Online Encyclopedia

10TH EARL OF THOMAS COCHRANE DUNDONAL...

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 677 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

10TH

See also:
EARL OF THOMAS COCHRANE DUNDONALD (1775-186o)  ,
See also:
British
See also:
admiral, was born at Annsfield in
See also:
Lanarkshire on the 14th of December 1775 . He came of an old Scottish
See also:
family, the first
See also:
earl having been
See also:
Sir William Cochrane (d . 1686), a soldier who was created Baron Cochrane in 1647 and earl of Dundonald in 1669 . He was the son of Archibald Cochrane, 9th Earl (1749-1831), who is remembered as a most ingenious, but also most unfortunate, scientific speculator and inventor, who was before his time in suggesting and attempting new processes of
See also:
alkali manufacture, and various other uses of applied science . The family was greatly impoverished owing to his losses over these schemes, but still possessed a good
See also:
deal of
See also:
interest . By the help of friends Thomas was provided with a commission in an
See also:
infantry regiment, and at the same time put on the books of a man-of-war by his
See also:
uncle, Captain A . F . I . Cochrane (1758-1832), while still a boy . He finally chose the
See also:
navy, and went to sea in his uncle's
See also:
ship, the "
See also:
Hind," in 1793 . He could already count nearly five years' nominal service, an example of those
See also:
naval abuses which he was to denounce (and to profit by) during a large
See also:
part of his career . His promotion was rapid .

He became a

See also:
lieutenant in 1796 . While in that rank he was led by his self-assertive temper into a
See also:
quarrel with his
See also:
superior, Lieutenant Philip Beaver (1766-1813), for which he was sent before a court-martial . A warning to avoid flippancy in future was, however, the worst that happened to him . In 'Soo he was appointed to the command of the " Speedy " brig, a small vessel in which he gained a
See also:
great and deserved reputation as a daring and skilful officer . His capture of the
See also:
Spanish
See also:
frigate " El Gamo " (32) on the 6th of May 18or was indeed a feat of unparalleled audacity . His promotion to
See also:
post rank followed on the 8th of August . Though he was
See also:
apt to represent himself as disliked and neglected by the admiralty, and was frequently insolent towards his superiors, he was, as a
See also:
matter of fact,
See also:
pretty constantly employed, and he more than justified his appointments by his activity and success as captain of the " Pallas " (32) and " Imperieuse " (38) on the ocean and in the Mediterranean . Unfortunately for himself he secured his return to parliament as member for
See also:
Honiton in 1806 and for Westminster in 1807 . In the House of
See also:
Commons he soon made his mark as a radical, and as a denouncer of naval abuses . But his views did not prevent him from profiting to the utmost by one very
See also:
bad abuse, for he did his utmost to secure the retention of his frigate in
See also:
port, in order that he might be able to attend parliament . In spite of his radical opinions he made a furious attack on the admiralty for the new prize
See also:
money regulations which diminished the shares of the captains to the
See also:
advantage of the men . In
See also:
April 1809 he was engaged in the attack on the French
See also:
squadron in the Basque Roads, which was very
See also:
ill
See also:
con-ducted by Lord Gambier .

The conduct of Lord Cochrane, as he was called till the

See also:
death of his
See also:
father, was brilliant and was rewarded by the order of the Bath, but his aggressive temper led him into making attacks on the admiral which necessitated a court-martial on Gambier . The admiral was acquitted, and Cochrane naturally fell into disfavour with the admiralty . He was not employed again till 1813, when he was named to the command of the " Tonnant, " which was ordered for service as
See also:
flagship on the coast of
See also:
America . In the
See also:
interval he was restlessly active in parliament in denouncing naval abuses, and was also, most disastrously for himself, led into speculations on the Stock
See also:
Exchange, by which he was brought at the beginning of 1814 into pressing danger of
See also:
total ruin . At this moment a notorious fraud was perpetrated on the Stock Exchange by an uncle of his and by other persons with whom he habitually acted in his speculations . Lord Cochrane was brought to trial with the others before Lord Ellenborough on the 8th of
See also:
June 1814 and all were condemned . He was sentenced to an
See also:
hour in the pillory, which was remitted, and to
See also:
fine and imprisonment, which were enforced . He continued to assert his innocence, and to protest that he had been unjustly condemned, but he was expelled from parliament and the order of the Bath . He was, however, almost immediately re-elected member for Westminster, but he had to serve his
See also:
term (one
See also:
year) of imprisonment, and, after escaping and being recaptured, he regained his liberty in 1815 on payment of the fine of f
See also:
i000 to which he had been sentenced . In 1817 he accepted the invitation of the Chileans, who werethen in revolt against Spain, to take command of their naval forces, and remaining in their service until 1822 contributed largely to their success . His capture of the Spanish frigate " Esmeralda " (40) in the harbour of
See also:
Callao, on the 5th of November 1820, was an achievement of
See also:
signal daring . In 1823 he transferred his services to Brazil, where he helped the emperor Dom Pedro I. to shake off the yoke of
See also:
Portugal; but by the end of 1825 he had fallen out with the Brazilians, and he returned to
See also:
Europe .

His activity was next devoted to the aid of the Greeks, then at the end of their struggle with the

See also:
Turks, but he found no opportunity for distinguishing himself, and in 1828 he returned home . His efforts were now steadily directed to securing his restoration to the navy, and in this he succeeded in 1832; but though he was granted a "
See also:
free pardon " he failed to obtain the new trial for which he was anxious, or to secure the arrears of pay he claimed.' He was restored to his place in the order of the Bath in 1847 . In 1848 he was appointed to the command of the North
See also:
American and West India station, which he retained till 1851 . At various periods of his
See also:
life he occupied himself with scientific invention . He took out
See also:
patents for lamps to burn oil of
See also:
tar, for the propulsion of
See also:
ships at sea, for facilitating excavation,
See also:
mining and sinking, for rotary steam-engines and for other purposes; and so early as 1843 he was an advocate of the employment of steam and the screw propeller in warships . During the
See also:
Crimean War he revived his " secret war plan " for the total destruction of an enemy's
See also:
fleet, and offered to conduct in person an attack on Sevastopol and destroy it in a few hours without loss to the attacking force . This plan, the details of which have never been divulged, he had proposed so far back as 1811, and the committee which was then appointed to consider it reported on it as effective but inhuman . Lord Dundonald died in
See also:
London on the 3oth of
See also:
October 1860, and was buried in Westminster Abbey . No one ever excelled him in daring and resource as a naval officer, but he suffered from serious defects of character, and even those who think him guiltless of the charge on which he was convicted in 1814 must feel that he had his own imprudence and want of self-command to thank for many of his misfortunes . He was succeeded in the title by his son Thomas as 11th earl (d . 1885), and the latter by his son Douglas (b . 1852) as 12th earl, a distinguished cavalry officer who became a lieutenant-general in 1907 .

The loth earl's Autobiography of a

Seaman (2 vols., 186o-1861), the main source for his Life (1869, by his son and heir), is written with spirit, but it was composed at the end of his career when his memory was failing, and was chiefly executed by others . He also wrote Notes on the
See also:
Mineralogy, Government and Condition of the British West India Islands (1851), and a Narrative of Services in the Liberation of Chili, Peru and Brazil (1858) . The whole story of his trial and of the Stock Exchange fraud for which he was condemned has been examined by Mr J . B . Atlay in The Trial of Lord Cochrane before Lord Ellenborough (1897) .

End of Article: 10TH EARL OF THOMAS COCHRANE DUNDONALD (1775-186o)
[back]
DUNDERLANDSDAL
[next]
DUNEDIN

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.