William Henry Shirreff (1785 - 1 December 1847)[1] was a Royal Navy officer, Captain of the frigate HMS Andromache, HMS Warspite and Gibraltar. He had six children four of whom were daughters. H had two notable daughters, Maria Georgina (Grey) and Emily Anne Eliza Shirreff, who transformed the education of British women to teach. He retired as a rear-admiral of the blue.
Life[]
Shirreff was born in 1785 and he joined the Royal Navy on 1 January 1796.
In 1810 he married Elizabeth Muray, the oldest daughter of the lawyer and Member of Parliament David Murray, a brother of Alexander Murray, 7th Lord Elibank.[1] When patrolling the west coast of South America in protection of the British interests in the region and in support of local independence movement against Spanish authority in the early 19th century. Advised by Captain William Smith about the discovery of the South Shetland Islands in March 1819, later that year Shirreff chartered Smith’s brig, the Williams, sending Lieutenant Edward Bransfield on board with the mission to survey and map the new lands.
From January to November 1830 he was the captain of Admiral Thomas Baker's flagship the 76 gun HMS Warspite. In 1831 her father was appointed to Gibraltar.[2] He and his family lived there until 1834. One of his sons had died in 1829 and the other died whilst they were in Gibraltar.[3]
Shirreff was promoted in 1846 to Rear Admiral of the Blue.[1][4]
Honour[]
Cape Shirreff at the north extremity of Ioannes Paulus II Peninsula on Livingston Island, in the South Shetland Islands is named after William Shirreff.
References[]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 O'Byrne, William Richard (1849). "
Shirreff, William Henry".
A Naval Biographical Dictionary. London: John Murray. Wikisource.
- ↑ Kamm (1971). Indicative Past. pp. 16–17.
- ↑ Philippa Levine, ‘Grey , Maria Georgina (1816–1906)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Oct 2005 accessed 12 Oct 2017
- ↑ Lodge, Edmund (1839). The Peerage of the British Empire as at Present Existing. Saunders and Otley. p. 196. https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=eITUAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA196.
Sources[]
- Alan Gurney, Below the Convergence: Voyages Toward Antarctica, 1699-1839, Penguin Books, New York, 1998
The original article can be found at William Henry Shirreff and the edit history here.