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RICHARD DEANE (1610-1653)

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Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 898 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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RICHARD DEANE (1610-1653)  ,
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British general-at-sea, major-general and regicide, was a younger son of
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Edward Deane of Temple Guiting or Guyting in Gloucestershire, where he was born, his
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baptism taking place on the 8th of
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July 161o . His
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family seems to have been strongly Puritan and was related to many of those Buckinghamshire families who were prominent in the
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parliamentary party . His
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uncle or
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great-uncle was
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Sir Richard Deane, lord mayor of
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London, 1628-1629 . Of Deane's early
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life nothing is accurately known, but he seems to have had some sea training, possibly on a
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ship-of-war . At the outbreak of the
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Civil War he joined the parliamentary army as a volunteer in the artillery, a branch of the service with which he was constantly and honourably associated . In 1644 he held a command in the artillery under Essex in
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Cornwall and took
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part in the surrender after
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Lostwithiel . Essex (Letter to Sir Philip Stapleton, Rush-worth Collection) calls him " an honest, judicious and stout man," an estimate of Deane borne out by Clarendon's " bold and excellent officer " (
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book xiv. cap . 27), and he was one of the few
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officers concerned in the surrender who were retained at the remodelling of the army . Appointed
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comptroller of the ordnance, he commanded the artillery at
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Naseby and during Fairfax's
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campaign in the west of England in 1645 . In 1647 he was promoted colonel and given a regiment . In May of that
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year Cromwell was made lord-general of the forces in Ireland by the parliament, and Deane, as a supporter of Cromwell who had to be reckoned with, was appointed his
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lieutenant of artillery . Cromwell refused to be thus put out of the way, and Deane followed his example .

When the war

broke out afresh in 1648 Deane went with Cromwell to Wales . As brigadier-general his leading of the right wing at Preston contributed greatly to the victory . On the entry of the army into London in 1648, Deane superintended the seizure of treasure at the
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Guildhall and Weavers' Hall the day after Pride " purged " the House of
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Commons, and accompanied Cromwell to the consultations as to the " settlement of the
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Kingdom " with Lenthall and Sir Thomas Widdrington, the keeper of the great seal . I-Ie is rightly called by Sir J . K . Laughton (in the
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Diet. of Nat . Biog.) Cromwell's " trusted partisan," a character which he maintained in the active and responsible part taken by him in the events which led up to the trial and execution of the king . He was one of the commissioners for the trial, and a member of the committee which examined the witnesses . He signed the
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death warrant . Deane's capacities and activities were now required for the
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navy . In 1649 the office of lord high
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admiral was put into commission . The first commissioners were Edward Popham, Robert Blake and Deane, with the title of generals-at-sea .

His command at sea was interrupted in 1651, when as major-general he was brought back to the army and took part in the

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battle of Worcester . Later he was made president of the commission for the settlement of Scotland, with supreme command of the military and
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naval forces . At the end of 1652 Deane returned to his command as general-at-sea, where Monck had succeeded Popham, who had died in 1651 . In 1653 Deane was with Blake in command at the battle off Portland and later took the most prominent and active part in the refittingof the
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fleet on the reorganization of the naval service . At the outset of the three days' battle off the North Foreland, the 1st, and and 3rd of
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June 1653, Deane was killed . His
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body
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lay in state at
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Greenwich and after a public funeral was buried in Henry VII.'s
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chapel at Westminster Abbey, to be disinterred at the Restoration . See J . Bathurst Deane, The Life of Richard Deane (187o) .

End of Article: RICHARD DEANE (1610-1653)
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