120mm royal navy captain

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rado2828

Active Member
Joined
May 5, 2014
Messages
63
Location
Shrewsbury
Hello to all
This is my new figure sculpture it is 120mm sculpted in milliput .Represents Vice-Admiral Hon.Charles Orlando Bridgeman as Captain post 1814.
Hope you like it .All comments are welcomed.
Little information about the Admiral.
Bridgeman was a younger son of Orlando Bridgeman, 1st Earl of Bradford, by his marriage to Lucy Elizabeth Byng, daughter of George Byng, 4th Viscount Torrington and Lady Lucy Boyle, a daughter of John Boyle, 5th Earl of Cork.[1] Educated at Harrow, on 18 June 1804, at the age of thirteen, he joined the navy as a first class volunteer on the almost-new HMS Repulse.[2]
In 1805 Bridgeman was rated as a Midshipman, and during the Napoleonic Wars he saw active service on blockade duty with Robert Calder, later serving in the Dardanelles Operation of 1807 and in the expedition to the Scheldt. In November 1809 he joined HMS Manilla under Captain George Francis Seymour, and on 10 September 1810 was promoted Lieutenant in HMS Semiramis. On 1 May 1811 he transferred to HMS Revenge as Flag-Lieutenant to Rear Admiral Arthur Kaye Legge and served at the defence of Cadiz. On 8 March 1813 he joined HMS Bellerophon and on 2 April 1814 the king's yacht HMS Royal Sovereign. He commanded HMS Badger from 12 December 1814 until 28 August 1816, on the West India station, taking part in the invasion of Guadeloupe of 1815. His next command was Icarus, a ten-gun brig-sloop, from 24 June 1817 until 2 September 1819, on the South America station. In 1819 he was promoted Captain. His last command, from 7 September 1827 to May 1830, was HMS Rattlesnake, attached to a squadron in the Mediterranean.[2] For most of the years 1827 to 1829 Rattlesnake was cruising off the coasts of Greece during the Greek War of Independence. Her log for the period, kept by Talavera Vernon Anson, survives in a collection at the New York Public Library.[3]
Bridgeman took retirement from the navy on 1 October 1846,[2] joining the Reserved List on half-pay. He was later promoted to Vice-Admiral. In retirement he lived at Knockin Hall, West Felton, Shropshire.[4] When he died in April 1860, he was still "of Knockin Hall" and left an estate worth about £16,000.[5]
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First class sculpt and pose. The army was going nowhere without the Senior Service and it's good to see another naval figure. I'm not sure which part of the ship he is placed, possible on the forward end of the poop deck looking towards the bow. I tend to use basswood for planking with black cartridge paper for the caulking. There is abundant information w.r.t. ships' decks, shift of butts etc. in the 'Anatomy of the Ship' series, and of course, HMS Victory is still around. I'm also not sure what function the rope/cable going through the deck eye serves.

Will this be commercially available?

Mike
 
Thank`s a lot for you good words Dan,Mike much appreciated. The plan is to be commercial along whit the figure of general the marquis of Londonderry that i sculpted some time ago and couple of other i am working on at the moment. I will post when ready.The base represents the Quarterdeck the Captain command post and the place where the ship`s colours were kept, as for the rope part of rigging the way pictured on contemporary painting i used as reference.

Best regards,
Rado
 
Hi Mike i do not know for sure.This is the description given by Google for Quarterdeck. Apologies if that is wrong.

Best regards;

Rado
 
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