:''This article is about the 18th century vice-admiral. For the 17th century Royalist, see
John Byron, 1st Baron Byron.''
Vice-Admiral The Honourable 'John Byron'
RN (
November 8,
1723 –
April 10,
1786) was a
British vice-admiral. He was known as ''Foul-weather Jack'' because of his frequent bad luck with the
weather.
Byron was the second son of the 4th
Baron Byron. He joined the navy at a young age, accompanying
Baron Anson on his
circumnavigation as a midshipman. Byron's ship, HMS ''Wager'', was shipwrecked on the coast of
Patagonia, and the survivors decided to split in two teams, one to make its way by boat to
Rio de Janeiro, the other, John Byron's, to sail North and meet Spaniards. He wrote of his adventures in ''The Narrative of the Honourable John Byron'', which sold well enough to appear in several editions. These experiences form the basis of the
novel ''
The Unknown Shore'' by
Patrick O'Brian, which closely follows Byron's own account.
In
1760 he was in command of a squadron sent to destroy the fortifications at
Louisbourg. In July of that year he defeated the French flotilla sent to relieve
New France at the
Battle of Restigouche.
Between June 1764 and May 1766 Byron completed his own circumnavigation as captain of
HMS ''Dolphin''. In 1765 he took possession of the
Falkland Islands on the part of Britain on the ground of prior discovery, and his doing so was
nearly the cause of a war between
Great Britain and
Spain, both countries having armed fleets to contest the sovereignty of the barren islands. On this voyage, Byron discovered islands of the
Tuamotus,
Tokelau and the
Gilbert Islands, and visited
Tinian in the
Northern Marianas Islands.
In
1769 he was appointed governor of
Newfoundland. He was made Commander-in-chief of the British fleet in the
West Indies in
1778 and
1779 during the
American War of Independence. He unsuccessfully attacked a
French fleet under the
Comte d'Estaing at the
Battle of Grenada in July 1779.
He was the father of John ''Mad Jack'' Byron, who in turn fathered the poet
Lord Byron.
See also
★
Governors of Newfoundland
★
List of people of Newfoundland and Labrador
★
Cape Byron in Australia, named after Byron
External links
★
Biography at Government House ''The Governorship of Newfoundland and Labrador''
★
Ships of the World: An Historical Encyclopedia - HMS ''Dolphin''