Name |
George Keith |
Prefix |
Admiral |
Suffix |
Elphinstone, GCB, 1st Viscount Keith |
Birth |
7 Jan 1746 |
Elphinstone Tower, Stirling, Stirlingshire, Scotland |
Gender |
Male |
Occupation |
Between 1781 and 1790 |
Dunbarton, Dunbartonshire, Scotland |
Whig M.P. |
Occupation |
1794 |
Rear Admiral |
- Keith is said to have made more in prize money than any other naval officer.
|
Note |
13 Apr 1794 |
Knight of the Bath |
Occupation |
1795 [1] |
Vice Admiral |
Note |
Nov 1796 |
Hester Lynch Thrale wrote of Admiral Elphinstone in herThraliana in - even though she could not have known that she was writing of her future son-in-law Admiral George Keith Elphinstone who was responsible for trapping the Dutch Fleet in Saldanha Bay. Our capture of the whole Dutch Fleet at once without firing a Gun is a great event indeed. |
Property |
Tulliallan Castle, Kincardineshire, Scotland |
Death |
10 Mar 1823 |
Burial |
Overton Kirkyard, Tulliallan, Fife, Scotland [2] |
Notes |
- On 7 January 1746 he was born at Elphinstone Tower, near Stirling, and named after his great- uncle George Keith, last Earl Marischal. In 1761 he entered the navy. From 1781 till 1790 he was a Whig M.P. for Dunbarton. On 9 April 1787, he married Jane Mercer and they became the parents of one daughter but, on 12 December 1789, his wife died. He became Treasurer and Comptroller of the Household to the Duke of Clarence, the future King William IV. In 1793 he distinguished himself against the French off Toulon and, on 13 April 1794, became a Knight of the Bath. In 1794 he became a Rear Admiral and, in 1795, a Vice Admiral.
He commanded the expedition to Cape Town, which place capitulated on 17 September 1795, while the Dutch fleet at Saldanha Bay surrendered to him on 19 August 1796. For this he was rewarded by being created Baron Keith of Stonehaven Marischal, in the Irish peerage, with a special remainder, failing heirs male of his body, to his daughter Margaret. As Commander at Sheerness he quelled the alarming mutiny at the Nore. From 1796 till 1801 he was a Whig M.P. for Stirling. From 1799 till 1802, he was also Commander-in-Chief in the Mediterranean, aiding in the operations at Aboukir Bay and the capture of Alexandria. On 15 December 1801, he was rewarded with a British peerage of the same designation. In 1801 he became an Admiral of the Blue and, in 1805, of the White. He was responsible for the British fleet's over the French fleet in Boulogne harbour between 2 and 3 October 1804.
On 10 January 1808 he married Hester Maria Thrale and another daughter was born. In 1810 he became an Admiral of the Red. In 1812 he was the Commander of the Channel Fleet and conducted the correspondence with Napoleon Bonaparte in regards to his banishment to St. Helena. Having received many decorations, on 1 June 1814 he was created Viscount Keith. On 10 March 1823 he died at Tullyllan, on the Firth of Forth, and was buried there.
|
Person ID |
I97 |
UK Thrale family |
Last Modified |
16 Jun 2024 |
Family 2 |
Hester Maria Thrale, b. 17 Sep 1764, Southwark, Surrey, England d. 31 Mar 1857, Piccadilly, Middlesex, England (Age 92 years) |
Note |
1796 |
Queeney first met Viscount Admiral George Keith of Elphinstone. |
Marriage |
10 Jan 1808 |
Saint Marylebone, Middlesex, England [3] |
Residence |
Tulliallan Castle, Kincardineshire, Scotland |
Residence |
Piccadilly, Middlesex, England |
Address: 110 Piccadilly |
Children |
|
Family ID |
F55 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
Last Modified |
16 Jun 2024 |