Page:A Naval Biographical Dictionary.djvu/1266

1252 WARREN. 

entered the Navy, 3 May, 1827, as a Volunteer, on board the 104, Capt. Hon. Geo. Elliot, guard-ship at Portsmouth. In the following Sept. he became Midshipman of the 50, Capt. Sir Thos. Staines; and in Jan. 1828 he assisted at the reduction of the piratical fort of Carabusa, in the island of Candia, and at the destruction there of several vessels belonging to the freebooters. He continued employed in the Mediterranean in the 84, Capt. Geo. Burdett, until March, 1832; he next, in March and June, 1833, joined his former ship, the Victory, Capt. Edw. Rich. Williams, and the 78, Capt. Arthur Fanshawe, the latter on the Lisbon station; and in the month of June, 1834 (in the course of which year he passed his examination), he was nominated Mate in succession of the  74, Capt. Henry Shiffner, and  52, flag-ship of Hon. Sir Thos. Bladen Capel, whom he accompanied to the East Indies. In March, 1840, at which period he had been for about 10 months employed in the Mediterranean in the steamer, Capt. Anthony Wm. Milward, and 74, Capt. Fairfax Moresby, he joined the  36, Capt. Edw. Boxer. He served subsequently in the boats and on shore in the operations on the coast of Syria, and was present at the bombardment of St. Jean d’Acre. At the storming of Sidon he happened to be on board the steamer, Capt. Woodford John Williams : as a reward for his services he was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant 4 Nov. 1840. On 2 Dec. following the, in which frigate he yet remained, was under the necessity of cutting away her masts during a gale in Acre Bay. Mr. Warren’s appointments, since he left her, have been – 2 and 14 Feb. 1841, and 8 April, 1843, to the, , and steamers, Capts. Thos. Henderson, Fred. Warden, and Horatio Thos. Austin, all in the Mediterranean – 4 Sept. 1843, after nearly four months of half-pay, to the Coast Guard – and 28 April, 1845, and 17 Dec. 1847, to the cutter and  steamer of 100-horse power, Capts. Juste Peter Koepel, and Henry Dumaresq, employed in protecting the Jersey fishers, a service on which he continues. While on the books of the he was detached in her tender the.

Lieut. Warren married, in Oct. 1843, Sarah, daughter of the late Capt. Biggs, of the King’s Royal Rifles. – Messrs. Halford and Co.

 WARREN. 

was born 1 June, 1789, at Portsmouth. He is youngest brother of

This officer entered the Navy, in July, 1800, as L.M., on board the gun-brig, Lieut.-Commander Wm. Rich. Bamber; and was present, 2 April, 1801, in the attack upon the Danish line of defence before Copenhagen. During the after part of the year last mentioned he served with Capt. Solomon Ferris in the 64 and  and  74’s. He was on board the when that ship, as noticed in our memoir of Commander C. G. Warren, was captured off Algeciras. From 1802 until 1804 he was employed, again with Capt. Ferris in the 74, and with Capts. Fred. Cotterell and John Serrell, in the 74. In the boats of the latter ship under Lieut. Geo. Hewish he assisted in cutting out a French man-of-war schooner, near Port au Prince. While boarding on the quarter he received a blow on the head from a cutlass, and was beaten back; but, binding the wound with his neckcloth, he returned to the attack. Lieut. Hewish being killed after displaying desperate valour, the command of the party devolved upon Mr. Warren, who took possession of the vessel, and was sent the next day with her to Jamaica. On leaving the he was received, in the course of 1804, on board the, Capt. John Wainwright, lying at Spithead, and  98, successive flag-ship in the Channel and off Cadiz and Gibraltar, of Admirals John Knight, Sir Rich. Bickerton, and Lord Collingwood. In 1807, after having served for a short time at Portsmouth in the prison-ship, Lieut-Commander Smith, he again joined Lieut. Bamber, on board the 12, in the Baltic. When the French army was subsequently advancing upon the town of Memel, Mr. Warren, who happened to be in attendance there in a boat on Lord Henry Clinton, had the honour, at their personal request, of conveying over to the opposite shore the King, Queen, and Princess of Prussia; all of whom, as soon as Napoleon’s proposals had been acceded to, he conducted back. Having returned to Yarmouth, the was ordered to convey a King’s messenger, Mr. James, with despatches to Heligoland. On arriving off the island directions were given to the Master to proceed on shore and deliver the despatches to the British Consul; but it blowing at the time a gale, and the sea running mountains high, the latter declared it was not possible for him to reach the shore. Perceiving a reluctance on the part of his brother Midshipmen to undertake the service, and aware that importance was attached to the immediate delivery of the papers, Mr. Warren at once volunteered; and, accompanied by a boat’s crew brave as himself, succeeded in landing them. On regaining his ship he had the satisfaction, for his conduct, of being applauded in the warmest manner by Mr. James. In the course of 1808 we find him joining in succession, as a Supernumerary, the, Capt. Hon. Courtenay Boyle; as Sub-Lieutenant, the 12, Lieut.-Commander Tatham; again as a Supernumerary (for a passage to the West Indies), the  64, Capt. Wm. Pryce Cumby; and, as Acting-Lieutenant, the sloop, Capt. Thos. Pinto. He was confirmed a Lieutenant, 16 Feb. 1809, into the 74, Capts. Jas. Athol Wood and Christopher John Wm. Nesham; and was subsequently appointed – 11 Dec. 1809, to the 80, Capts. Henry Lidgbird Ball and Robt. Plampin, in the Channel – 2 June, 1811, as First-Lieutenant, after six months of half-pay occasioned by ill health, to the armée en flûte, Capt. Hon. Wm. Henry Percy, under whom he escorted the Prince of Orange to Lisbon – 22 April, 1812, in a similar capacity, to the 10, Capt. Thos. Fife, in which vessel he served until the following Nov. in the Channel – 1 Feb. 1813, for upwards of three months, to the 74, Capt. Lord Colville, in the North Sea – 23 Sept. following, to the, Lieut.-Commander M‘Donald, surveying-ship at Plymouth, where he remained until June, 1814 – and 26 July, 1815, to the  74, flag-ship of Sir Geo. Cockburn. During his passage home in the Captain from the West Indies Mr. Warren, who when it came on was officer of the middle watch, experienced a violent hurricane near Newfoundland, in which a convoy of 80 sail, at the time in company, suffered much. After accompanying Napoleon Buonaparte to St. Helena in the he was placed, in Nov. 1815, on half-pay. His last appointment was to the Coast Guard, in which service he was employed from 25 Oct. 1825 until 15 July, 1830.

Lieut. Warren (who, the date of his commission being altered, now takes rank from 15 May, 1817) married Mary Southgate, eldest daughter of the late Commander Wm. Styles, R.N., by whom he has had issue 13 children. – J. Hinxman.

 WARREN. 

was born, 28 Nov. 1792, in Dublin.

This officer entered the Navy, 25 Dec. 1805, as Fst.-cl. Vol., on board the 18, Capts. Sam. Jackson and Taylor; in which vessel and her boats we find him, until 1807, in constant action with the enemy’s flotilla and batteries in the neighbourhood of Calais and Boulogne. In the summer of the latter year, having attained the rating of 