Barrington Reynolds Military person

Admiral Sir Barrington Reynolds, GCB (1786 – 3 August 1861), was a senior and long-serving officer of the British Royal Navy who went to sea with his father aged only nine during the French Revolutionary Wars and was captured by the French aged eleven. Returning to service on his release soon afterwards, Reynolds experienced the successive deaths of his elder brother and his father on active service during the Napoleonic Wars as well as severe bouts of ill-health himself. Leaving the service at the end of the war, Reynolds returned to the Navy in the 1840s after an absence of thirty years and played a major role in the final destruction of the illegal trade in African slaves to Brazil. Reynolds was honoured for this service and retired again to his family seat in Cornwall, where he died aged 75.

Personal facts

Birth dateJanuary 01, 1786
Birth place
Cornwall , Penair School
Date of deathAugust 03, 1861
Place of death
Cornwall , Penair School

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Military person

allegianceUnited Kingdom
award
Order of the Bath
military operations
Acre Israel
Napoleonic Wars
French Revolutionary Wars
French ship Droits de l'Homme (1794)
military branch
Royal Navy
service start1795
service end1795

Barrington Reynolds on Wikipedia