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SHERARD OSBORN (1822—1875)

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Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 344 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SHERARD

OSBORN (1822—1875)  ,
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English
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admiral and Arctic explorer, the son of an
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Indian army officer, was born on the 25th of
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April 1822 . Entering the
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navy as a first-class volunteer in 1837, he was entrusted in 1838 with the command of a gunboat at the attack on Kedah in the
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Malay Peninsula, and was
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present at the reduction of Canton in 1841, and at the capture of the batteries of Woosung in 1842 . From 1844 till 1848 he was gunnery mate and
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lieutenant in the flag-
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ship of
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Sir George Seymour in the Pacific . He took a prominent
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part in 1849 in advocatinga new search expedition for Sir John Franklin, and in 1850 was appointed to the command of the steam-
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tender "
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Pioneer " in the Arctic expedition under Captain Austin, in the course of which he performed (1851) a remarkable sledge-journey to the western extremity of Prince of Wales Island . He published an account of this voyage, entitled Stray Leaves from an Arctic Journal (1852), and was promoted to the rank of
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commander shortly afterwards . In the new expedition (1852—1854) under Sir
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Edward Belcher he again took part as commander of the " Pioneer." In 1856 he published the
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journals of Captain Robert M'Clure, giving a narrative of the
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discovery of the North-West Passage . Early in 1855 he was called to active service in connexion with the
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Crimean War, and being promoted to
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post-rank in August of that
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year was appointed to the "
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Medusa," in which he commanded the Sea of Azoff
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squadron until the conclusion of the war . For these services he received the C.B., the
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Cross of the Legion of Honour, and the Medjidie of the
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fourth class . As commander of the " Furious " he took a prominent part in the operations of the second Chinese War, and performed a piece of difficult and intricate navigation in taking his ship 600 m. up the Yangtse-kiang to Hankow (1858) . He returned to England in broken
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health in 1859, and at this time contributed a number of articles on
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naval and Chinese topics to Blackwood's
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Magazine, and wrote The Career, Last Voyage and
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Fate of Sir John Franklin (1860) . In 1861 he commanded the "
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Donegal" in the Gulf of Mexico during the trouble there, and in 1862 undertook the command of a squadron fitted out by the Chinese government for the suppression of piracy on the coast of
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China; but owing to the non-fulfilment of the condition that he should receive orders from the imperial government only, he threw up the appointment . In 1864 he was appointed to the command of the " Royal
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Sovereign " in order to test the turret
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system of ship-
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building, to which this vessel had been adapted .

In 1865 he became

agent to the
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Great Indian Peninsula Railway
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Company, and two years later managing di-rector of the Telegraph Construction and Maintenance Company . In 1873 he attained flag-rank . His
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interest in Arctic exploration had never ceased, and in 1873 he induced Commander Albert Markham to undertake a summer voyage for the purpose of testing the conditions of ice-navigation with the aid of steam, with the result that a new Arctic expedition, under Sir George Nares, was determined upon . He was a member of the committee which made the preparations for this expedition, and died a few days after it had sailed .

End of Article: SHERARD OSBORN (1822—1875)
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