James Gambier, 1st Baron Gambier
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Admiral of the Fleet James Gambier, 1st Baron Gambier, Template:Post-nominals (13 October 1756 – 19 April 1833) was a Royal Navy officer and colonial administrator. After seeing action at the capture of Charleston during the American Revolutionary War, he saw action again, as captain of the third-rate Template:HMS, at the battle of the Glorious First of June in 1794, during the French Revolutionary Wars, gaining the distinction of commanding the first ship to break through the enemy line.
Gambier went on to be a Lord Commissioner of the Admiralty and First Naval Lord and then served as Governor of Newfoundland. Together with General Lord Cathcart, he oversaw the bombardment of Copenhagen during the Napoleonic Wars. He later survived an accusation of cowardice for his inaction at the Battle of the Basque Roads.
Early career
Born the second son of John Gambier, the Lieutenant Governor of the Bahamas and Bermudian Deborah Stiles, Gambier was brought up in England by his aunt, Margaret Gambier, and her husband, Admiral Charles Middleton, 1st Baron Barham.<ref name=odnb>Template:Cite ODNB</ref> He was a nephew of Vice-Admiral James Gambier and of Admiral Lord Barham<ref name="multiple">Tracy, 2006, p. 148</ref> and became an uncle of the novelist and travel writer Georgiana Chatterton.<ref>Template:Cite ODNB</ref>
Gambier entered the Navy in 1767 as a midshipman on board the third-rate Template:HMS, commanded by his uncle, which was serving as a guardship in the Medway, and followed him to serve on board the 60-gun fourth-rate Template:HMS in 1769 where he served on the North American Station. He transferred to the 50-gun fourth-rate Template:HMS under Rear Admiral Parry, in 1772, in the Leeward Islands. Gambier was placed on the sloop Template:HMS and was then posted to England to serve on the 74-gun third-rate Template:HMS, a guardship at Spithead.<ref name="multiple" /> He was commissioned as a lieutenant on 12 February 1777, in which rank he served successively in the sloop Template:HMS, the 24-gun frigate Template:HMS, the third-rate Template:HMS under Vice-Admiral Lord Shuldham, and then in Template:HMS under his uncle's flag.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Lord Howe promoted Gambier to commander on 9 March 1778 and gave him command of the bomb ship Template:HMS, which was promptly dismasted and surrendered to the French.<ref name=heath94>Heathcote, p. 94</ref> He was taken prisoner for a short period and, after having been exchanged, he was made a post captain on 9 October 1778 and appointed to the 32-gun fifth-rate HMS Raleigh and saw action at the capture of Charleston in May 1780 during the American Revolutionary War.<ref name=heath94/> He was appointed commander of fifth-rate Template:HMS, cruising in British waters, later in the year.<ref name="multiple149">Tracy, N, 2006, p. 149</ref> In 1783, at the end of the War, he was placed on half-pay.<ref name="multiple" />
In February 1793 following the start of the French Revolutionary Wars, Gambier was appointed to command the 74-gun third-rate Template:HMS under Lord Howe. By faith an evangelical, he was regarded as an intensely religious man, nicknamed Dismal Jimmy, by the men under his command.<ref name=heath94/> As captain of the Defence Gambier saw action at the battle of the Glorious First of June in 1794, gaining the distinction of commanding the first ship to break through the enemy line and subsequently receiving the Naval Gold Medal.<ref name=heath95>Heathcote, p. 95</ref>
Senior command
Gambier was appointed to the Board of Admiralty led by Earl Spencer in March 1795.<ref name=sainty>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=rodger69>Rodger, p. 69</ref> Promoted to rear-admiral on 1 June 1795, he became First Naval Lord in November 1795.<ref name=sainty/> Promoted to vice-admiral on 14 February 1799,<ref>Template:London Gazette</ref> Gambier left the Admiralty after the fall of the first Pitt ministry in February 1801 and became third-in-command of the Channel Fleet under Admiral William Cornwallis, with his flag in the 98-gun second-rate Template:HMS.<ref name=heath95/> He went on to be governor and commander-in-chief of Newfoundland Station in March 1802. In that capacity he gave property rights over arable land to local people allowing them to graze sheep and cattle there and also ensured that vacant properties along the shore could be leased to local people.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> It was around that time that he also bought Iver Grove in Buckinghamshire.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Gambier then returned to the Admiralty as a Lord Commissioner of the Admiralty and First Naval Lord on the Admiralty Board led by Viscount Melville when the second Pitt ministry was formed in May 1804.<ref name=sainty/><ref name=rodger69/> Promoted to full admiral on 9 November 1805,<ref>Template:London Gazette</ref> Gambier left the Admiralty in February 1806.<ref name=heath95/> He returned briefly for a third tour as First Naval Lord on the Admiralty Board led by Lord Mulgrave when the Second Portland Ministry was formed in April 1807.<ref name=heath95/><ref name=rodger69>Rodger, p. 69</ref>
