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Rh destruction. In the course of 1806 the chased on shore a convoy of merchantmen, although under the escort of two brigs and a lugger. One of the vessels she took, and others she contrived to destroy. For nearly two years Lieut. Swain was employed with a schooner under his orders in watching the Passage du Raz. Eventually he saw the French fleet come out; and the intelligence of this event he conveyed to Sir John Duckworth, whom he had the good fortune to fall in with off the Saintes rocks. In 1809 he took part in the operations under Sir Rich. Strachan in the Scheldt; and he was for a long time engaged in protecting the trade in the North Sea. After he left the he did not go afloat. He accepted his present rank 26 May, 1845.

Commander Swain is married and has issue. One of his sons, George Brooks Forster, Second-Master R.N. (1842), is now acting as Master of the 12, in the East Indies; another, Henry Thomas, First-Lieutenant R.M. (1847), is doing duty on board the  92; and a third, Edmund, who attained the rank of Second-Master 2 Oct. 1847, is at present employed at the Cape of Good Hope in the  steamer.

 SWAINE. 

was born 1 Jan. 1769, at Lynn Regis, co. Norfolk, and died 14 Jan. 1848, at Wisbeach, co. Cambridge. He was only surviving son of the late Spelman Swaine, Esq., of Leverington, near Wisbeach, by Dorothy, daughter of Walter Robertson, Esq., of Lynn Regis.

This officer entered the Navy, in April, 1782, as Fst.-cl. Vol., on board the 24, Capt. Albemarle Bertie, stationed in the Channel. In the ensuing Oct., having followed Capt. Bertie as Midshipman into the 32, he accompanied Lord Howe to the relief of Gibraltar, and was present in the partial action near Cape Sepet. Between 1783 and 1791 he served in succession, chiefly on the Home station, and principally in the capacity of Midshipman, in the 74, Capt. Anthony Jas. Pye Molloy, 24, Capt. Wm. Domett, 90, Capt. Tonkin,  98, Capt. Thos. Pringle, frigate, Capt. Edm. Dod,, Capt. Henry Roberts, and 74, Capt. Alan Gardner. He then went back, as Master’s Mate, to the, then commanded by Capt. Geo. Vancouver; and while in that vessel, of which he was nominated Acting-Lieutenant in 1792, he visited the Canary Islands, the Cape of Good Hope, New Holland, New, the Islands, and Nootka Sound; and was for nearly two years employed in exploring the north-west coast of America. During his absence from England he was the means, by affording timely assistance, of saving the lives of Capt. Vancouver, Lieut. Peter Puget, a Midshipman, and a boat’s crew, when treacherously attacked by a party of Indians. He was officially promoted on his return home 27 Oct. 1795; appointed, 26 Nov. following and 4 May, 1801, to the sloop, Capts. Amherst Morris, Michael Seymour, and Robt. Keen, and 38, Capt. Hon. Fras. Farington Gardner, on the Channel and Cork stations; and on 29 April, 1802, was advanced to the rank of Commander. In the he assisted at the capture of L’Allégrée, a French vessel laden with ammunition and other warlike stores, six privateers, carrying in the whole 57 guns and 301 men, and a transport armed with 14 guns. Obtaining command, in June, 1802, of the sloop, Capt. Swaine was sent in that vessel with despatches to Tangiers, Algiers, Tunis, Tripoli, and Valette; and in Oct. 1803 he had the honour of leading Lord Nelson’s fleet through the Straits of Bonifaccio to Agincourt Sound, an anchorage among the Madalena Islands, to the northward of Sardinia. The service he rendered on this occasion – the first time the navigation had been attempted by a three-decker – gained him a very high compliment from the hero. On the night of 6 Jan. 1804 the, owing to an unusual current, was wrecked near Mazara, on the coast of Sicily. Her officers and crew were, however, saved by a merchant-vessel; and her Captain had the gratification, on being tried by a court-martial, of being not only acquitted of all blame on account of the disaster, but of being commended for the conduct he had at the time exhibited. From 16 Sept. 1808 until removed to the sloop, Capt. Swaine commanded the  of 10 guns on the Downs station. In the he conveyed some military officers to Oporto, a Spanish grandee to Cadiz, and despatches to the Mediterranean, where he was made Post, 17 May, 1810, into the  28. Before, however, he could join that vessel she had returned to England and was broken up. His last appointments were, 3 Aug. 1811 and 28 April, 1814, to the 20 and  38, employed on the Irish, West India, and North American stations. In the latter frigate, after conveying Major-General Gibbs and other military officers to New Orleans, he was again, 26 Feb. 1815, wrecked near Cuba on a, rock not previously known. He underwent in consequence the customary ordeal of a court-martial, and was fully acquitted. He accepted the rank of Rear-Admiral 1 Oct. 1846.

Rear-Admiral Swaine was a Magistrate and Chief Bailiff of the Isle of Ely. He married, 26 Aug. 1806, Sophia Anne, eldest daughter of the Rev. Chas. Le Grice, of Bury St. Edmunds, co. Suffolk, by whom he has left issue. – Messrs. Stilwell.

 SWAINSON. 

entered the Navy, 14 June, 1807, as Fst.-cl. Vol., on board the floating-battery, Capt. Sam. Martin Colquitt, lying in the river Mersey. In the course of the following month he removed to 38, Capt. Robt. Barrie, and with that officer (deducting a few months passed in 1811-12 on board the 74, Capt. John Halliday) he continued to serve, as Midshipman and Master’s Mate, in the same ship and in the  50 and  74, until nominated, 12 Nov. 1814, Acting-Lieutenant of the  bomb, Capt. Thos. Alexander. In the, in which frigate he continued until wrecked on the Needles Point 14 Oct. 1811, he cruized with activity in the Mediterranean, where, besides assisting at the destruction of L’Etourdie national brig of 18 guns and 200 men, and being on many occasions employed in the boats, he participated, 1 May, 1811, in a gallant action of an hour and a half in Sagone Bay, in which the , in company with the 36 and  18, effected the annihilation, with a loss to herself of 2 men killed and 19 wounded, of the two armed store-ships Giraffe and Nourrice, each mounting from 20 to 30 guns, and defended by a 5-gun battery, a martello tower, and a body of about 200 regular troops. In the he served off Cadiz and made a voyage to Barbadoes; in the  he took part in a variety of operations on the coast of North America, including a highly successful expedition to the Penobscot; and in the  he was present at the capture, 14 Jan. 1815, of St. Mary’s, the frontier town of the state of Georgia. A few days after the latter event he removed, again as Acting-Lieutenant, to the bomb, Capt. John Sheridan. He left that vessel in the ensuing April; and on 13 June, 1815, he was made Lieutenant, officially, into his former ship the, Capt. Geo. Martin Guise, then lying at Portsmouth. He was placed on half-pay in the course of the same month; and was afterwards employed – from 26 Sept. 1830 until 1834, as a Supernumerary, in the schooner, Licut.-Commander Chas. Holbrook, on the lakes of Canada – and, from 30 Nov. 1846 until Nov. 1848, in command of the packet, on the Falmouth station. – Messrs. Stilwell.

