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1212 he had been for a few months stationed in the North Sea and Baltic in the 12, Lieut.-Commander Geo. Broad, he was received, in Dec. 1807, on board the 40, Capt. Alex. Skene, again in the West Indies; where, with the exception of a few months in 1812 (during which he returned to England in the 18, Capt. Wm. Manners), he continued employed until Sept. 1815 in the  and  sloops,  64, flagship of Vice-Admiral Bartholomew Sam. Rowley, 74, Capt. Robt. Honyman, sloop, bearing the flag of Rear-Admiral Wm. Brown, and sloop, Capt. Alex. Kennedy. In the he was present at the siege of Copenhagen in 1807; he acted for seven months as Master on board the ; and, while officiating in a similar capacity in the, he served at the blockade and surrender of the city of St. Domingo in 1809, and was engaged in a boat in an attempt to cut out the French privateer Supérieure from under the Moro Castle, on which occasion the launch of the  was sunk. He was Midshipman, Master’s Mate, and Acting-Lieutenant (order dated 16 Dec. 1811) of the from March, 1810, until May, 1812; and Acting-Lieutenant and Lieutenant (commission dated 7 June, 1814) of the  from 12 July, 1813, until he invalided 9 Sept. 1815. In the latter vessel he was engaged in carrying troops up the Mississippi during the attack upon New Orleans. He afterwards, with the permission of the Admiralty, made six voyages in a merchantman to Madras and Calcutta, out of the port of London; and from 8 Feb. 1837 until the period of his death he had charge of a station in the Coast Guard.

Lieut. Tullis married, 24 April, 1827, Eliza, daughter of the late Rev. Robt. Culbertson. – Burnett and Holmes.

 TULLOH. 

, born about 1785, is son of the late Lieut. John Tulloh, R.N., and brother of

This officer entered the Navy, 17 Nov. 1799, as a Supernumerary, on board the 64, armée en flûte, Capt. Hardy. He served next, from Jan. 1800 until April, 1802, as A.B. and Midshipman, in the 20, Capt. Jas. Keith Shephard, at the Nore; in May of the latter year he joined the 33, Capt. Philip Wilkinson, stationed in the Bay of Biscay; he was employed, from 1803 until Jan. 1806, in the  74, Capt. Lord Henry Paulet, on the coasts of France and Spain; and in the following Sept. he was received by Sir John Duckworth on board his flag-ship the  100. On 14 Feb. 1807, when about to enter the Dardanells, he assisted in a boat under the present Sir Nesbit Josiah Willoughby, and was nearly destroyed, in an attempt to save the crew of the 74, at the time in flames. He was afterwards, previously to the re-passage of the Dardanells, engaged in a disastrous affair with the Turks on the island of Prota. On 15 Aug. 1808, at which period the had been for some time employed in the West Indies, he was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant. His succeeding appointments were, chiefly on the Home station – 31 Aug. 1808, to the 10, Capt. Thos. Fortescue Kennedy, part of the expedition sent in 1809 to the river Scheldt, where his health, from serving in flat-boats, became much impaired – 10 Jan. 1810 after an interval of half-pay, to the 74, bearing the flag of Hon. Robt. Stopford – 25 Aug. followmg, to the 36, troop-ship, Capt. Hon. Edmund Sexten Pery Knox – 8 June, 1811, for seven months (he had invalided from the  in the preceding April), to the  74, Capt. Wm. Chas. Fahie – and, 8 April, 1812, to the 10, Capts. W. B. Hunt and Robt. Bidden (now Carre). While attached to the he served at the blockade of Rochefort, and aided in cutting out different vessels laden with naval stores from under Rochelle. On the death, at Heligoland, of Capt. Hunt of the, the command of that vessel devolved upon him, and he was sent with her to North Yarmouth. On his arrival he was ordered to the Baltic to assist in conducting to England the Russian fleet, of 17 sail of the line; a service which he accordingly performed. Having been refitted at Sheerness, the was joined by Capt. Riddell; with whom Mr. Tulloh proceeded off the Texel. He was subsequently, in a violent storm, blown to sea; his health again suffered; and he lost the sense of hearing. He therefore, about Oct. 1813, invalided; and on 27 Oct. 1845 he accepted his present rank.

Commander Tulloh married Hester, sister of

 TULLOH. 

entered the Navy, 3 May, 1803, as Ordinary, on board the 64, Capts. Wm. Hotham, Thos. Vivion, and Robt. Barton, employed in the North Sea, in the Downs, and on the coast of Ireland. In March, 1805, he removed as Midshipman (a rating he had already attained) to the 20, Capt. Hon. Geo. Elliot; with whom he continued to serve in the 28 and  36, again in the Downs, and in the Mediterranean and East Indies, until nominated, 1 May, 1810, Acting-Lieutenant, on the latter station, of the  sloop, Capts. Robt. Worgan Geo. Festing, and Wm. Kelly. In Oct. 1808 the, after a running action of nearly an hour, in which she had her Master killed and 1 seaman wounded, captured La Jena French national corvette, of 18 guns (pierced for 24) and 150 men. In April, 1811, Mr. Tulloh, whose commission bears date 12 March in that year, removed from the to the  74; in which ship, bearing the broad pendant of Commodore Wm. Robt. Broughton, he co-operated in the reduction of Java. In May, 1813, about 12 months after he had returned to England, he was placed in command of a gun-boat in the river Elbe, where he remained until the early part of 1814, and was in consequence present in the operations against Cuxhaven and Gluckstadt. His last appointment afloat was to the sloop, Capt. Wm. Slaughter; in which vessel, stationed in the Downs, he served from 20 July to 4 Sept. 1815. He has been employed, since 9 Feb. 1837, in the Naval Hospital at Plymouth. – Holmes and Folkard.

 TULLOH. 

is brother of

This officer entered the Navy, 23 April, 1801, as Fst.-cl. Vol., on board 14, Lieut.-Commanders Birdwood and Jump, lying at Appledore; and from June, 1802, until received, in Nov. 1807, on board the, Capt. Wolley, stationed at Plymouth, was employed, a great part of the time as Midshipman, in the  32 and  36, both commanded by Capt. Geo. Wolfe. In the he was engaged in conveying troops from Guernsey to Holland and to different parts of England. While serving in the he escorted convoy home from Oporto; assisted at the capture of L’Alert privateer of 16 guns and 90 men, and at the destruction, 12 July, 1804, on the coast of France, of La Charente of 20 and La Joie of 8 guns; united in Aug. 1805 in Admiral Hon. Wm. Cornwallis’ pursuit of the French fleet into Brest and took part in the ensuing Sept. in an action off Vigo, in which the, after an hour’s cannonade, captured one and defeated the rest of a flotilla of nine gun-boats by whom she had been attacked. He was present too, in the early part of 1806, at the capture, with some loss to the British, of two out of a squadron of gun-boats, each armed with a long 4-pounder and a 12-pounder cohorn, which had come through the Passage du Raz. Towards the close of