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Rh , the enterprise was in every way successful. The Vengeance was set on fire and destroyed by her own crew; the row-boat, with 12 schuyts lying near her, was captured; and the brass guns in the battery (the others were spiked) brought off. Two days prior to this, Mr. Slade had been, in command of the boats of the same squadron, in company with the cutter, commanded by the present Rear-Admiral Searle  when that vessel made prize of the above-named ; on which occasion he drove on shore a large armed schooner. His conduct was such as to obtain for him very honourable mention, and afforded his Captain an opportunity of describing him as being at all times a truly deserving and gallant officer. He was shortly afterwards present at the capture of the Helder and the surrender of the Dutch squadron under Rear-Admiral Storey. As a tribute to the professional character of Lieut. Slade, we must here state that in six weeks he brought the crew of the from a state of insubordination bordering on mutiny into the very highest discipline, without the ordeal of a single court-martial and with the exercise of very trifling punishment. He continued in command of (already alluded to) in the North Sea until 1802; and was subsequently employed – from 5 Oct. 1805 until he invalided in June, 1806, in the  of 12 guns, on the Mediterranean station – in 1809-10, in the Sea Fencibles in Ireland – from 31 Jan. 1810 until 1814, in the  receiving-ship at Falmouth – and, for a few weeks in March and April, 1816, in the Ordinary at Plymouth. His promotion to Post-rank took place 21 Oct. 1810.

Capt. Slade married, 3 Dec. 1796, Cheney, youngest daughter of Henry Roe, Esq., by whom he had seven children. One of his sons, an officer in the Navy, was drowned.

 SLAUGHTER. 

entered the Navy 10 Aug. 1808; served, as Master’s Mate, in the boats of the 16 at the capture of a piratical vessel off the island of Elba in 1815; passed his examination in 1817; and was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant 22 July, 1830. His appointments have since been in succession – 24 Aug. 1832 to the Coast Guard – 15 June, 1838, to the command, which he retained until Jan. 1840, of the Revenue cruizer – 26 Sept. in the latter year to the post of Admiralty Agent on board a contract mail steamer – 7 March, 1843, again to the Coast Guard – and, 2 Jan. 1846, to another mail-steamer, in which he is at present employed.

 SLAUGHTER, K.H.

was born 11 Nov. 1787. This officer entered the Navy, 21 Dec. 1794, as Fst.-cl. Vol., on board the 74, Capts. Erasmus Gower, Wm. Essington, Thos. Seccombe, Eliab Harvey, and Sir Robt. Barlow; in which he was for ten years employed (part of the time under the flag of Rear-Admiral Collingwood) on the Home and Mediterranean stations. He was in consequence present in Cornwallis’ celebrated retreat, 16 and 17 June, 1795, and in the action off Camperdown 11 Oct. 1797. On leaving the he became Midshipman (a rating he had attained in Jan. 1800) of the  98, Capt. Geo. Martin, lying at Spithead; and on 29 Jan. 1805 he was nominated Sub-Lieutenant of the gun-brig, Lieut.-Commander Wm. Chivers. While in that vessel he was constantly engaged with the enemy’s flotilla on the coast of France, and for his conduct in bringing out a national cutter from under the strong batteries of Calais, received the thanks of Commodore Edw. W. C. R. Owen. On 18 Sept. 1806 he was made full Lieutenant into the, Capt. Robt. Elliot, stationed at first in the Downs and next in the Mediterranean; where, prior to his removal in Jan. 1809 to the 32, Capt. Wm. Hoste, he passed the Dardanells with Sir John Duckworth, co-operated with the army in the attack upon Rosetta, and obtained the thanks of Lord Cochrane for his exertions during the defence of Trinidad Castle, attached to the fortress of Rosas, as well as of Rear-Admiral Sir Alex. John Ball for having in an open boat conveyed important despatches to Capt. Hon. Arthur Kaye Legge, senior officer off Syracuse. With the boats of under his orders, Lieut. Slaughter took possession, 27 Aug. 1809, of six gun-boats and a convoy of merchant trabaccolos anchored under the walls of the strong fortress of Cortellazzo, near Trieste, which had just before been stormed and carried by a body of seamen and marines under the present Capt. Chas. Geo. Rodney Phillott. On 29 Aug. 1810, a convoy having been chased the day before into the harbour of Grade, he landed at the head of a detachment of seamen and marines from the and  a little to the right of the town, which he at once proceeded to attack. On their march the British were met, about the dawn of day, by a body of troops and peasantry, who opened a very destructive fire and obliged them to retire to the shelter of some hillocks. Conceiving that they were retreating to their boats, the French quitted a very advantageous position which they had been occupying, and charged with the bayonet. They were, however, received with characteristic bravery and steadiness – and a Lieutenant, a Serjeant, and 38 Privates of the 81st Regt. of French Infantry were made prisoners. Lieut. Slaughter and his party then entered the town and took possession of the vessels, 25 in number. At about 11 a detachment of the 5th Regt. of French infantry, consisting of a Lieutenant and 24 men, entered Grade from Maran, a village in the interior; these were instantly attacked by Lieut. Slaughter and the force that was nearest to them, consisting of a division of seamen and marines belonging to the and also to the  frigate, whose boats had landed just as the men of the  and  had achieved their exploit. The same intrepidity which had ensured success on that occasion produced it on this – the enemy, after two of their number had been killed, throwing down their arms and surrendering. Every exertion was now made to get the convoy out of the river, but, it being almost low water, that object was not to be effected before 7 p.m., and then not without great labour and fatigue, the men having to shift the cargoes of the large vessels into small ones, in order to float them over the bar. The loss on the part of the British in performing this very gallant service amounted to 4 marines killed and 1 Lieutenant of marines, 3 seamen, and 4 marines wounded; that of the French to 10 killed, 8 by bayonet wounds, a proof of the nature of the conflict, and 8 wounded. “I cannot,” says Capt. Hoste In his official account of the performance, addressed to Sir Chas. Cotton, the Commander-in-Chief, “sufficiently express my thanks to the Commanding Lieutenant, Slaughter, who has on this, and on many frequent instances before, given proofs of courage and conduct which merit every encouragement; and I beg leave to recommend him in the strongest terms to your consideration.” Mr. Slaughter was in consequence rewarded with a Commander’s commission dated 21 Nov. 1810. Previously to quitting the he appears to have been engaged in other attacks on the enemy’s towns and convoys. On one occasion, while endeavouring to burn a Russian squadron at Trieste, the boat he was in was upset, at night, by a concussion of Congreve-rockets, and he and his crew, exposed to a heavy fire, were only saved by the timely assistance rendered by another boat. Assuming command, 17 Dec. 1812, of the sloop, Capt. Slaughter, while stationed in April, 1814, off Dunkerque, received on board a deputation from that town charged with an invitation to Louis XVIII. to return and take possession of his throne and kingdom. This deputation he presented in person at the Admiralty and to His Majesty at his