Page:A Naval Biographical Dictionary.djvu/997

Rh of Good Hope – 36, Capt. Wm. Paterson, lying at Plymouth – and 74, fitting for the flag of Sir Rich. King, Commander-in-Chief in the East Indies, previously to proceeding whither he fought under the officer last mentioned as Admiralty-Midshipman (a rating he had filled on board the ) at the battle of Algiers. For his conduct on the occasion he was promoted, 16 Sept. 1816, to the rank of Lieutenant. His last appointments were, in June, 1817, and Feb. 1819, to the 36 and  74, both commanded by Capt. John Clavell on the East India station, whence he returned in Oct. 1819. The Lieutenant is now Postmaster at Chesterfield.

 ROBERTS. 

, born 25 Aug. 1787, at Salisbury, is eldest son of the late Capt. Wm. Roberts, ot the 2nd Dragoon Guards, by Sarah, daughter of the late Jeffery Gawen, Esq., of Salisbury; brother of Commander Wm. Gilbert Roberts, R.N. (1815), who served as Lieutenant of the 74 in the operations against Washington and Baltimore, at the capture of the American gun-vessels on Lake Borgne, and in the attack on New Orleans, and died 4 Oct. 1843, at Bath, in his 53rd year; and nephew of Retired Commander Jeffery Gawen, R.N. (Lieutenant 1793), who died in 1837. His ancestors were related to the former Earls of Radnor.

This officer entered the Navy, 12 May, 1794, as a Volunteer (under the patronage of the Earl of Pembroke), on board the sloop, Capt. John Loring, lying at Chatham. From Nov. 1794 until Aug. 1797, and from May, 1799, to Nov. 1800, his name was borne on the books of the gun-vessel and  store-ship, both commanded by his relative Lieut. Gawen. In Nov. 1801 he joined the 98, Capt. Jas. Vashon, employed off Cadiz and Gibraltar; and in March and Aug. 1805 he was nominated (after having served in the Channel as Midshipman in the 38, Capts. Jas. Wallis and Thos. Dundas) Sub-Lieutenant of the  gun-brig and  cutter, Lieut.-Commanders Thos. Foulerton and Dan. Carpenter. He was made full Lieutenant 12 Oct. in the same year; and was subsequently appointed – 4 Nov. 1805, to the 74, bearing the flags of Admirals Sir Wm. Sidney Smith and Henry Edwin Stanhope – 1 Feb. 1808, to the 80, flag-ship of Sir W. S. Smith on the coast of Brazil – 2 Dec. 1809, after seven months of half-pay, to the  10, Capt. Edw. Reynolds Sibly, in the Mediterranean – 19 Nov. 1810 and 16 May, 1811, to the 120, flag-ship of Sir Sam. Hood (at whose particular request he was appointed), and 74, Capt. John Chambers White, on the same station – and, 17 April, 1812, to the command of gun-boat No. 22, employed at the defence of Cadiz. While serving with Sir Wm. Sidney Smith in the he assisted at the defence of Gaeta; commanded a division of the storming party at the reduction of Capri; was present at the battle of Maida, and when the  sustained a loss of 42 men killed and wounded in the attack on Fort Licosa; aided in disarming the coasts of Naples and Calabria from the Gulf of Salerno to ; and contributed, during Sir John Duckworth’s expedition against Constantinople, to the destruction of a Turkish squadron off Point Pesquies. Under Admiral Stanhope we find him present, in the same ship, at the siege of Copenhagen, where he came into frequent contact with the enemy’s flotilla. On the surrender of the Danish squadron he assisted in fitting out the Christian VII. of 80 guns. He was First-Lieutenant of the when that vessel and the  frigate, Capt. Hon. Henry Blackwood, effected a wonderful escape from a powerful division of the Toulon fleet, consisting of six ships of the line and four frigates; and when Senior of the  he co-operated with the patriots on the coast of Catalonia, and, on the fall of Tarragona, assisted in rescuing the inhabitants from the fury of the French. Being confirmed, 23 July, 1812, in the rank of Commander (a few weeks after he had been ordered to act as such) in the 16, Capt. Roberts continued employed on the east coast of Spain, under Rear-Admiral Benj. Hallowell and Capts. Edw. Codrington and Chas. Adam, until the peace of 1814. His exertions during that period, particularly at the unsuccessful siege of Tarragona by Sir John Murray, on the failure whereof he embarked the advanced portion of the troops, were of a very high order and had the effect of obtaining for him the glowing eulogiums of the different naval and military authorities. On his removal, in April, 1814, to the 18, he proceeded forthwith to the coast of North America and joined the squadron under Rear-Admiral Hon. Henry Hotham, then employed in the blockade of New London and New York. On 8 of the ensuing Sept. he succeeded, in command of his own boats, in retaking, at the entrance of the Bay of Fundy, after much resistance, the Betsy, a fine teak-built ship of 600 tons, with a cargo of spices, which had been taken on the coast of Sumatra by an American privateer. On this occasion he was severely wounded and 2 of his men were also hurt. After conducting the blockade of Newport, in Rhode Island, and destroying many of the enemy’s vessels, he was sent with despatches, at the conclusion of the war with the United States, to Cumberland Island and the West Indies. He left the on the occasion of his promotion to Post-rank, 13 June, 1815; and accepted the Retirement 1 Oct. 1846.

Capt. Roberts married, 31 May, 1817, Charlotte, eldest daughter of the late Sir Robt. Dallas, Lord Chief-Justice of the Court of Common Pleas, and first-cousin of the present Sir Robt. Dallas, Bart., brother-in-law of Rear-Admiral Hon. Geo. Poulett, and of Sir Peter Parker, Bart., Captain R.N., who fell in an affair with the Americans at Bellair, near Baltimore, 30 Aug. 1814. By that lady he has issue a son and daughter. – Goode and Lawrence.

 ROBERTS. 

was born in 1792 and died 2 Oct. 1845 at Petersham. He was eldest son of the Rev. Wm. Roberts, D.D., Vice-Provost of Eton College, and Rector of Worplesdon, co. Surrey (whose father was Provost of Eton), by a daughter of Col. John Gore, Lieutenant-Governor of the Tower of London, and sister of the late Vice-Admiral Sir John Gore, K.C.B., K.C.H. He was brother-in-law of the late Earl of Egremont.

This officer entered the Navy, in Dec. 1804, as Fst.-cl. Vol., on board the 32, commanded by his uncle Sir John Gore; under whom he escorted the Marquis Cornwallis as Governor-General to India, and thence returned, a distance of 13,831 miles, in the extraordinarily short period of 82 days. Following his relative as Midshipman, in Feb. 1806, into the 74, he served in that ship off Brest and L’Orient and for nine months at the blockade of Rochefort, where he witnessed, 25 Sept. 1806, the capture of four heavy French frigates by a squadron under the orders of Sir Sam. Hood. After serving for two years on the coast of Spain and among the Western Islands in the 40, Capt. Hon. Thos. Bladen Capel, he again, in Aug. 1810, joined Sir John Gore on board the 80, employed in the Channel and off Lisbon. From July to Sept. 1811 he cruized in the Bay of Biscay as Acting-Lieutenant in the 38, Capt. Wm. Parker. He was officially promoted, 6 March, 1812, into the 74, Capt. Chas. Grant, in the Mediterranean; and was next appointed, on that station – 9 May, 1812, to the 74, Capt. Rich. Hussey Moubray – 30 Jan. 1813, to the 38, Capt. Hon. Henry Duncan – 4 Jan. 1814, to the  120, flagship of Sir Edw. Pellew – and 24 March ensuing, to