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POST-CAPTAINS OF 1802.


LENOX THOMPSON, Esq
[Post-Captain of 1802.]

This officer was made a Lieutenant, Feb. 19, 1780; and obtained the rank of Commander, March 30, 1799. His post commission bears date Jan. 15, 1802.

Agent.– ___



CHARLES FEILDING, Esq
[Post-Captain of 1802.]

This officer is descended in the paternal line, from the Earls of Hapsburgh, in Germany, who were Counts Palatine in the reign of Henry I. His father, the late Commodore Charles Feilding, was a grandson of Basil, 4th Earl of Denbigh; and his mother, a sister of George, the present Earl of Winchelsea and Nottingham.

Captain Feilding was posted in the West Indies, Jan. 15, 1802; returned to England in the Andromeda frigate, on the 24th Sept. following; and subsequently commanded the Circe of 28 guns, which ship was wrecked on the Lemon and Ower, whilst in chase of an enemy, Nov. 16, 1803. His next appointment was to the Sea Fencibles at Queenborough; and we afterwards find him in the Revolutionnaire frigate.

He married, April 24, 1804, Lady Elizabeth Theresa, eldest child of Henry, 2d Earl of Ilchester, relict of William Davenport Talbot, Esq., of Laycock Abbey, Wiltshire; and sister of the Marchioness of Lansdowne.

Agent.– Thomas Stilwell, Esq.



THOMAS GEORGE SHORTLAND, Esq
[Post-Captain of 1802.]

This officer is the only surviving son of Captain John Shortland, R.N., who died at Lisle in 1803. He was born at Portsea, May 10, 1771; entered the naval service as a Midshipman, on board the Irresistible 74, bearing the broad pendant of Sir Andrew Snape Hamond, in Jan. 1785; and removed into the Alexander store-ship, commanded by his father, in Mar. 1787.

On the 13th May following, the Alexander sailed from the