In May 1807 Gambier volunteered to command the naval forces, with his flag in the second-rate HMS Prince of Wales, sent as part of the campaign against Copenhagen during the Napoleonic Wars. Together with General Lord Cathcart, he oversaw the bombardment of Copenhagen from 2 September until the Danes capitulated after three days (an incident that brought Gambier some notoriety in that the assault included a bombardment of the civilian quarter). Prizes included eighteen ships of the line, twenty-one frigates and brigs and twenty-five gunboats together with a large quantity of naval stores<ref name="multiple149-150">Tracy, N, 2006, pp. 149–50.</ref> for which he received official thanks from Parliament, and on 3 November 1807 a peerage, becoming Baron Gambier, of Iver in the County of Buckingham.<ref>Template:London Gazette</ref>
Battle of the Basque Roads
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In 1808 Gambier was appointed to command the Channel Fleet. In April 1809 he chased a squadron of French ships that had escaped from Brest into the Basque Roads. He called a council of war in which Lord Cochrane was given command of the inshore squadron, and who subsequently led the attack. Gambier refused to commit the Channel Fleet after Cochrane's attack, using explosion vessels that encouraged the French squadron to warp further into the shallows of the estuary. This action resulted in the majority of the French fleet running aground at Rochefort.<ref name="multiple"/>
Gambier was content with the blockading role played by the offshore squadron. Rear-Admiral Sir Eliab Harvey, who had commanded "Fighting Temeraire" at the Battle of Trafalgar, believed they had missed an opportunity to inflict further damage upon the French fleet. He told Gambier "I never saw a man so unfit for the command of a fleet as Your Lordship." Cochrane threatened to use his parliamentary vote against Gambier in retaliation for not committing the fleet to action. Gambier called for a court martial to examine his conduct. The court martial, on 26 July 1809 on Gladiator in Portsmouth, exonerated Gambier. Consequently, neither Harvey nor Cochrane were appointed by the Admiralty to command for the remainder of the war.<ref name="multiple150">Tracy, N, 2006, p. 150</ref> The episode had political and personal overtones. Gambier was connected by family and politics to the Tory prime minister William Pitt. In Parliament, Cochrane represented the constituency of Westminster, which tended to vote Radical. In the aftermath of Basque Roads, Cochrane and Gambier quarreled and Gambier excluded Cochrane from the battle dispatches. Cochrane took the unusual move of standing in opposition to parliament's pro forma vote of thanks to Gambier.<ref>Blake, p. 213</ref><ref>Hall, p. 40</ref>
Later career
In 1814 Gambier was part of the team negotiating the Treaty of Ghent, ending the War of 1812 between Britain and the United States.<ref name=heath96>Heathcote, p. 96</ref> He was appointed a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath on 7 June 1815.<ref>Template:London Gazette</ref> Promoted to Admiral of the Fleet on 22 July 1830,<ref>Template:London Gazette</ref> he died at his home, Iver Grove in Buckinghamshire, on 19 April 1833 and was buried at St. Peter's churchyard in Iver.<ref name=heath96/>
Legacy
Gambier was a founding benefactor of Kenyon College in the United States, and the town that was founded with it,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Gambier, Ohio, is named after him,<ref>Gannett, p. 134.</ref> as is Mount Gambier, the city and dormant volcano in South Australia,<ref>Grant, p. 68.</ref> and Gambier Island in British Columbia,<ref>Walbran, p. 197 .</ref> as well as the Gambier Islands in French Polynesia.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Gambier appears as a minor character near the end of Flying Colours, a 1938 Horatio Hornblower novel by C. S. Forester.<ref>Forester, pp. 214–22.</ref>
Personal life
In July 1788 Gambier married Louisa Mathew, daughter of Daniel Mathew, 1718–1777, of Felix Hall, Kelvedon, Essex and St Kitts, West Indies, and Mary Elizabeth Byam, 1729–1814; they had no children.<ref name=odnb/>
Arms
See also
References
Sources
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- 1756 births
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