John Ford (Royal Navy officer)

John Ford
Died 1796
Allegiance  Kingdom of Great Britain
Service/branch  Royal Navy
Rank Vice-Admiral
Commands held Unicorn
Brilliant
Nymphe
Jamaica Station
Battles/wars American Revolutionary War
Anglo-French War

Vice-Admiral John Ford (died 1796) was a Royal Navy officer who served as Commander-in-Chief of the Jamaica Station.

Naval career

Promoted to post-captain on 25 June 1773, Ford was appointed to the command of the post ship Unicorn in April 1776 in which he saw action at the capture of American frigate Raleigh in September 1778 and the action in Cancale Bay in May 1779. He commissioned the sixth-rate Brilliant in July 1779 and then transferred to the command of fifth-rate Nymphe in which he saw action at the Battle of the Chesapeake in September 1781 during the American Revolutionary War and again at the Battle of the Saintes in April 1782 during the Anglo-French War.[1]

Ford went on to become Commander-in-Chief of the Jamaica Station with his flag in the fourth-rate Europa in 1793.[2] At the request of French Royalists he mounted a campaign against Saint-Domingue and Jérémie in the Caribbean.[3] Ford sent the frigates Penelope, Iphigenia, and Hermione, plus the schooner Spitfire, to the north side of the island where on 23 September 1793 the British captured four merchant vessels at L'Islet, and on the 29th seven at Flamande Bay. Also on the 23rd, the squadron directly under Ford captured Môle-Saint-Nicolas, where they captured amongst other vessels a schooner belonging to the French Navy named Convention Nationale; the British took her into service under her earlier name as HMS Marie Antoinette.[4]

Promoted to rear-admiral, Ford commanded a squadron commanded that accompanied Brigadier-General John Whyte that briefly captured Port-au-Prince in 1794. At the time some forty five vessels lay in harbour and these were all made prizes.[5]

References

  1. "John Ford". Three Decks. Retrieved 11 October 2015.
  2. Cundall, p. xx
  3. The Royal Navy. A History from the Earliest Times to 1900, William Clowes, Volume 4, p. 214
  4. Ships of the Royal Navy, Colledge, p.216
  5. The London Gazette: no. 13684. pp. 723–725. 17 July 1794. Retrieved 8 July 2010.

Sources

Military offices
Preceded by
Philip Affleck
Commander-in-Chief, Jamaica Station
1793–1795
Succeeded by
William Parker
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