Robert Merrick Fowler

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Vice-Admiral
Commands heldHMS Porpoise
Sea Fencibles in Ireland
HMS Crocus
HMS Charybdis
HMS Nyaden
HMS Conqueror
Battles/wars

HMS Investigator from 1801 to 1803 and for his involvement in Battle of Pulo Aura
in 1804.

Career

Fowler, born 1778 at

Horncastle, Lincolnshire, England joined the Royal Navy in May 1793 as a volunteer. He served as midshipman on Royal William and was promoted to lieutenant in February 1800.[1]

He was posted to HMS Xenophon (later Investigator) as first lieutenant and second-in-command to Flinders during the years 1801–03. He was subsequently appointed to command HMS Porpoise which was wrecked off what is now Queensland on the homeward voyage during August 1803. Fowler was exonerated for the responsibility for the shipwreck at court-martial in 1804.[2][3]

In 1804, Fowler and other survivors of the Porpoise joined a British fleet in

Pulau Aur in what is now Malaysia. As an acknowledgement of his contribution, Fowler received a sword from Lloyd's Patriotic Fund.[4]

Fowler was promoted to

vice-admiral on the Retired List in 1858.[7]

Fowler retired to Walliscote House at Whitchurch-on-Thames in Oxfordshire and died in 1860. He was remembered by Flinders in 1802 in the naming of the following geographical places in South Australia: Fowlers Bay and Point Fowler.[8]

Battle of Pulo Aura - A small group of large ships on the left engages a line of ships on the right, which is protecting several smaller ships. Clouds of smoke hang over the fight as the ships fire their cannons.

Notes

  1. ^ Brown (2000), p.489
  2. ^ Flinders (1966) [1814], p. 154
  3. ^ Brown (2000), p.489
  4. ^ Brown (2000), p.489
  5. ^ Brown (2000), p.489
  6. ^ "Naval Promotions". The Sydney Morning Herald. 16 February 1847. p. 2. Retrieved 15 February 2014.
  7. ^ "No. 22140". The London Gazette. 19 May 1858. p. 2454.
  8. ^ Brown, Anthony (2007). "The Tangled Fortunes of War: The story of Robert Fowler and Pierre Bernard Milius". Australian Heritage. pp. 34–40. Retrieved 15 February 2014.

See also

References