|
Date: |
|
Description: | Oval miniature in tempera on ivory in a rectangular moulded wooden frame, partly gilded and with a gilded oval window mount. It has an accompanying black leather case with an integral stand. The sitter is a young man, shown head and shoulders, slightly turned to his left but facing out to the viewer, against a background of a landscape horizon (to the right) and sky. He has grey eyes and curly mouse-brown hair centrally parted, and wears the uniform of a lieutenant in the Honourable East India Company marine service (the Bombay Marine, later Indian Navy), with a single epaulette on the right shoulder.
Hawkins was born on 6 April 1798 in St James's, Westminster, London, the sixth child (of ten) and second son (of five) of Samuel Hawkins, a solicitor, and his wife Sarah (nee Calland). He attended Midhurst School, Findon, West Sussex (where the family partly lived) and on 14 October 1811 entered the Royal Navy. He served as a midshipman in the 'Denmark' but caught typhus and, after recovering, transferred to the East India marine service as a midshipman on 20 October 1812. In this he became a lieutenant on 23 May 1824 and proved a very effective officer, eventually receiving the thanks of the British government twice and that of the Bombay ministry seven times.
In 1829 commanding the Company vessel 'Clive' he visited the Persian Gulf, and the Museum has a scimitar presented to him by the Imaum of Muscat for his efforts in saving the town from fire that year (WPN1116). In 1830, in a sensational court-martial, he was found guilty on a technical charge of piracy and sentenced to seven years transportation, but received a Royal Pardon and on 21 May 1831 was promoted to commander. In this rank, in 1838, he conducted a survey of the River Euphrates.
He was promoted to captain on 21 January 1839, serving as Commodore in the Persian Gulf , 1845-47, and from August 1848 to 27 January 1849 was Acting Superintendent and Commander-in-Chief of the Indian Navy. On 25 August 1851 he died prematurely in a carriage accident when he was 'thrown out of his curricle and killed on the spot near his house in Colaba, Bombay' (Boase, 'Modern English Biography', vol.1, p. 1339). He appears to have been unmarried and to have been buried at St Thomas's Church, Bombay.
The previous Museum record states this item shows Hawkins aged 30 in 1822, without being clear why. Since it shows him as a lieutenant it must be from no earlier than 1824 and , if aged 30, about 1828. Hayter, the miniaturist (1761-1835), largely practised in London and it must have been painted in England. The Museum also has a later oil portrait of Hawkins (BHC2756) from a different source.
AUDIT: Has a case that needs a part.
AUDIT: Requires marking
caption: Captain John Croft Hawkins, 1798 - 1851 - front | Publisher: | "http://collections.rmg.co.uk/" | Rights holder: | "Royal Museums Greenwich" | Subjects: | John Croft miniatures (medals) Hawkins | Source: | Royal Museums Greenwich | Identifier: | http://collections.rmg.co.uk/collections... | Go to resource |
|
More Like this...
-
Scimitar
Scimitar, which belonged to Captain…
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Scabbard
Scabbard for scimitar, which belonged…
|