Lord Proby | |
---|---|
Born | 19 June 1779 |
Died | 6 August 1804 HMS Amelia, at Surinam |
Buried | St Michael's Cathedral, Bridgetown, Barbados |
Allegiance | United Kingdom |
Service/branch | Royal Navy |
Years of service | 1792? - 1804 |
Rank | Post-Captain |
Commands held |
HMS Emerald (temporary) Fireship HMS Tarleton HMS Peterel HMS Danae HMS Amelia |
Battles/wars |
French Revolutionary Wars Napoleonic Wars |
William Allen Proby, Lord Proby (19 June 1779 – 6 August 1804) was a British Royal Navy officer and Whig politician.
Proby was the eldest son of John Proby, 2nd Baron Carysfort (later 1st Earl of Carysfort, and his first wife Elizabeth (née Osbourne). He was educated at Rugby School,Warwickshire, England from 1788.
Proby was commissioned into the Royal Navy and was promoted quickly, probably due to the influence of his family; while serving on the Lisbon station, in December 1797, he was placed in temporary command of HMS Emerald and by 1798, at the age of 19, he had been promoted to post-captain having also commanded the fireship Tarleton and the sloop Peterel. He became the captain of Danae and in her suffered a mutiny on 14 March 1800; forty of the crew seized the ship off Le Conquet, Brest. The mutiny seems to have been caused by Danae being overburdened with French and American sailors conscripted unwillingly, and possibly a rather lax approach to discipline. Having secured the loyal crew below decks, the mutineers gave up the ship to the French 16-gun brig-corvette Colombe, which sent over a boarding party. Lord Proby surrendered the ship with the words "To the French nation, but not to mutineers." He and the loyal members of his crew were exchanged on parole, having received favourable treatment from the French authorities.