A
editName | Picture | Born | Died | Notability | Connection | Notes |
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Augustus Agar | 75px|alt=Photo submitted by Simon Manchee | Jan 4, 1890 | Dec 30, 1968 | He joined the Royal Navy in 1904. He took part in many actions during World War I. In late 1918 he worked with the British Secret Intelligence Service. He was the only man to be knighted based entirely on his exploits as a spy. He was awarded the Victoria Cross for sinking the Oleg, a Bolshevik Russian cruiser. He saw action in World War II | born in Kandy, Ceylon. His father John Shelton Agar, was an Irishman from Woodmont, County Kerry | —
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Thomas Andrews | Feb 7, 1873 | Apr 15, 1912 | Businessman and shipbuilder; managing director and head of the draughting department for the Belfast shipbuilding company Harland and Wolff. Andrews was the shipbuilder in charge of the plans for the ocean liner RMS Titanic. He was travelling on board the Titanic during its maiden voyage when it hit an iceberg on 14 April 1912 and was one of the 1,517 people who perished in the disaster. | born at Ardara House, Comber, County Down | —
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Alexander Armstrong | —
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1818 | Jul 4, 1899 | Naval surgeon, explorer, and author who from 1850–1854 sailed the arctic on HMS Investigator under the command of Robert John Le Mesurier McClure in search of the lost expedition of explorer Sir John Franklin. He became director-general of the Royal Navy’s medical department. He was awarded a KCB in 1871.[1] | born Donegal | —
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Ange René Armand | 1788|Feb|17} | May 13, 1855 | French naval officer and politician. | Descendant of an ancient family of Ireland who followed King James II to France | —
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[[Baron Aylmer|Matthew Aylmer]] | File:GG-Matthew Whitworth-Aylmer.jpg | 1650 | 1720 | Baron Aylmer | born in Ireland | —
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B
editName | Picture | Born | Died | Notability | Connection | Notes
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Augustus Warren Baldwin | —
|
Oct 1, 1776 | Jan 5, 1866 | Joined the merchant navy in 1792. He was commissioned Royal Navy lieutenant in 1800. He participated in the bombardment of Copenhagen in 1807, and in 1808 received a gold medal and a commander’s commission for his part in the capture of the russian ship Sewolod (Vsevolod. Although retired from the navy, he was promoted to admiral in 1862.[2] | born near Lisnagat in County Cork | —
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Robert Barber | —
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1749 | 1783 | quartermaster on HMS Adventure during Captain Cook's Second Voyage 1772-1775. On the 31 December 1772 he became an A.B. He was Master of HMS Mercury when he died.[3] | born in Kilkenny | —
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John Barry | 1745 | Sep 13, 1803 | "The Father of the American Navy"; an officer in the Continental Navy during the American Revolutionary War and later in the United States Navy. He commanded Lexington, Raleigh, and Alliance. He won the final naval battle of the American Revolution off the coast of Cape Canaveral on March 10, 1783. | born in Tacumshane, County Wexford | —
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Edward Bransfield | —
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1785 | 1852 | Polar explorer. Discoverer of the Antarctica continent, (mainland rather than islands), on 30 January 1820.[4] Bransfield Strait, Bransfield Island, Bransfield Trough and Mount Bransfield are named after him, as is the RRS Bransfield. | born in Ballinacurra, County Cork | —
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Francis Beaufort | 1745 | Sep 13, 1803 | Creator of the Beaufort scale for indicating wind force. He entered the British Navy at 13 and served on HMS Colossus and HMS Latona before being transferred to HMS Aquilon, which participated in the ‘Glorious First of June’. With his brother-in-law he devised a system which could transmit a message from Dublin to Galway in eight minutes. An Alaskan sea is named after Beaufort. | born in Tacumshane, County Wexford | —
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Hugh Talbot Burgoyne | Jul 17, 1833 | Sep 7, 1870 | Awarded the Victoria Cross, as a Royal Navy lieutenant, serving in the Crimean War, he landed at a beach where the Russian army were in strength, without covering fire, hr set fire to corn stores and ammunition dumps and destroyed enemy equipment. | born in Dublin | —
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James "Spanish" Blake | —
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1560 | Feb 20, 1635 | spy | born in Galway | —
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William Bligh | Sep 9, 1754 | Dec 7, 1817 | In 1800 he completed a major survey of Dublin harbour and recommended that the North Bull Wall should be constructed to prevent sand building up in the mouth of the harbour. He correctly forecast that this would create a natural scouring action that would deepen the river channel, and sand gradually accumulated along the side of the North Bull Wall resulting in the modern Bull Island. | None | [1] | |
Anne Bonny | Mar 8, 1697 | Apr 25, 1782 | Pirate | born "Anne Cormac" in Kinsale, County Cork. | [2] | |
Brendan | 484 | May 16, 577 | Brendan "the Navigator", a legendary voyager, may have travelled to America. | born in Ciarraighe Luachra (Fenit) in County Kerry, | —
| |
William Brown | Jun 22, 1777 | Mar 3, 1857 | Brown's victories in the Independence War, the Argentina-Brazil War, and the Guerra Grande in Uruguay earned the respect and appreciation of the Argentine people, and today he is regarded as one of Argentina's national heroes. Creator and first admiral of the country's maritime forces, he is commonly known as the "father of the Argentine Navy". | born in Foxford, County Mayo. | [5][6][7][8] | |
Michael Byrne | —
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1761 | A near-blind fiddler who served in the Royal Navy. His sixth ship, in 1787, was the Bounty under Captain Bligh. He survived the wreck of the Pandora. He was acquitted of the charge of mutiny. He later served under Bligh's nephew, Francis Bond, on the Prompte. | born in Kilkenny | —
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|}
Baugh (Bagh, Bough, Boghe), William (c.1587–1619?), pirate
B
editName | Picture | Born | Died | Notability | Connection | Notes |
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- Richard Brydges Beechey (1808–95),
artist, naval officer, and marine surveyor; born London - strongly associated with Ireland, spending long periods of residence there between 1835 and 1876: he married an Irish wife, carried out survey work of the Irish coastline, and exhibited many seascape paintings with Irish themes in Ireland.
