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SINGLE CAMPAIGN MEDALS


'Having by my last report of the state of the enemy's ships, apprised their Lordships that the Rivoli of 74 guns, recently launched at Venice, was in readiness to put to sea; I have now great satisfaction in announcing her capture by His Majesty's Ship Victorious, after a severe contest of five hours, on the 21st ultimo ... The great disparity of force sufficiently bespeaks the merits of the captors, the Rivoli having 862 men at the commencement of the action, while the crew of the Victorious was reduced to 506, of whom 60 were in the sick list. The loss has been very severe on both sides, upwards of 400 having been killed and wounded on the part of the enemy, and 42 men killed, and 99 wounded, on the part of the Victorious ...' (Vice-Admiral Sir Edward Pellew's Despatch of 29 March 1812 refers).


Victorious was the last ship aboard which Lodwick served at sea, for he returned to shore duties in September 1814, his skills as a Carpenter being used in the construction of new ships, and in repairing those damaged in action. He was first employed on the repair of his old ship, Victorious, which was later to become a Receiving ship. He later worked on the new Belleisle, which was launched from Pembroke Dock on 26 May 1819, and her subsequent fitting out at Portsmouth. It was during his time that Lodwick found himself in a debtor’s prison, which caused him to publish the following petition in the London Gazette:


‘By order of the Court for the Relief of Solvent Debtors - the petition of William Lodwick, late of Pembroke Dock-Yard, Carpenter of His Majesty’s Ship Belleisle, but now a prisoner for debt confined in His Majesty’s Gaol of Haverfordwest, in the County of Pembroke, will be heard before His Majesty’s Justices of the Peace of the said County, at an adjournment of the General Quarter Sessions of the Peace, which will be holden at the Guildhall, Haverfordwest, in and for the said County, on Wednesday the 14th day of April next, at the hour of Ten of the Clock in the Morning; and that a schedule annexed to the said petition, containing a list of the Creditors of the said prisoner, is filed in the Office of the said Court, No. 9, Essex-Street, Strand, in the County of Middlesex, to which the creditors of the said prisoner may refer; and he doth hereby declare, that he is ready and willing to submit to be fully examined touching the justice of his conduct towards his creditors. William Lodwick.’


It seems that Lodwick successfully extricated himself from his financial quagmire for he was subsequently employed on the completion of the Vengeance 84, which left the stocks at Pembroke in July 1824, and lastly, the San Josef, an old Spanish First Rate 114-gun ship captured at Cape St Vincent in 1797, now to be re-fitted as a Gunnery Training ship. It was at the end of this re-fit in 1837 that William Lodwick was finally retired from the service after a career that had lasted more than 42 years.


Sold with comprehensive research including copied service record and ship’s muster and pay lists. 17


MILITARY GENERAL SERVICE 1793-1814, 2 clasps, Vittoria, Pyrenees (Matthias Asch, 5th Bn. 60th Foot) some light marks, otherwise nearly extremely fine and rare


£2500-3000


Jaëger Matthias Asch/Esch was a Prussian subject, born in Coblentz in 1791, and a miller by trade. He enlisted at the Foreign Depot, Lymington, Hampshire, and was sent to the 5th Battalion 60th Foot. He was taken prisoner by the French on 25 July 1813 at the Rock of Aretesque in the Pyrenees. Sold with research.


18


A fine Peninsula War medal awarded to Private Hugh Tucker, 40th Foot, who was wounded above the eye at Badajoz and in the arm at Vittoria, and also served in South and North America and at Waterloo


MILITARY GENERAL SERVICE 1793-1814, 11 clasps, Vimiera, Talavera, Busaco, Ciudad Rodrigo, Badajoz, Salamanca, Vittoria, Pyrenees, St. Sebastian, Orthes, Toulouse (H. Tucker, 40th Foot) edge bruising, otherwise good very fine £4000-5000


One of thirteen 11-clasp medals to the 40th Foot and one of only eight St Sebastian clasps to this regiment.


Hugh Tucker was born at Torrington, Devon, and enlisted into the 40th Foot at Exeter on 25 September 1804, aged 24, for unlimited service. He served in ‘South America, Peninsula, North America and at Waterloo, and was wounded above the right eye at Badajoz on the 10th of May 1812 and in the right arm at Waterloo.’ He was discharged at Rochdale on 6 December 1820. Sold with copied discharge papers.


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