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506 HEXT. 

, born 5 July, 1780, at Bodmin, co. Cornwall, is second and only surviving son of the late Fras. John Hext, Esq., Attorney-at-law, of Tredethy, by Margaret, daughter of Elias Lang, Esq., Surgeon, of Plymouth. One of his brothers, Samuel, a Major in the Army and a C.B., served with distinction, both in Egypt under Abercromby, and throughout the peninsular war, and died 24 July, 1822, aged 40; and another, George, Lieutenant of H.M.S., was killed by a rifle-shot while leading a boat-attack in the Chesapeake in 1813, aged 29.

This officer entered the Navy, 9 April, 1791, on board the 14; and in Aug. 1793 joined the  74, Capts. John Willet Payne and Thos. Larcom, part of the force under Lords Howe and Bridport in the actions of 28 and 29 May and 1 June, 1794, and 23 June, 1795. With the exception of a year in 1797-8, during which he was lent to the 38, Capt. Hon. Robt. Stopford, he next, between Oct. 1796 and the peace of Amiens, served with Capts. Payne, Sampson Edwards, and Sir Edw. Pellew, on board the 74, of which ship, employed on the Home station, he was created a Lieutenant, 8 Aug. 1799, as a reward for the conduct he had displayed on the occasion of a recent mutiny. In June, 1802, Mr. Hext became Second of the 38, Capt. John Larmour, under whom he shortly afterwards conveyed Sir John Borlase Warren as British Ambassador to St. Petersburg, whence he had the honour of being sent home in personal charge of his Excellency’s despatches. In Jan. 1803 he was sent with an armed boat into the port of Leith for the purposes of impressment, and, although exposed for many hours to the attacks of a furious mob, he succeeded in fully effecting the service with which he had been entrusted. The prudence and forbearance manifested in this instance by Mr. Hext, notwithstanding the severe bruizes inflicted upon him and many of his men by the volley of stones incessantly kept up by the populace, were so marked as to elicit the warm plaudits of his Captain. In the following Nov. we find the employed in removing from Cronstadt the valuables (estimated at about 300,000l.) belonging to the King, which had been saved from the palace at Hanover when entered by the French. On her passage to England she took the ground, and remained in a state of jeopardy until at length righted through the instrumentality of Mr. Hext, who, having been sent for assistance, seized a British barque, and anchored her in such a position as enabled her to heave the frigate off. In the early part of 1804, while detached in a six-oared cutter, our officer appears, on his own responsibility, and with much difficulty and danger, to have detained and brought out from the river Ems a neutral laden with masts supposed to be for the use of the enemy. On reaching his ship the next day he had the satisfaction of learning that his Captain had just received orders for the apprehension of the very same vessel. In May, 1804, he assumed command of the hired cutter, off Brest, from which station he was ultimately driven in a violent gale, which occasioned the necessity of all his guns being thrown overboard, and of his making the best of his way to Ireland, where he only arrived after a week of .consummate exertion. On leaving the in Jan. 1805, Mr. Hext was appointed Senior of the  36, Capt. Wm. Rathbone, under whom, on 4 of the ensuing Nov., he fought in Sir Rich. Strachan’s action off Ferrol. During the long chase which preceded the battle, the, from the unwearied attention bestowed by her First-Lieutenant on the trimming of her sails, left the British squadron far astern. On the achievement of the victory the Commodore, while hailing Capt. Rathborne, availed himself of the opportunity of making particular mention of Mr. Hext, and in so especial a manner as to lead the latter to imagine that immediate promotion awaited him. This however he did not obtain until 28 April, 1809, by which time he had further served on the East India station in the 18, Capt. Geo. Harris, 74, and Blanche frigate, both commanded by Capt. Geo. Bell, again, Capt. Hon. Pownoll Bastard Pellew, and, as Acting-Commander, in the  hospital-ship at Poulo-Pinang, where his exertions in suppressing two fires which endangered the public stores procured him the thanks of the Governor. Being superseded in the by her proper Captain in Feb. 1810, Capt. Hext returned home in an Indiaman, and was not again employed until June, 1813, when he obtained an appointment to the  bomb, but was ordered to assume the command, pro tempore of the  32, and to assist Capt. John Hancock, of the  36, in escorting the outward-bound trade to Portugal; after which he proceeded, with some merchantmen under his convoy, to Gibraltar. When off St. Andero, on the north coast of Spain, in the, Capt. Hext, at the commencement of 1814, had the fortune, although at great personal risk, of saving the crew of a Spanish merchantman, and also a transport with Spanish troops on board. During the subsequent operations in the river Gironde he behaved in a very conspicuous manner, and was for several days engaged, amidst great difficulties of situation, in throwing shells into the fortress of Blaye. His services, in the whole, called forth the warm acknowledgments of Admiral Penrose. Capt. Hext, who left the in Sept. 1814, and has since been on half-pay, was not advanced to Post-rank until 23 Nov. 1841.

The subject of the foregoing narrative is a Magistrate, as was also his father, for co. Cornwall. He married, 15 Sept. 1812, Barbara, youngest daughter and last-surviving child of the late Jas. Read, Esq., M.D., of Tremear, near Bodmin, and sister of Lieut. John Read, R.M., who was killed in Sir Jas. Lucas Yeo’s attack on Cayenne in 1809. By that lady he has issue two sons (the eldest of them, Fras. John, a Lieutenant in the 83rd Regt.) and one daughter.

 HEYLAND. 

, born 29 Sept. 1790, is son of a gentleman (himself the son of the Rev. Robt. Heyland, D.D., Rector of Coleraine) who lost his right leg when Midshipman of H.M.S. – was afterwards attached to the Ordnance service in Ireland – and in 1798 was killed by the rebels while commanding a division of gun-boats for the relief of New Ross. He is first-cousin of the present – that gentleman’s father, Lieut.-General Cuppage, having married his paternal aunt.

This officer entered the Navy, 24 May, 1805, as Third-cl. Boy, on board the sloop, Capts. Woodley Losack and Jas. Andrew Worth, in which vessel he served for nearly five years on the Cork station, and was instrumental to the capture, during that period, of many of the enemy’s privateers and merchantmen. From the early part of 1810 until the summer of 1812 he was next actively employed with Capt. Fras. Beaufort, as Midshipman, in the sloop,  110, and  frigate, chiefly on the Mediterranean station, where he took part in the survey of the coast of Karamania. He then joined the and  frigates, both commanded by Capt. Henry Hope, under whom he served, latterly on the coast of North America, until Nov. 1814. The number of prizes he there assisted in making was extremely great. He was also for some time engaged in the blockade of New London; and on one occasion, 8 April, 1814, he served in the boats under Capt. Rich. Coote, at the gallant destruction, near Pettipague Point, on the Connecticut River, with but trifling loss to the British, of 27 of the enemy’s vessels, three of which were heavy privateers, and the aggregate burden of the whole upwards of 5000 tons. He left the, as above, having been advanced to the rank of Lieutenant by commission dated 19 July, 1814, and has since been on half-pay. 