O'Byrnes 1849 'Naval Biographical Dictionary'
O'Byrnes 1849 'Naval Biographical Dictionary'


Royal NavyO'Byrne

The following is the entry for James Ward Tomlinson in William O'Byrnes 1849 'Naval Biographical Dictionary'.

TOMLINSON. (Lieutenant, 1826.)

James Ward Tomlinson is eldest son of the late Vice-Admiral Nicholas Tomlinson.
This officer entered the Navy 11 Oct. 1813; passed his examination in 1820; and was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant 1 Feb. 1826, as a reward for his conduct during the war in Ava; where he served with the British flotilla in a brilliant and decisive attack made upon the village of Than-ta-bain, 7 Oct. 1824, commanded the boats of the Arachne 18, Capt. Henry Ducie Chads, at the defeat, 15 Dec. following, of 200 of the enemy’s war-boats on the Lyne branch of the river Irawady, and was present, 6 Feb. 1825, at the capture of a 36-gun stockade at the above-named Than-ta-bain. His appointments have since been – 31 March, 1828, to the Badger 10, Capt. Chas. Crowdy, employed on particular service – 10 Dec. 1829, after a few months of half-pay, to the Coast Blockade, in which he remained, as a Supernumerary of the Hyperion 42, Capt. Wm. Jas. Mingaye, until the early part of 1832 – 17 Sept. 1832 and 9 Dec. 1833, to the Britannia 120 and Talavera 74, Capts. Peter Rainier and Edw. Chetham, both in the Mediterranean, whence he returned in 1835 – 9 Feb. 1842, for upwards of 12 months, to the post of Admiralty Agent on board a contract mail steam-vessel – and 24 Nov. 1845, to the command, which he still retains, of the Harpy steam-vessel, of 200 horse-power, on the south-east coast of America. Agents – Goode and Lawrence.


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