Sir Francis Holburne | |
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Admiral Holburne with his son, Francis Holburne (1752-1820) in a 1756 portrait by Joshua Reynolds
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Born | 1704 |
Died | 15 July 1771 |
Allegiance | Kingdom of Great Britain |
Service/branch | Royal Navy |
Rank | Admiral |
Commands held |
Portsmouth Command Greenwich Hospital |
Battles/wars |
War of the Austrian Succession Seven Years' War |
Admiral Sir Francis Holburne (1704 – 15 July 1771) was a Royal Navy officer who also served as a Member of Parliament.
Francis entered the Navy in 1720 as a volunteer aboard HMS St Albans, passing his examinations in 1725. He began his career in 1727 with a promotion to lieutenant and was promoted to Captain in 1739.
Francis was appointed commodore and commander-in-chief at the Leeward Islands in 1748. In 1749, after the War of the Austrian Succession, he was sent to Barbados to help secure the execution of the treaty terms.
Admiral Holburne was still ambitious and keen to make plans for his future. He aroused some resentment amongst his peers with Admiral Lord Boscawen describing him in a private letter to his wife as being ‘Rich and contrived to insinuate himself into the good graces of Lord Anson’.
Francis had known Lord Morton as an intimate family friend and may well have owed his advancement in the Navy to Archibald Campbell, Duke of Argyll who "took him by the hand in his younger days and made him a Captain.
He was appointed a member of the court-martial that was convened to try Admiral John Byng. The trial began in December 1756 and ran until March 1757. When the Tribunal was examined before the House of Lords, "all the court martial seemed terrified....except old Admiral Holbourne, who cursed and swore at the bar of the House, because Byng was not shot out of the way, without giving him the trouble of coming from Portsmouth".
Later in 1757, as Vice Admiral of the Blue, Holburne embarked on a command at Halifax, Nova Scotia to capture Louisbourg as part of the Louisbourg Expedition led by Lord Loudon. There were many delays, and fever had struck his fleet, causing much of it to remain in port. On the night of 24 September they were caught up in a violent storm which drove the 60-gun Tilbury onto the shore, sank the 14-gun Ferret and dismasted most of the remainder of his fleet. Holburne sent the most heavily damaged ships back to England while he wintered in Halifax with the rest of the fleet. On 4 February 1758 he was named Vice Admiral of the White and thereafter returned to England, with his North American command transferring to Admiral Edward Boscawen.