List of Cornish soldiers, commanders and sailors
This is a list of Cornish people who were notable soldiers or seamen.
Army and Air Force officers and other ranks
- Captain Thomas Agar-Robartes, British Army officer and MP
- Colonel James Carne VC DSO, British Army officer
- John Gilbert "Jack" Cock DCM MM, soldier and footballer
- Robert Davies, Lieutenant of the Royal Engineers awarded the G.C. for bomb-disposal in 1940 saving St. Paul's Cathedral.
- John Enys, British soldier during the American Revolution.
- James Fynn VC, British soldier
- Captain Albert Jacka VC, MC and Bar, the first Australian to win the VC at Gallipoli (his family migrated to Victoria from St Buryan)
- Rick Rescorla, U.S. war hero and 9/11 victim (1939–2001)
- Sergeant Steven Roberts, the first soldier to die in the invasion of Iraq
- Captain George Symons VC, DCM, artillery officer
- Sir John Trelawny, 1st Baronet, soldier in the English Civil War
- Arthur Tremayne, soldier in the Crimean War
- Captain Robert Walling, Royal Garrison Artillery
- Lieutenant-Colonel James Howard Williams, also known as Elephant Bill, British Army officer and elephant expert
- Airmen
- Wing Commander Guy Gibson of The Dambusters.
- Air Commodore John Grigson DSO, DFC, Royal Air Force
- Charles Reep, airman and inventor of the long ball in soccer
- Nigel Tangye, airman, author and hotelier at Newquay[1][2]
- Geoffrey Wellum, DFC, fighter pilot and author
Commanders
- Sir John Arundell, Cornish Royalist commander
- Colonel Edward Bolitho, British Army officer
- Major-General Charles Edward-Collins, British Indian Army officer.[3]
- Sir Walter Gilbert, 1st Baronet, general
- Bevil Grenville, Cornish Royalist commander
- Sir Richard Grenville, 1st Baronet (or Granville) (1600–1658), Cornish Royalist leader during the English Civil War
- Philip Melvill, Governor of Pendennis Castle, Falmouth
- William Scawen, Royalist commander in the English Civil War
- Richard Trant (d. 2007), general in the British army
- John Trevanion, Cornish Royalist commander
- John Johns Trigg, officer in the Virginia militia, American Civil War
- Stephen Trigg, brother of John, politician and officer in the Virginia militia, American Civil War
- David Tyacke, GOC Singapore District, last Commanding Officer of the DCLI
- James Howard Williams (Elephant Bill), lieutenant-colonel in the British Indian Army
Seamen
- John Eliot, captain in the Royal Navy and Governor of West Florida
- James Erisey, privateer
- Captain William Hennah, RN
- Robert Peverell Hichens, DSO, DSC, lieutenant commander, RNVR
- William Hicks, Lieut. RN
- Sir Edward Nicholl, commander, RNR
- William Odgers, VC, sailor in New Zealand
- Ernest Herbert Pitcher, VC, petty officer in the Royal Navy
- Spry family, of St Anthony in Roseland: several members of the family were commanders in the Royal Navy
- Walter Tremenheere KH (1761-1855), colonel of marines[4]
- James Trevenen, captain in the Russian Navy
- Joseph Trewavas, VC, seaman in the Royal Navy
- Mark Versallion, lieutenant, RNR
- Charles Bampfield Yule, lieutenant, RN
Admirals
- Sir John Arundell of Lanherne alias John Fitzalan, 1st Baron Arundel (died 1379), naval commander and Lord Marshal of England
- Sir John Arundell, admiral, known as 'Jack of Tilbury'
- William Bligh, captain of HMS Bounty, botanist, governor of New South Wales, Royal Navy admiral
- Edward Boscawen, Royal Navy admiral
- Sir Frederick Edward-Collins, Admiral RN; Acting Governor and Commander in Chief of the Fortress of Gibraltar
- Sir Frank Hopkins, Royal Navy Admiral, a former captain of the aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal
- Edward Pellew, 1st Viscount Exmouth, Royal Navy admiral
- Admiral Barrington Reynolds, RN, notable for an anti-slavery expedition
- Rear-Admiral Robert Carthew Reynolds, RN[5]
- Sir Bartholomew Sulivan, Royal Navy admiral and hydrographer
- Rear-Admiral Thomas Ball Sulivan, Royal Navy officer
- Richard Darton Thomas, Royal Navy admiral
- Sir John Forster "Sandy" Woodward, Royal Navy admiral
See also
- Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry officers
- Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry soldiers
References
- ↑ Teach Yourself To Fly; by Squadron Leader Nigel Tangye, R.A.F.O. (1941) (Reprinted by Hodder, 2008; ISBN 978-0-340-96614-3)
- ↑ Tangye began his service career in the Royal Navy.
- ↑ Who Was Who
- ↑ The Dictionary of National Biography; the Concise Dictionary from the beginnings to 1930. London: Oxford University Press, 1939; p. 1313
- ↑ Reynolds, Robert Carthew, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, J. K. Laughton, Retrieved 29 March 2008
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