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Thomas Fremantle (admiral)

Sir Vce-Admiral Thomas Francis Fremantle
Sir Thomas Fremantle.jpg
Sir Thomas Fremantle
Born 20 November 1765
Aston Abbotts, Buckinghamshire, England
Died 19 December 1819 (aged 54)
Naples, Italy
Place of burial Garden of Don Carlo Califano, Naples, Italy
Allegiance United Kingdom United Kingdom
Service/branch Naval Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg Royal Navy
Rank Vice Admiral
Commands held HMS Spitfire
HMS Tartar
HMS Inconstant
HMS Ganges
HMS Neptune
Adriatic Sea
Battles/wars French Revolutionary Wars
Napoleonic Wars
Awards Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath
Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Guelphic Order

Vice Admiral Sir Thomas Francis Fremantle, 1st Baron Fremantle, GCB GCH (20 November 1765 – 19 December 1819) was a British naval officer in the Royal Navy whose accolades include three separate fleet actions, a close friendship with Lord Nelson, and a barony in Austria.

Thomas Fremantle's son was Sir Admiral Charles Howe Fremantle and Fremantle in Western Australia was named after him.

Fremantle was born in 1765, and joined the navy in 1777 aged 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. He was made a lieutenant on 13 March 1782 while on duty in Jamaica and promoted to commander on 13 November 1790, in command of the sloop HMS Spitfire. He was then in a good position to profit from the mass promotions that accompanied the outbreak of the French Revolutionary War in 1793, being made a post-captain on 16 May 1793 in the small frigate HMS Tartar. In this ship he first came to the notice of Nelson, when they both served at the Siege of Bastia, where Nelson lost an eye and Fremantle gained a reputation for daring, taking his ship under the fortress walls despite heavy fire from above which had already sunk one frigate in the bay.

The following year Fremantle commanded the frigate HMS Inconstant and was engaged in Lord Hotham's indecisive and cautious fleet action in the Gulf of Genoa on 14 March 1795. The French fleet had departed from Toulon and were making for the Italian coast, pursued 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 for the oncoming British fleet to capture her and another French ship that had turned back in a rescue attempt. The first British ship to the scene was Nelson's HMS Agamemnon, and respect between the two officers was further enhanced.


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