Page:Royal Naval Biography Marshall v4p2.djvu/328

This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
306
commanders.

Aug. 1828; and is now serving under Captain Edward Sparshott, flag-ship of the Hon. Sir T. B. Capel, on the East India station.



JOHN CHAMBERLAYNE, Esq.
[Commander.]

Was made lieutenant into the Weazel sloop, Captain (now the Hon.) Frederick Noel, on the Mediterranean station, Jan. 11th, 1814. He obtained his present rank on the 28th Aug. 1828.



JOHN FREDERICK APPLEBY, Esq.
[Commander.]

Son of Mr. John Appleby, a respectable yeoman, of Soberton, in Hampshire.

This officer was born at Soberton, and entered the royal navy in the beginning of 1S05, at an early age, as midshipman on board the Queen 98, bearing the flag of Rear-Admiral (afterwards Sir John) Knight, then about to sail for Gibraltar, but destined to form part of the squadron under Lord Collingwood, employed in the blockade of Cadiz. He subsequently served under Vice-Admiral Sir Charles Cotton, second in command of the Channel fleet; and in the Minstrel sloop, on the Mediterranean station. In 1811, here-joined Sir Charles Cotton’s flag ship, the San Josef 110, and returned with that officer to England. In June 1812, he passed his examination at Portsmouth; and in Jan. 1813, was appointed acting lieutenant of the Bristol 64, armed en flûte, Captain George Wyndham, in which ship he was present at the siege of Tarragona, by the military and naval forces under Lieutenant-General Sir John Murray and the late Vice-Admiral Sir Benjamin H. Carew. In 1814, we find him proceeding to Halifax, as midshipman on board the Akbar frigate. Captain Archibald Dickson, under whose successor. Captain Charles Bullen, by whom he was strongly recommended for promotion, he continued to serve until ad-