- Thomas Fremantle (Royal Navy officer)
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name = Thomas Fremantle
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caption = Captain Thomas Fremantle
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birth_date = birth date|1765|11|20|df=yes
birth_place = Aston Abbots,Buckinghamshire ,England
death_date = death date and age|1819|12|19|1765|11|20|df=yes
death_place =Naples ,Italy
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resting_place = Garden of Don Carlo Califano, Naples, Italy
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nationality = flagicon|ENG English
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occupation =Royal Navy Vice Admiral
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footnotes =Vice-Admiral Sir Thomas Francis Fremantle GCB GCH RN (20 November 1765 –19 December 1819 ) was a very successful naval officer in theRoyal Navy whose list of accolades includes action in three separate fleet actions, a close personal friendship with Lord Nelson and a Baronage in Austria.Fremantle was born in 1765, and joined the navy in 1777 aged just eleven aboard the frigate HMS "Hussar". Profiting from family influence, active commissions in the
American War of Independence and a keen sense of seamanship and aggressive tactical awareness, promotion came easily, makinglieutenant on13 March 1782 while on duty inJamaica and being promoted tocommander on13 November 1790 in command of thesloop HMS "Spitfire". Although he did not achieve fame with his service in this period, he was in a good position to profit from the mass promotions which accompanied the outbreak of theFrench Revolutionary War in 1793, being made aPost Captain on16 May 1793 in the smallfrigate HMS "Tartar". It was in this ship that he first came to Nelson's eye, when they both served at thesiege of Bastia , where Nelson lost an eye and Fremantle gained a reputation for daring action, taking his ship under the fortress's walls despite heavy fire from overhead, which had already sunk one frigate in the bay.The following year Fremantle was commanding the frigate HMS "Inconstant" when he was engaged in Lord Hotham's indecisive and cautious fleet action in the Gulf of Genoa on the
14 March 1795 . The French fleet had departedToulon and were making for the Italian coast, being chased by Hotham's fleet and an approaching storm. Fremantle, despite unspoken rules of engagement which did not require him to engage ships larger than his own, used his superior speed to overtake the 80 gun "Ça Ira", which had been damaged in a collision. By taking his ship under the massive bow of his opponent, he managed to slow her enough that the oncoming British fleet was able to capture "Ça Ira" and another French ship which had turned back in a rescue attempt. The first British ship to the scene was Nelson's HMS "Agamemnon", and the respect between the two officers continued to grow.Nelson requested and received Fremantle as a companion and junior officer when he was detached to Italy in 1796, and the two wreaked havoc along the Italian coastline, evacuating British and royalist civilians to
Corsica when the French army invaded, capturing coastal positions and raiding shore installations, capturing the island ofElba . One of the British refugees whom Fremantle rescued fromLeghorn was the 18-year old Catholic Betsey Wynne, daughter of Richard Wynne (from the famous anglo-venician Wynne family, accointed withCasanova ) and Camille de Royer, with whom Fremantle was so charmed that he married her that year, with Prince Augustus as his best man. The same year he was embroiled in an engagement with Spanish gunboats offCadiz , again under Nelson, and the next year he was with his mentor at the disastrous battle of Tenerife, where both officers were grievously wounded in the arm. Nelson's was amputated, Fremnatle's survived, but he never regained full use of it again.Returning home on convalescence, Fremantle used the time to hone his own theories of successful command at sea, shown by several proposals he sent to the admiralty concerning the judgement of petty disciplinary actions on board ship. Although these were rejected out of hand, they would later be used as models when the disciplinary system was revised in the 1850s. A very popular officer, loved by his men, his contemporaries and the public alike, Fremantle did not remain at home long, and when Nelson was given command of the Channel Fleet Fremantle joined him in August 1800 as commander of the
