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Rh  and John Chas. Dalrymple Hay, both on the East India station. On 19 Aug. 1845, as Senior of the latter vessel, he took command of her pinnace, and served with the boats of a squadron, carrying altogether 530 officers, seamen, and marines, at the destruction, under Capt. Chas. Talbot, of the piratical settlement of Malloodoo, on the north end of the island of Borneo, where the British encountered a desperate opposition, and sustained a loss of 6 men killed and 15 wounded. Agents – Messrs. Ommanney.

 HILLYAR. 

, born 3 June, 1788, is son of Jas. Hillyar, Esq., Surgeon R.N.; brother of the late Rear-Admiral Sir Jas. HiUyar, K.C.B., K.C.H., and of the present Dr. Robt. Purkis Hillyar, K.H., K.T.S., Inspector of Hospitals and Fleets, who served as Surgeon of the and  in the expeditions of 1801 and 1807 to Egypt, and was Surgeon of the  74, at the battle of Navarin; and uncle of Lieuts. and Hillyar, R.N.

This officer entered the Navy, in Dec. 1795, as Fst.-cl. Vol., on board the 38, Capts. Hon. Robt. Stopford and Jas. N. Morris, of which frigate his brother, the late Sir Jas. Hillyar, was then Second-Lieutenant. During the five following years he presents himself to our notice as being very actively employed – a great part of the time as Midshipman – off the coast of France, also in cruizing to the westward, and ultimately in the Mediterranean, where he co-operated for several months with the Austrian army on the northern shores of Italy, and beheld the surrender of Genoa. Towards the close of 1800 he joined the troop-ship, under the orders of his brother, with whom he continued uninterruptedly to serve, chiefly on the Mediterranean station, until Jan. 1808. On the 18th of Aug. 1803, while at the blockade of Genoa, Mr. Hillyar was sent with a prize felucca and a small boat, under the command of Lieut. Jones, to effect the capture of a large Greek ship steering for that port. Determined, apparently, to reach their destination, and availing themselves of a light breeze which had sprung up and retarded the advance of the British, the enemy maintained a stern and fierce resistance. Lieut. Jones, at the commencement of the conflict, was mortally wounded, but, although they were at first repulsed, the crew of the felucca, now led by Mr. Hillyar, returned to the charge, and in a few minutes gained possession of the ship’s deck, the Greeks being compelled either to run below or jump overboard. To evince his estimation of this exploit. Lord Nelson, on the 27th of the same month, promoted Mr. Hillyar to the vacancy created by the death of Lieut. Jones, and as he had but just accomplished his 15th year, his Lordship further obtained an Order in Council to confirm this mark of extraordinary favour. Of the, which ship was afterwards employed for a long time, as an frigate, at the blockade of Toulon and Cadiz, our officer eventually became First-Lieutenant. His appointments on leaving her were – 18 March and 18 Nov. 1808, to the armée en flûte, and  28, Capts. Eras. Beaufort and John Rich. Lumley, also in the Mediterranean, where he officiated for 20 months as Senior Lieutenant of the last-mentioned vessel – and 16 Aug. 1810 and 8 May, 1811, to the 80, and  120, bearing each the flag, off the Scheldt and again in the Mediterranean, of the late Lord Exmouth, under whom, besides witnessing the partial actions of 5 Nov. 1813 and 13 Feb. 1814, with the Toulon fleet, he was again, in April, 1814, present at the fall of Genoa – we believe as First-Lieutenant. Being advanced to the rank of Commander by commission dated 27 Aug. 1814, Capt. Hillyar was subsequently appointed in that capacity – 6 July, 1824, to the Coast Guard at Merazion, where he remained three years – and, 14 March, 1834, to the 78, Capt. Wm. Elliott, in which ship, successively employed on the Lisbon and Mediterranean stations, he remained until posted 20 Jan. 1836. During the preceding year he had been ordered to observe and report upon the sailing-trials between H.M. ships, , and , and so completely did the report he made win the approbation of the Sea Lords of the Admiralty, that in the June following his promotion he was nominated Secretary (in the 80) to Hon. Sir Chas. Paget, for the purpose of making all the observations and reports required in a series of experimental cruizes then about to take place. He left the in Dec. 1836; and was lastly employed, from 15 May, 1840, until he resigned 7 Aug. 1841, on board the  50, as Flag-Captain to Sir Edw. Durnford King, Commander-in-Chief at the Cape of Good Hope.

Capt. Hillyar is married and has issue. – Messrs. Ommanney.

 HILTON. 

, born 18 Feb. 1782, is brother of

This officer entered the Navy, 1 April, 1795, as Fst.-cl. Vol., on board the 32, Capt. Chas. John Moore Mansfield, with whom he served, in the same ship, and in the 36, until April, 1801. While in the, he participated, as Midshipman, in three sharp encounters with the enemy – the first time, on 31 Jan. 1797, when, in a mistaken engagement of 40 minutes with an of similar force, 66 of whose people were killed and 50 badly wounded, the British sustained a loss of 3 men killed and 6 wounded; the second, in an action fought, in the same year, off Cadiz between the  and three British ships on the one side, and a Spanish 74 on the other; and the third, in an affair with some Spanish gun-boats near the batteries of Algeciras, in which the , while in escort of a convoy, had 4 men killed and 19 wounded. When in the, in the summer of 1800, Mr. Hilton assisted in taking captive a small Swedish frigate, the Ulla Fersen, a step rendered necessary by opposition the latter had offered to being detained. He was ultimately (while serving in the Channel on board the 110, flag-ship of Hon. Wm. Cornwallis) made Lieutenant, 29 July, 1801, into the  100, Capt. John Child Purvis, with whom he continued until paid off in April, 1802. On 23 of the following July he rejoined the, then commanded by Capt. Robt. Williams, on the Irish station. On the renewal of hostilities in 1803, Commodore Wm. Domett having hoisted his broad pendant on board that frigate, Mr. Hilton was sent by him in a Revenue-cutter for the purpose of raising seamen, of whom the Navy was at the time in great need. Having put into a small harbour, to the south-west of the Cove of Cork, he landed with a party of men and proceeded towards Skibbereen with a view to the impressment of some sailors known to be at that place. On his way, however, he sustained a furious attack from a body of peasantry, who, besides more or less beating his men, inflicted upon him two severe cuts in the head, and all but deprived him of life. Being again, in Aug. 1804, placed under the orders of Admiral Cornwallis in the, Mr. Hilton had an opportunity, on 22 Aug. 1805, of joining in that officer’s pursuit of the French fleet into Brest, and of afterwards acting for five months as his First-Lieutenant. His next appointment, we find, was, in Feb. 1807, to the 74, Capt. Sir Arch. Collingwood Dickson, whom he accompanied in the ensuing expedition to Copenhagen, whence, on the surrender of the Danish shipping, he was sent home in command of the Perlen, one of the largest of the enemy’s frigates. While subsequently attached, between July, 1808, and May, 1810, in the capacity of First-Lieutenant, to the 98, bearing the flag of his old Captain, Purvis, he witnessed many of the operations connected with the defence of Cadiz, and was for a considerable time charged, in addition to his other duties, with the province of translating all