army, aided by a small squadron commanded by Captain Grant, completed the conquest of the Genoese territory. A 74-gun ship found on the stocks at Genoa, was launched and laden with the frame of another of similar dimensions. She was escorted to England by the America, in the autumn of 1814.
On the 2d Nov. 1813, Captain Rowley was rewarded with a patent of Baronetcy, for his eminent services on the Cape station. At the general promotion, Dec. 4, in the same year, he received the honorable appointment of a Colonel of Royal Marines. On the 4th June, 1814, he was advanced to the rank of Rear-Admiral; and in Jan. 1815, when the Order of the Bath was extended into three classes, we find him among the officers who were nominated to be Knights Commanders. He subsequently hoisted his flag on board the Impregnable, of 104 guns, and accompanied Lord Exmouth to the Mediterranean, where he remained but a short time, the hostilities occasioned by Buonaparte’s return from Elba having ceased immediately after that adventurer’s overthrow at Waterloo. Towards the latter end of 1818, Sir Josias Rowley succeeded Sir Benjamin Hallowell as Commander-in-Chief on the Irish station, where he continued during the customary period of three years, with his flag in the Spencer, of 74 guns. In 1819, the corporation of the city of Cork presented him with its freedom in a silver box; and about the summer of 1821, he was chosen representative in Parliament for Kinsale.
Residence.– Drumsna, co. Leitrim, Ireland; and Albany B. 4, Piccadilly.
SIR EDWARD CODRINGTON,
Rear-Admiral of the Red; and Knight Commander of the most honorable Military Order of the Bath.
This officer is descended from the Codringtons, of Codrington, co. Gloucester, who were of considerable importance in the time of Henry IV[1]. He was made a Lieutenant in
- ↑ Sir Edward’s immediate ancestor was created a Baronet in 1721. The title is at present in the possession of his elder brother, Sir Christopher Bethell Codrington, of Dodington in Gloucestershire.