Page:Royal Naval Biography Marshall sp1.djvu/75

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66
POST-CAPTAINS OF 1806.

whose services we have recorded in our first volume; and he subsequently commanded several small vessels, under the orders of Lord Duncan. He obtained the rank of Commander, on the West India station, in 1802; and returned home from thence in the Plover sloop of war.

About Feb. 1805, Captain Forster was appointed to the Calypso, a fine 18-gun brig; and on the 18th July following, he received a very dangerous wound in the shoulder, whilst gallantly attacking a division of the enemy’s Hotilla, under the powerful batteries on Cape Grisnez[1].

In consequence of this wound. Captain Forster reluctantly gave up the Calypso, and came on shore with little hopes of recovery, much less of ever being able to take another command. Early in 1808, however, he found himself sufficiently convalescent to accept an appointment to the Majestic 74; bearing the flag of his old friend. Rear-Admiral Russell; and we subsequently find him in the Unicorn frigate, on the North sea station. Captain Forster obtained post rank Jan. 22, 1806; a pension of 250l. per annum was granted to him, for his wound, in Nov. 1814; and he survived, contrary to all expectation, until Jan. 12, 1824, on which day he died, at Berwick-upon-Tweed, deservedly esteemed and universally regretted.




SIR PHILIP CARTERET SILVESTER, Bart.
(Late Carteret.)
A Companion of the Most Honorable Military Order of the Bath.
[Post-Captain of 1806.]

Son of the late Rear-Admiral Philip Carteret, the circum-navigator, by Mary Rachael, sister of the late Sir John Silvester, Bart. Recorder of the city of London.

The first ship in which this officer went to sea was the Lion 64, commanded by Sir Erasmus Gower, who had served as his father’s first Lieutenant in the Swallow sloop, during a voyage of discovery round the globe, which commenced in 1766, and was not concluded till Mar. 1769[2].

  1. See Vol. II, pp. 131 and 888.
  2. In the month of Aug. 1766, the Dolphin, a 20-gun ship, was fitted out