Online Encyclopedia

BART SIR HYDE PARKER

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 827 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BART
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SIR HYDE PARKER
  . (1714-1782),
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British
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vice-
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admiral, was born at Tredington, Worcestershire, on the 25th of
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February, 1714, his
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father, a clergyman, being a son of
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Sir Henry Parker, Bart . His paternal grandfather had married a daughter of Bishop Alexander Hyde, of Salisbury . He began his career at sea in the merchant service . Entering the royal
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navy at the age of twenty-four, he was made
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lieutenant in 1744, and in 1748 he was made
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post-captain . During the latter
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part of the Seven Years' War he served in the East Indies, taking part in the capture of
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Pondicherry (1761) and of
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Manila (1762) . In the latter
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year Parker with two
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ships captured one of the valuable
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Spanish
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plate ships in her voyage between Acapulco and Manila . In 1778 he became
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rear-admiral, and went to North
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American waters as second-in-command . For some time before Rodney's arrival he was in command on the Leeward Islands station, and conducted a skilful
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campaign against the French at
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Martinique . In 1781, having returned home and become vice-admiral, he fell in with a Dutch
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fleet of about his own force, though far better equipped, near the Dogger
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Bank (Aug . 5) . After a fiercely contested
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battle, in which neither combatant gained any
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advantage, both sides drew off .

Parker considered that he had not been properly equipped for his task, and insisted on resigning his command . In 1782 he accepted the East Indies command, though he had just succeeded to the

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family baronetcy . On the outward voyage his
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flagship, the " Cato " (co), was lost with all on board . His second son, Admiral SIR HYDE PARKER (1739-1807), entered the navy at an early age, and became lieutenant in 1758, having passed most of his early service in his father's ships . Five years later he became a post-captain, and from 1766 onwards for many years he served in the West Indies and in North American waters, particularly distinguishing himself in breaking the defences of the North
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river (New York) in 1776 . His services on this occasion earned him a
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knighthood in 1779 . In 1778 he was engaged in the
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Savannah expedition, and in the following year his
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ship was wrecked on the hostile Cuban coast . His men, however, entrenched themselves, and were in the end brought off safely . Parker was with his father at the Dogger Bank, and with Howe in the t co actions in the Straits of
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Gibraltar . In 1743, having just become rear-admiral, he served under Lord Hood at
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Toulon and in Corsica, and two years later, now a vice-admiral, he took part, under Hotham, in the indecisive fleet actions of the 13th of March and the 13th of
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July 1795 . From 1796 to 'Soo he was in command at
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Jamaica and ably conducted the operations in the West Indies . In 18o1 he was appointed to command the fleet destined to break up the
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northern armed
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neutrality, with Nelson as his second-in-command .

Copenhagen, the first objective of the expedition, fell on the 2nd of
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April to the fierce attack of Nelson's
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squadron, Parker with the heavier ships taking little part . Subsequently Parker hesitated to advance up the Baltic after his victory, a decision which was severely criticised . Soon after-wards he was recalled and Nelson succeeded him . He died in 1807 . The family name was continued in the navy in his eldest son, who became vice-admiral and was First Sea Lord of the Admiralty in 1853 (dying in 1854); and also in that son's son, who as a captain in the Black Sea was killed in 1854 when storming a
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Russian fort .

End of Article: BART SIR HYDE PARKER
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SIR GILBERT PARKER (1862— )
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THEODORE PARKER (1810-186o)

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