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Barton 11 Feb. 1743–4, when, in September, he was appointed to the Marlborough, and a few months later to the Neptune, carrying the flag of Vice-admiral Rowley, the commander-in-chief, by whom, in May 1745, he was promoted to the command of the Duke fireship; and in February 1746–7 he was further promoted by Vice-admiral Medley to the Antelope frigate. In that, and afterwards in the Postilion xebec, he remained in the Mediterranean till the peace, when the Postilion was paid off at Port Mahon, and Barton returned to England in the flagship with Vice-admiral Byng. He had no further employment at sea till the recommencement of the war with France, when he was appointed to the Lichfield, 50 guns, one of the fleet which went to North America with Boscawen in the summer of 1755, and which, off Louisbourg, in June 1756, captured the French 50-gun ship, Arc-en-Ciel, armed en flûte, and carrying stores. The next year he was senior officer on the coast of Guinea, and, having crossed over to the Leeward Islands, brought home a large convoy in August 1758. The Lichfield was then placed under the orders of Commodore Keppel, as part of the squadron destined for Goree, and sailed with it on 11 Nov. On the 28th a heavy gale scattered the fleet; at night, the Lichfield by her reckoning was twenty-five leagues from the African shore. At six o'clock on the following morning she struck on the coast near Masagan; it was rocky and rugged; the sea was extremely high, and swept over the wreck, which beat violently, but by good fortune held together till the gale moderated, when those who had not been washed overboard or drowned in premature attempts, managed to reach the shore, distant only about 400 yards; the saved amounted to 220 out of a crew of 350. These survivors, naked and starving, were made prisoners by the Emperor of Morocco, and kept for a period of eighteen months in semi-slavery. After a tedious negotiation they were at last ransomed by the British government, and arrived at Gibraltar on 27 June 1760 (, Naval and Military Memoirs, iii. 184 et seq.; ‘An authentic Narrative of the Loss of His Majesty's ship Lichfield, Captain Barton, on the coast of Africa, with some Account of the Sufferings of the Captain and the surviving part of the Crew … in a journal kept by a Lieutenant,’ i.e. Mr. Sutherland, third lieutenant, Lond. 12mo. 24 pp.).

Captain Barton arrived in England on 7 Aug., was tried for the loss of his ship, was fully acquitted, and in October was appointed to the Téméraire, a fine ship of 74 guns, captured from the French only the year before. In this ship he served, under Commodore Keppel, in the expedition against Belle-Isle in April 1761, had especial charge of the landing, and was sent home with despatches. He afterwards convoyed a number of transports to Barbadoes, and served under Sir George Rodney at the reduction of Martinique, January 1762. In the following March he was detached, under Commodore Sir James Douglas, to Jamaica, and formed part of the expedition against Havana in June and July, during a great part of which time he commanded the naval brigade on shore. Under the stress of fatigue and climate his health gave way, and he was compelled to exchange into the Devonshire for a passage to England, which was not, however, put out of commission till the peace. He attained his flag on 28 April 1777, became vice-admiral on 19 March, 1779, admiral on 24 Sept. 1787, and lived on till 1795; but during the whole of these last thirty-two years his health, broken down by the Havana fever, did not permit him to accept any active command. He is described as faithful and affectionate as a husband, kind and forbearing as a master, unshaken and disinterested in his friendships; a sincere christian, piously resigned to the will of God during his long illness.

[Gent. Mag. lxvi. i. 81. Charnock (Biog. Nav. vi. 17) implies that this account was written ‘under the inspection of a relative;’ it is, however, quite wanting in all family or personal details.]  BARTON, RICHARD (1601–1669), jesuit, whose real name was Bradshaigh or Bradshaw, was born in Lancashire in 1601. He was educated in the English college at Rome; entered the Society of Jesus in 1625; became a professed father in 1640; rector of the English college at Liège in 1642; provincial of the English province (1656–60) during the great political change in the collapse of the commonwealth and the restoration of the monarchy, and rector of the English college at St. Omer from 1660 till his death on 13 Feb. 1668–9. Dodd (Certamen utriusque Ecclesiæ, 12) ascribes to him a work on the ‘Nullity of the Protestant Clergy’ in reply to Archbishop Bramhall, but the correctness of this statement has been questioned. Some interesting letters written by him in 1659–60 to Father General Nickell upon English affairs are printed in Foley's ‘Records.’

[Oliver's Collections S.J. 51; Foley's Records, i. 227–32, vii. 78; Backer's Bibliothèque des Ecrivains de la Compagnie de Jésus (1849), i. 439.] 