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FITZJAMES—FITZMAURICE. Since the period of his leaving the he has been on half-pay.

Lieut. Fitz-Gerald married, in 1831, Eliza Ravenscroft, eldest and only surviving daughter of the late Lieut.-Colonel Starke, of Laugharne Castle, Caermarthenshire.

 FITZJAMES. 

entered the Navy, 25 Aug. 1825, as Fst.-cl. Vol., on board the 42, Capt. Robt. Gambier, in which ship, after accompanying Mr. Morier, the British Commissioner, to Mexico, and serving for some time under the flag of Sir Thos. Masterman Hardy, on the Home station, he was employed in conveying troops to Malta, Gibraltar, and also to Lisbon, where we find him present at the period of Don Miguel’s first arrival and usurpation of the throne. Having left the in Sept. 1828, he next, in Dec. 1830, joined the St. Vincent, flag-ship successively at Portsmouth and in the Mediterranean of Sir Thos. Foley and Sir Henry Hotham, with the latter of whom he witnessed, as Midshipman, the revolution in Greece, and the occupation of the Palamedi at Nauplia by the Russian, French, and English forces. While on the books of the, Mr. Fitzjames served for six months in her tender, the cutter; and from Aug. 1832, until July, 1833, he was lent to the  46, Capt. Edm. Lyons, during which period he escorted King Otho and the Bavarian Regency from Trieste to Greece. He subsequently, on returning to the, passed his examination 16 Nov. 1833; after which he joined, in June, 1834, the 52, flag-ship at Chatham of the Hon. Sir Thos. Bladen Capel; and from Oct. 1834, until March, 1837, took an active part, as Mate of the steamer, in all the operations of the expedition to the celebrated river of that name under Colonel Chesney, including the laborious work of transporting the above-mentioned vessel and the, another steamer, from Suedia to Bir, a distance of 140 miles, across an almost impervious country. While returning, on one occasion, from an attack on a tribe of Bedouin Arabs who had committed depredations on some of his party, Mr. Fitzjames unfortunately broke his leg; and, on another, he was taken prisoner, but released after a captivity of ten days. For his services he was promoted, 19 Jan. 1838, to a Lieutenancy in the, Capt. Thos. Hastings, at Portsmouth, and for his proficiency in gunnery and mathematics he obtained a first-class certificate. His next appointment was, 17 Oct. 1838, to the 84, Capt. Barrington Reynolds, one of the ships employed, in 1840, during the campaign in Syria, where he appears to have been the officer selected to distribute among the Egyptian soldiery at Beyrout the proclamations of Sir Chas. Napier, for which a price was set on his head by Soliman Pacha. He was also present at the bombardment of Beyrout, the operations at D’Journi, and the blockade of Alexandria. On 27 May, 1841, he joined, after a re-attachment of a few weeks to the, the 72, flag-ship in China of Sir Wm. Parker, whose official praise, as well as that of Sir Hugh Gough, he repeatedly acacquied for his meritorious conduct during the hostilities of 1842, his name occurring in not less than five gazettes. In the course of that year he directed with excellent precision the fire of the rocket-brigade in the attack on the heights of Segoan and Tzekee, 15 ond 16 March; had also charge of the rocket-party at the taking of Chapoo, May; served on shore at the battle of Woosung, June; again commanded the rocket-brigade, and was severely wounded, at the storming and capture of the city of Ching-Kiang-Foo, 21 July; was present at the signing of the treaty at Nanking; and participated in all the operations in the Yang-tse-Kiang. On 23 Dec. 1842, Lieut. Fitzjames was rewarded by promotion to the rank of Commander; and, on 30 of the same month, he was appointed to the sloop, of 16 guns. After visiting Bassora and Koram, at the junction of the Tigris and Euphrates, where no man-of-war had ever before been, he was sent to quell the disturbances among the crews of the merchantmen loading guano at Icheboe, on the coast of Africa; and on his ultimate arrival in England he was paid off 10 Oct. 1844. Since 4 March, 1845, Capt. Fitzjames (whose Post-commission bears date 31 Dec. in that year) has been in command of the discovery-ship, Capt. Sir John Franklin, now engaged in a fresh attempt to explore the north-west passage through Lancaster Sound and Bering Strait, and has had the conduct of the magnetic operations connected with the expedition.

On 1 Feb. 1835, while the Euphrates expedition was fitting out in the river Mersey, Capt. Fitzjames particularly distinguished himself by his heroism in plunging overboard, in face of a strong gale and lee tide, and saving the life, at the imminent hazard of his own, of a custom-house officer. A piece of plate was in consequence presented to him by the merchants, and the freedom of the city by the corporation, of Liverpool; and the Royal Humane Society and London Shipwreck Institution each voted him a silver medal.

 FITZMAURICE. 

entered the Navy, in Oct. 1804, as Clerk, on board the store-ship, Master-Commander Dan. M‘Coy, and on his return from a visit to Gibraltar was transferred, as Midshipman, in Oct. 1805, to the 74, Capts. Graham Moore, Rich. Henry Alex. Bennett, and Walter Bathurst. A few months after his removal to the 22, Capt. Phipps Hornby, he took part, 13 March, 1811, in the memorable action off Lissa, where a British squadron, carrying in the whole 156 guns and 879 men, completely routed, after a battle of six hours, and a loss to the  of 13 killed and 33 wounded, a Franco-Venetian armament, whose force amounted to 284 guns and 2655 men. On 16 Nov. 1812, Mr. Fitzmaurice was promoted, from the 32, Capt. John Rich. Lumley, to an Acting-Lieutenancy in the 74, flag-ship in the Leeward Islands of Sir Fras. Laforey, to which he was confirmed 28 May, 1813. He returned home in Aug. 1815; was afterwards employed in the 20, Capt. Abraham Lowe, on the Home station, from 11 Jan. 1816, to 14 Jan. 1817; and since the latter date, with the exception of a command of the  Revenue-cutter to which he was appointed 29 May, 1826, has been on half-pay.

 FITZMAURICE. 

is only surviving son of the late Harman Fitzmaurice, Esq., a lineal descendant of the Lords of Kerry, and great-grand-nephew of the first Earl.

This officer entered the Navy, 8 Dec. 1800, as Fst.-cl. Vol., on board the 64, Capt. Thos. Bertie, under whom he served in the battle of Copenhagen, 2 April, 1801. He subsequently joined, on the Home, East India, and South American stations, the 28,  32,  36, and  64, Capts. Hon. Philip Wodehouse, David Atkins, Benj. Wm. Page, and Wm. Fothergill. On 18 Nov. 1807, he obtained a Lieutenancy in the, of 18 guns and 117 men, Capt. Chas. Mars Gregory; and he soon afterwards had his hat shot off while co-operating in a sanguinary attempt made by the boats of that sloop, in company with those of the frigate, to cut out a Spanish schooner from under a battery at Porto Rico. After a contest of an hour and a half, in which she lost 10 men killed and 30, including Mr. Fitzmaurice severely, wounded, the, on 3 Oct. 1808 was unfortunately taken by the French nationai brig Palinure. The subject of this sketch, who had not been since employed, accepted his present rank 24 July, 1844. 