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Sir Richard King, 2nd Baronet : ウィキペディア英語版
Sir Richard King, 2nd Baronet

Vice Admiral Sir Richard King, 2nd Baronet KCB (28 November 1774 – 5 August 1834) was an officer in the Royal Navy during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, who fought with distinction at the battle of Trafalgar despite being amongst the youngest captains present.
==Naval career==
King was the son of Sir Richard King, 1st Baronet, a wealthy and high-ranking member of the Navy. King was placed on board ship at fourteen thanks to the influence of his father and made Post Captain〔Promoted to:-
*Lieutenant 14 November 1791
*Commander 1793
*Captain 14 May 1794

just six years later, an achievement made possible by his father's rank of admiral. Normally an officer would be waiting double or triple that time before gaining such a prestigious rank. Nonetheless, King was no incompetent, and proved his worth as captain of HMS ''Sirius'', capturing four enemy privateers whilst in command, as well as sitting on the navy board which condemned Richard Parker to death for his part in the Nore mutiny in 1797. At the Action of 24 October 1798, King captured two Dutch ships. In 1801 he captured a French frigate, and was rewarded with command of the large 74 gun ship of the line HMS ''Achille''.
A month before the battle of Trafalgar, sensing that there was glory to be won in the coming operations off Cadiz, King used his influence with his father in law, Admiral Sir John Duckworth, to persuade Nelson to give him a position in the blockading fleet. Since his reputation was good, Nelson endorsed the move and King joined just in time to catch the combined fleet off Trafalgar on 21 October 1805.〔(Sir Richard King at Oxford Dictionary of National Biography )〕 The seventh ship in Collingwood's division, ''Achille'' was heavily engaged, chasing off the Spanish ''Montanez'' and the battling alongside HMS ''Belleisle'' with the ''Argonauta''. Whilst chasing this ship through the melee, ''Achille'' was cut off by her namesake, the French ''Achille'', with whom she began a savage cannonade until joined by the French ship , whom ''Achille'' turned her attention on. An hour of savage fighting forced the French craft to eventually surrender, but at the cost of 13 dead and 59 wounded, severe losses in comparison with most of the British fleet.
King was, along with the other captains, voted many honours following the battle, and unlike several of his compatriots retained his command at sea, being engaged the following year in the action against a French frigate squadron in an action in which Sir Samuel Hood lost an arm. The same year he inherited his fathers baronetcy 〔November 1806〕 and transferred to the Mediterranean, where in 1812 he made the jump to Rear-Admiral〔Rear Admiral of the Blue 12 August 1812, of the White 4 June 1814, of the Red 12 August 1819〕 and second in command to Edward Pellew. He was appointed KCB on 2 January 1815 and served as commander-in-chief on the East Indies Station from 1816.〔 Continuing in service postwar in 1819 as a Vice-Admiral 〔Vice Admiral of the Blue 19 July 1821, of the White 27 May 1825, of the Red 22 July 1830〕 and Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath,〔2 January 1815〕 King served as commander in chief in the East Indies and also remarried following his first wife's death to the daughter of Admiral Sir Charles Cotton, Maria Susannah. As Commander-in-Chief, The Nore from 1833 after an eventful life, King continued his successful career past the age many of his contemporaries retired at. Such devotion to duty often has a price, and King died in office in 1834 whilst at Sheerness from a sudden outbreak of cholera. He was buried nearby,〔(All Saints’ Church, Eastchurch, Isle of Sheppey )〕 survived by twelve children and his second wife.

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