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ARTHUR—ASHBY. Gage Morrig, off th& coast of Ireland; then sailed for the West Indies in the frigate, Capt. Thos. Briggs; and, on 12 Aug. 1807, was there confirmed, from the 74, flag-ship of Sir Alex. Cochrane, to a Lieutenancy in the 32, Capts. Thos. John Cochrane, Wm. Maude, Chas. Napier, and Hon. Jas. Wm. King. During a continuance of nearly seven years in that frigate, Mr. Arrow commanded a party at the destruction of a French West Indiaman, under a heavy fire from the island of Margarita, in 1807 – assisted, with the 32, in capturing the French frigate La Topaze of 38 guns, off Guadeloupe, 22 Jan. 1809 – was present at the ensuing reduction of the Saintes and,in 1813-14, shared, as First Lieutenant, in many active operations on the river Scheldt, particularly in an unsuccessful attack made by the boats of the  and, attended wdth great loss to the British, on five French brigs, under Fort Lillo. From the, which ship bore the flag of the Duke of Clarence when H.R.H. escorted Louis XVIII. to France, Mr. Arrow was at length promoted to the rank of Commander, 16 May, 1814. He has been employed in the Coast. Guard since 6 Jan. 1820, and is the Senior Officer in that service.

Commander Arrow married Miss Kew, of New Palace Yard, Westminster, by whom he has issue.

 ARTHUR, C.B.

, born in 1779, is son of the late John Arthur, Esq., of Plymouth, by Catherine, daughter of Thos. Cornish, Esq.; brother of Col. Sir Geo. Arthur, Bart., K.C.H., late Governor of Bombay, and formerly Lieut.-Governor of Upper Canada, and of Van Diemen’s Land; and uncle of Capt. Fred. Leopold Arthur, 4th foot.

This officer entered the Navy, in 1788, as Captain’s Servant, on board the 74, Capt. Andrew Sutherland, guard-ship at Portsmouth, and during the remainder of the peace served in the  32, Capt. Rich. Goodwin Keats, 74, commanded by H.R.H. the Duke of Clarence, and  32, Capt. Joseph Ellison. In 1793 he sailed for the East Indies as Midshipman of the 32, Capt. Alan Gardner, and, after assisting at the reduction of Trincomalee and Colombo, in 1795-6, was sent in command of three transports laden with stores and provisions for Rear-Admiral Rainier’s squadron at Amboyna, where he joined that officer in his flag-ship, the  74. From March, 1797, until officially promoted, 28 Feb. 1800, Mr. Arthur continued to serve in the East Indies as Acting Lieutenant on board the 32, Capts. Benj. Wm. Page and Wm. Hills, and 64, Capts. Alex. Milner and John Turner. Returning then to England, he became in succession attached, on the Cadiz, Mediterranean, and Jamaica stations, to the, 98, Capt. Jas. Vashon, and  74’s, Capts. Frank Sotheron and Sir Robt. Barlow, and 74, flag-ship of Rear-Admiral Jas. Rich. Dacres. On 1 Nov. 1805, the subject of this memoir, who had previously borne a useful part in repeated actions with the gun-boats off Cadiz, was promoted to the rank of Commander for his gallant conduct in cutting out, in command of the ’s boats, a Spanish schooner from under the batteries of Santa Martha, and capturing four others (one armed) in the Gulf of Maracaibo. Being next appointed, 25 Sept. 1806, to the bomb, he accompanied Lord Gambler’s subsequent expedition to Copenhagen, where he served with the in-shore squadron under Capt. Peter Puget on the occasion of its being attacked by the Danish flotilla, and in his general conduct acquired the entire approbation of his superior officers. On paying off the, in Dec. 1807, Capt. Arthur was employed in superintending the discharge of the Danish line-of-battle ships at Portsmouth. On 12 April, 1808, he joined the brig, of 10 guns and 70 men, which vessel, during the Scheldt expedition of 1809, he commanded as one of the advanced squadron above Bach. He subsequently, on 11 Jan. 1810, being off Dieppe, distinguished himself by running in under the batteries and attacking seven lugger privateers, anchored within 200 yards of the pier-head, one of which, L’Aimable Nelly, of 16 guns and 60 men, he succeeded in boarding and bringing out. In acknowledgment of this dashing exploit, he was at once promoted to Post-rank, by commission dated back to the day on which it was achieved. From 10 Oct. 1812, until 1 Dec. 1815, Capt. Arthur further commanded the 24, off Lisbon and in the Mediterranean. He was not however again employed until the summer of 1844, when, after 28 years of incessant application, he was appointed Captain of the 104, and Superintendent of the Ordinary at Portsmouth, which situation he resigned on being constituted, 23 Sept., in the same year, Captain of the  80, and Superintendent of Sheerness Dockyard. He was superseded in the latter appointment on advancement to Flag-rank, 9 Nov. 1846.

Rear-Admiral Arthur was nominated a C.B. 28 July, 1838, and from 28 Aug. 1840, until his last promotion, was in the receipt of the Captain’s Good Service Pension. He married, in Nov. 1809, Elizabeth, daughter of the Rev. Wm. Wells, Rector of East Allington, co. Devon, by whom he has issue three sons and one daughter.

 ARTHUR. 

entered the Navy, 2 June, 1811, as L.M., on board the 120, Capt. Rich. Harward, flag-ship in the Mediterranean of Sir Edw. Pellew; became Midshipman, in Nov. 1811, of the 26, Capt. Gardiner Henry Guion, employed in co-operation with the patriots on the coast of Catalonia; served, from Feb. 1813, to Feb. 1818, in the  36, Capts. Andrew King and John Reynolds, under the former of whom, besides witnessing the fall of Genoa, he was wounded, we are informed, in an attack on Fort Erie, in 1814; then joined the 104, flag-ship, on her return from the East Indies, of Lord Exmouth, Commander-in-Chief at Plymouth; and, on 6 Feb. 1821, was advanced to the rank of Lieutenant. His next appointment was, 10 July, 1823, to the 50, flag-ship of Sir Lawrence Wm. Halsted, on the Jamaica station, where he attained his present rank, while serving in the sloop, 11 Oct. 1824. He has not since been employed. – John P. Muspratt.

 ASHBY. 

entered the Navy, 28 Sept. 1811, as Fst.-cl. Vol., on board the 16, Capt. F. Moore Maurice, employed in the North Sea, and during the last two years of the war served on the Mediterranean station as Midshipman of the  38, Capt. Sir Wm. Hoste, and 74, Capt. Thos. Briggs. Until promoted, 11 Dec. 1826, he was afterwards employed, the last seven years as Mate, in the 60,  26,  42,  again, and  28, Capts. Hon. Anthony Maitland, Hon. Robt. Cavendish Spencer, Hood Hanway Christian, Bentinck Cavendish Doyle, and Jas. Arthur Murray, on the Mediterranean, Cape of Good Hope, South America, and East India stations. Attaining the rank of Lieutenant, 11 Dec. 1826, he next joined, 16 Aug. 1827, the 46, Capt. Augustus Wm. Jas. Clifford, in which frigate, after escorting Lord Wm. Bentinck, as Governor-General, to India, we find him returning to England with Major-Gen. Bourke, late Lieut.-Governor of the Cape. He has been on half-pay since 1830. – Case and Loudonsack.

 ASHBY. 

entered the Navy 13 April, 1808, as Fst.-cl. Vol., on board the 74 Capts. Ross Donnelly, John Hollinworth, and Chas. Adam, with whom he successively