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Robert Elliot (Royal Navy officer)

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Robert James Elliott (born 12 May 1790 Wheldrake, Yorkshire – died Pentonville, London 30 April 1849)[1] (fl. 1822–1833), was an English naval officer, Captain in the Royal Navy, and known as a topographical draughtsman from 1822 to 1824.

Engraved view of the town and roads of Singapore from government hill, from an Elliot sketch

Biography

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Elliot (Elliott) was the son of the Reverend Robert Elliot and Mary. His father was a younger brother of Gilbert Elliot-Murray-Kynynmound, 1st Earl of Minto, the Governor-General of India between 1807 and 1813.[2] His cousin, Minto's son, George served during the same period.[3]

He entered the Royal Navy as a Cadet in 1802, and served his country with honour during the Napoleonic War. His name appeared in the London Gazette in 1807, and he was made a lieutenant for his gallantry in charge of the boats of the Fox, in 1808 when he was severely wounded in trying to cut out a ship from Batavia Roads.[4][5]

Promoted to Lieutenant in 1808, and from then to 1814 he served in the East Indies. He was made Commander on 27 August 1814.[6] From 1822 to 1824 he was in command of a vessel that toured India, Canton, and the Red Sea during this period he made numerous on the spot sketches.

When in London on retirement, he busied himself with charity work for benefiting sailors, and support for a sailors' home.[7] The Sailors' Home, Well-street, was originally founded in 1828 by Captain R. J. Elliot, R.N., Admiral G. C. Gambier, and Lieut. R. Justice, R.N., who, in the previous year, had successfully started the Destitute Sailors' Asylum; the destruction of the Brunswick Theatre in Well-street affording the opportunity for carrying out the scheme. Up to that time nothing had been done for the protection of seamen.[8]

Loculus of Robert Elliot in the Terrace Catecombs of Highgate Cemetery

In 1846 he was awarded the commander's out pension of Greenwich Hospital. He died at Pentonville on 30 April 1849 and was interred in the Terrace Catacombs of Highgate Cemetery.[9]

Some of the sketches he had made on his travels were published under the title View in the East in 1833. In that edition, the letterpress descriptions were drawn from a variety of published works, including Amelia Heber's posthumous edition of Reginald Heber's Narrative of a Journey through the Upper Provinces of India (1828). In the 1835 edition, the publishers Fisher & Co. commissioned Emma Roberts to write new letterpress.

These sketches were worked up by Samuel Prout, Clarkson Stanfield, and others into finished drawings and consequently engraved; they were published in parts by Fisher & Co., appearing 1830–1833, under the title, Views in the East, comprising India, Canton, and the Red Sea, with Historical and Descriptive Letterpress by Emma Roberts.[10]

Views in India, China, and on the Shores of the Red Sea was published in 1835.

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References

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  1. ^ Peach, Annette. "Robert James Elliott - British Travel Writing". University of Wolverhampton. Retrieved 30 September 2020.
  2. ^ Peach, Annette (2004). "Elliot, Robert James". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/8669. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. Retrieved 4 October 2020. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  3. ^ "HMS Modeste". National Maritime Museum. November 1814. Retrieved 5 October 2020. Elliot painted HMS Modeste - going free...Nov 1814; his cousins ship
  4. ^ "Naval Intelligence". Edinburgh, Scotland: The Caledonian Mercury. 24 September 1846. p. 4. Retrieved 5 October 2020. Commander Robert James Elliot (1814)
  5. ^ Haultain, Charles; Allen (of Greenwich Hospital), Joseph (1842). The New Navy List. Simpkin, Marshall and Co. p. 157. 54 R. J. Elliot, commanded the boats of the Fox, in a gallant but unsuccessful attempt to cut out a ship from Batavia Roads in 1808, in which he was severely wounded
  6. ^ Marshall, John (1833–1835). "Elliot, Robert James" . Royal Naval Biography. Vol. 4, part 52.5.4. London: Longman and company. p. 339.
  7. ^ "Robert James Elliot, died 1849". St George-in-the-East Church. Archived from the original on 25 February 2020. Retrieved 4 October 2020. Charles Besley Gribble, the first minister of St Paul Dock Street and chaplain to the institutions, wrote The Naval Officer: a new creature in Christ Jesus, exemplified in the living and dying of Captain Robert James Elliot, R.N. (Nisbet 1849).
  8. ^ Dickens Jr., Charles (1881). Dickens's Dictionary of the Thames. Retrieved 6 October 2020. The new establishment, when finally completed in 1835,
  9. ^ "Sailors' Home, Well-street, London Docks (now Ensign Street)". The Standard. London. 7 September 1850. p. 1. Retrieved 6 October 2020. Sailors' Home, Well-street, London Docks. A marble bust of the late Captain Robert James Elliot, R.N., has recently been placed by his friend, in the dining hall of this institution, and a handsome tablet to his memory has also been erected in St. Paul's, the seamen's church, in Dock-street. Deeplv imbued with a sense of the evils which beset the social condition of the seaman during his sojourning on shore, more fearful than the direst perils of the great deep, he devoted his time, bis energies, and bis substance to their removal. The Sailors' Home and the Destitute Sailors' Asylum were founded through his exertions, and remain the memorial, of his unremitting and anxious care. The last labour of love in which declining health permitted him to share was the erection of this church to the honour and glory of God for the seaman', special use.
  10. ^  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainCust, Lionel (1889). "Elliot, Robert". Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 17. p. 262.
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