Robert Henderson (Royal Navy officer)

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Robert Henderson
Born1778
Invasion of Île de France

Rear-Admiral Robert Henderson (1778 – 14 June 1843) was an officer of the British

Invasion of Île de France
and was awarded a pension for his service which he retained until he became a retired admiral in 1838. He died in 1843.

Military career

Henderson was born in 1778, the son of prominent naval officer Captain William Henderson of

Forfarshire. Educated at Marischal College, Henderson followed his father into the British Royal Navy in 1792 as a midshipman in HMS Southampton shortly before the outbreak of the French Revolutionary Wars. Serving during the war, Henderson became a lieutenant in 1799 aboard the sloop HMS Osprey and was still aboard her during the successful invasion of Saint Lucia in 1803.[1] Later in the year, Osprey attacked a schooner off Trinidad and Henderson, who led the boarding party, was very seriously wounded. The following year, still on Osprey, Henderson led another boarding party that captured the French privateer Resource off Trinidad. For this service, Henderson was awarded a sword by the Lloyd's Patriotic Fund of London and moved to the ship of the line HMS Centaur.[1]

Centaur was part of the fleet that captured the Dutch colony of

post captain in 1805. From 1805 to 1806 he was in charge of HMS Pheasant
.

In 1810 he took command of the newly captured

Invasion of Île de France, which was successfully concluded on 3 December 1810. Henderson retired at the end of the war to his native Aberdeen but remained on the naval retired list, obtaining promotion to rear-admiral on 28 June 1838. He died in January 1843 aged 65.[1]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Gentleman's Magazine, January to June 1843, p. 429

References

  • "Obituary, Rear-Admiral Robert Henderson". Gentleman's Magazine, January to June, 1843, p. 429, retrieved 1 January 2009. 1843.