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James Young (Royal Navy officer, born 1762)
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James Young (Royal Navy officer, born 1762) : ウィキペディア英語版
James Young (Royal Navy officer, born 1762)

James Young (1762 – 8 March 1833) was an officer of the Royal Navy who saw service during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, rising to the rank of vice-admiral of the white.
Young was born in 1762, the son of a naval officer. He followed his father, and an older half-brother, into the navy and was promoted to commander early in the French Revolutionary Wars while serving in the West Indies with Sir John Jervis. His first command was a fireship, though he was also temporary commander of a 74-gun warship, before being promoted to post captain and given a frigate. He was successful in cruising against privateers, and was given another ship, in which in late 1799, he was involved in the chase of two Spanish frigates, capturing one of them. They were found to be transporting valuable cargoes from the Spanish colonies, and their capture made the captains involved extremely wealthy men, with their crews also receiving huge sums of money comparative to their usual wages.
Young commanded a frigate in the Mediterranean for the rest of the French Revolutionary Wars, paying her off at the peace. He did not immediately return to service with the outbreak of the Napoleonic Wars, and it was not until 1807 that he commissioned a 74-gun ship and joined the expedition to Copenhagen. Promoted to flag rank towards the end of the Napoleonic Wars, Young was further advanced to vice-admiral in 1830, and died three years later with the rank of vice-admiral of the white.
== Family and first commands ==
James Young was born into a naval family in 1762, the son of the naval officer James Young, who would become an admiral, and his second wife Sophia. William, his half-brother by his father's first marriage to Elizabeth Bolton, also embarked on a naval career and rose to be Vice-Admiral of the United Kingdom, with the rank of admiral of the red. James Young followed his father and brother into the navy, and after several years of service, was promoted to commander in 1794, shortly after the start of the French Revolutionary Wars, by Sir John Jervis. He had been serving with Jervis in the West Indies prior to this, and on returning to Britain aboard ''Reprisal'', was given command of the fireship . Young briefly served as acting-commander of the 74-gun from June 1795, after her previous captain, Christopher Mason, had been promoted to rear-admiral.〔 Young went out to the Mediterranean, before returning to resume command of ''Comet''. He was promoted to post captain on 5 October 1795.〔
Young was given command of the 32-gun in 1796 and cruised in the North Sea, and then in the English Channel, where he was particularly successfully against privateers, capturing the 16-gun ''Aventure'' off Cape Barfleur at 4.am on 19 December 1796 and ''Tartane'' off Beachy Head at 7.am on 18 February 1797.〔 ''Aventure'' was a privateer brig carrying sixteen 4-pounder guns and a crew of 62 men, under the command of Citizen Peltier. She was two days out of Calais on her first cruise and had not captured any prizes. ''Tartane'' was also a brig, mounting sixteen 4-pounder guns and carrying 60 men, on a cruise from Dieppe. She had not taken any prizes, and in his report on the capture, Young paid tribute to Captain Cheshire of the 18-gun sloop , who having seen the chase, manoeuvred to cut off ''Tartane''s escape. Young commanded ''Greyhound'' until March 1797, when he took command of the 32-gun .

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