Oct. 1826, Harriet Sarah, only child of the Rev. Henry Ward, Rector of Havering Bower, co. Essex. By his former marriage he has issue two daughters.

 SHIPPARD. 

, born 17 Feb. 1764, near Boness, in Scotland, is son of the late Mr. Shippard, who was Purser of the 74, flag-ship of Sir Horatio Nelson at the battle of the Nile 1 Aug. 1798, and who died in 1803 at Jamaica of yellow fever; and brother of the late Alex. Shippard, Esq., Rear-Admiral of the Blue. His grandfather, John Walkinshaw, of Scotston, having sided with the rebels in 1715, was attainted, deprived of his property, and obliged to seek refuge in France, where he remained until pardoned by George II. in 1730. One of his nieces, a daughter of Rear-Admiral Shippard, is married to

This officer entered the Navy, 23 June, 1778, as Midshipman, on board the 28, Capt. Jas. Montagu, stationed on the coast of France, where he took part in an action with the French 50-gun ship Jupiter. Removing, in Feb. 1799, to the 50, Capt. Sir Jas. Wallace, he assisted, in company with the 36,  20, and two 12-gun brigs, in an attack made, 13 May following, on three French frigates lying in Concale Bay, under the protection of a battery and of several pieces of cannon and howitzers on the beach; the result whereof was the surrender of one of the enemy’s ships, the Danaé 36 (taken possession of by Lieut. Roth, accompanied by Mr. Shippard), and the destruction of the remainder – the fire of the battery being also silenced. In the course of the same year, after she had been totally dismasted in a hurricane, and had thrown all her anchors and upper-deck guns overboard, the was herself taken, off the coast of America, by the French fleet under Comte d’Estaing. Being soon, however, restored to liberty, Mr. Shippard, in April, 1780, joined the 64, commanded at first by Sir Jas. Wallace, and next by Capt. Truscott. In her he contributed, 15 July ensuing, to the capture, after an action of two hours, of the Belle Poule of 32 guns and 275 men, 25 of whom, including the Captain, were killed and 50 wounded. Subsequently to the relief of Gibraltar by Admiral Darby, the, on 14 May, 1781, was for several hours fiercely engaged with a French 74, the conflict terminating by the separation of the combatants, after a loss to the British ship, which had been reduced to a vrreck, of 26 men killed and 64 wounded. Continuing in the until the peace of 1783, Mr. Shippard was afforded an opportunity of sharing in the victory gained by Rodney over the Comte de Grasse 12 April, 1782. We next, in 1790-1, find him serving on the Home station in the 74, Capt. Sir Thos. Rich, and 100, flag-ship of Lord Hood; and in Jan. and Dec. 1793, joining the  74, commanded by his friend Sir Jas. Wallace, and 90, flag-ship of Admiral Roddam at the Nore. He was made Lieutenant, 10 May, 1794, into the, then bearing the flag of Sir J. Wallace, with whom (deducting a period of two months passed on board the sloop) he continued employed at Newfoundland in the  50, until appointed, 10 April, 1797, to the  80, Capts. Hon. Thos. Pakenham and Wm. Hancock Kelly. In that ship he served for nearly six years in the Mediterranean, where, in March, 1803, he removed, as First-Lieutenant, to the 64, Capt. Thos. Briggs. He returned to England in March, 1805, and was afterwards employed – from 19 May, 1805, until 20 April, 1807, in the Sea Fencibles in Ireland – from 11 June, 1807, until 16 March, 1809, as Senior, in the 74, Capt. Jas. Young – and from 29 Oct. 1810, until promoted to the rank of Commander 12 Aug. 1812, in a similar capacity, in the 74, Capt. Wm. Chas. Fahie, on the coasts of France and Spain. In the he accompanied Admiral Gambier in the expedition against Copenhagen; whence on the surrender of the Danish fleet he brought home the Skiold 74. He was placed on the list of Retired Captains 2 Sept. 1846. – Burnett and Holmes.

 SHIPTON. 

is son of the late Rev. Dr. Shipton, Rector of PorksheadPortishead [sic], Vicar of Staunton Bury, and one of His Majesty’s Justices of the Peace for co. Somerset.

This officer entered the Navy, 2 May, 1803, as Midshipman, on board the 74, Capt. Wm. Bedford, attached to the force on the Home station, where he served from Feb. 1805 until June, 1807, in the 110, and  98, flag-ships of Lord Gardner and Sir Jas. Saumarez. He then joined the 36, Capt. John Dick, employed at first off Ferrol and next on the coast of North America and in the West Indies. After co-operating in the reduction of Martinique, he removed, 2 Nov. 1809, to the 74,