ship of the line HMS "Ganges". It was in this ship that he received further accolades for his service at the battle of Copenhagen in 1801 when he was in the thick of the action. He also dabbled in politics, standing unsuccessfully for the constituency of Sandwich in 1802 before taking it in 1806.Sent to
Ireland and thenFerrol in 1803 and 1804, Fremantle was given the massive 98-gun HMS "Neptune" in May 1805 and was attached to the Cadiz blockade, ready for Nelson's assumption of command later that year. At thebattle of Trafalgar that October, "Neptune" was third in Nelson's division, cutting the Combined Fleet shortly after HMS "Victory" did, and ploughing past the wrecked "Bucentaure" he engaged the massive "Santissima Trinidad" with which he endured a savage slogging match which left "Neptune" with 44 casualties and the outnumbered Spanish ship with over 300. Relatively undamaged, "Neptune" was able to tow the shattered "Victory" back toGibraltar and Fremantle profited by taking the chapel silver from the big Spanish ship which he used to adorn his home.Fremantle spent the next five years in England, serving as a
Member of Parliament for Sandwich 1806–1807 [http://www.leighrayment.com/commons/scommons2.htm] and as aLord of the Admiralty (1806–1807), before being posted rear-admiral [Rear Admiral of the BlueJuly 31 1810 , of the WhiteAugust 12 1812 , of the RedJune 4 1814 ] and taking command in theAdriatic Sea , where he employed the frigate squadrons under him to great effect against French held Italy and Dalmatia. When the French empire surrendered in 1814, the entire Balkan coast surrendered to him with over 800 ships, netting Fremantle a vast fortune. For his services he was made aKnight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath on12 April 1815 , as well as a ceremonial baron in Austria and later a vice-admiral [Vice Admiral of the BlueAugust 12 1819 ] and the commander in chief of the Mediterranean. He also received several Austrian and Italian knighthoods as well as initiation into theRoyal Guelphic Order of Hanover. Fremantle died in December 1819 from a sudden illness and was buried atNaples where his grave can still be seen in the Garden of Don Carlo Califano outside the gate of San Gennaro, Naples [ Monument: Upper Barracca Garden, Valletta, Malta"SACRED TO THE MEMORYOFSIR THOMAS FRANCIS FREMANTLEKNIGHT GRAND CROSSOF THEBATH, GUELPH, SAINT FERDINAND AND MERITSAINT MICHAEL AND SAINT GEORGEKNIGHT COMMANDER OF MARIA THERESABARON OF THE AUSTRIAN EMPIREAND VICE ADMIRAL OF THE BLUEWHO DIED AT NAPLES IN THE CHIEF COMMANDOF HIS MAJESTY’S NAVAL FORCESIN THE MEDITERRANEANON THE 19 DECR 1819 IN THE 54TH YEAR OF HIS AGETHIS MONUMENT IS ERECTED BY CAPTAIN A.P. GREENAND THE OFFICERS OF HIS MAJESTY’S SHIP ROCHFORTIN WHICH HE HAD HIS FLAGAS A TESTIMONY OF THEIR RESPECTFOR HIS CHARACTER AND TALENTS
"] . His eldest son son of the same name was a famous politician, originally given abaronetcy at his father's death before later being made Baron Cottesloe for his own services to the country. Another son Charles Howe Fremantle became the Captain of the 26 gun frigateHMS Challenger the first ship to arrive in a fleet of 3 ships sent out from Britain to establish a colony at the Swan River inWestern Australia . The Australian City of Fremantle is named after him. Another son, William Robert Fremantle (c.1808-1895) was the Dean of Ripon.Further reading
*"The Trafalgar Captains", Colin White and the 1805 Club, Chatham Publishing, London, 2005, ISBN 1-86176-247-X
References
External links
* [http://www.dukesofbuckingham.org/people/contemporaries/fremantle/thomas_fremantle.htm A biography from "dukesofbuckingham.org"]
* [http://www.nmm.ac.uk/searchbin/searchs.pl?flashy=et1740z&flash=true Animation of the Battle of Trafalgar]
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