- Hugh Talbot Burgoyne (1833-1870) RN VC
- Michael Byrne (sailor) : able seaman with Captain Bligh on the Bounty.
C
edit- Peter Campbell (naval officer) (1780-1832) - Urugayan Navy [3]
- James Leander Cathcart : enslaved in Algiers.
- Hugh Coveney - Minister for the Marine and noted yachtsman.
- Roger Anthony Craig - Laser dinghy competitor
- Harold Cudmore - yacht racing skipper
- Tom Crean (explorer) File:Featured article star.svg
- Andrew Cunningham First Sea Lord
- John de Courcy Ireland - Research officer of the Maritime Institute of Ireland
- Edward England (Edward Seegar) - pirate
- Edward Fegen HMS Jervis Bay
- Robert Forde polar explorer - stub
- Damian Foxall : won the 2007/2008 Barcelona World Race
H
edit- George Halpin : founding father of the Irish lighthouse service [4]
- Robert Halpin : Master of the SS Great Eastern
- David Harrel (1841-1939) Merchant navy, RIC, Under-Secretary for Ireland
- Bartholomew Hayden : Brazil Navy [5]
- Patrick Hayes (mariner) (1770-1856) director of the Marine Insurance Company, director of the Captains' Society; Harbor Master for the Port of Philadelphia
- John Philip Holland - submarine inventor
G
editFought in the Irish Confederate Wars refused amnesty and turned Tory, captured and sold with 300 others to Barbadian planters by Cromwellian forces. With three fellow Irish slaves stole a lugger, while loading sugar, and escaped. Joined L'Olonnois who, in time, appointed Greaves captain of one of his ships, crewed by escaped Irish slaves. He captured Margarita and looted a fortune in pearls. He retired but was arrested and sentenced to hang. He escaped after an earthquake and went whaling. Eventually he did retire, became respectable and died of natural old age.
K
edit- Walter Kennedy (pirate) (?-1721):pirate
- File:Captain_Dulaien_Flag.svg
- Patrick Keohane - polar explorer
- Lieutenant Commander John Kerans - The Yangtse River Incident [6]
- John King (sailor) (1865–1938) Ballinrobe : United States Navy Medal of Honor twice.
- Germyn Lynch (1441-1483) merchant sea captain
- Patricio Lynch - Rear Admiral - Chilean navy
- James Joseph Magennis VC
- Richard Charles Mayne (1835 – 1892): RN Admiral and explorer
- Kevin McClory (1926-2006) screenwriter, producer, and director. served in the British Merchant Navy in the Second World War. His ship was torpedoed on 21 February 1943, and he spent 14 days in a lifeboat
- Robert McClure aka Sir Robert John Le Mesurier McClure (or M'Clure):(1807–1873): he was the first to transit the Northwest Passage, and the first to circumnavigate the Americas.: He was born at Wexford :File:Robert McClure.jpg
- Charles McGuinness IRA, adventurer and sailor.
- Thomas Murphy (VC) VC for sea rescue
- Conor O'Brien (1880-1952) circumnavigation in the Saoirse
- Jorge O'Brien - Captain of the Chilean Navy during the Chilean War of Independence [7]
- William Ahern (Medal of Honor recipient) aka William O'Hearn (1861-?) United States Navy
- Gráinne Ní Mháille (Grace O'Malley) - Pirate Queen
- William Pirrie, 1st Viscount Pirrie:(1847–1924):shipbuilder:Born in Quebec, Canada, the son of Irish parents, he was taken back to Ireland when he was two years old and spent his childhood at Conlig, County Down:File:438825 aa17f8df.jpg
- John Roach - Shipbuilder -
- Captain Richard Roberts (1803-41) of SS Sirius (1837)
- Tim Severin lives in Timoleague, County Cork
- Ernest Shackleton - polar explorer
- Henry Hugh Gordon Stoker : captain of the Australian Submarine HMAS AE2.
- John Sullivan (VC) RN VC
- François Thurot real name O'Farrell, French naval captain who terrorised British shipping during the Seven Years' War.
- Derek Turner (journalist) (1964-) :served in the Irish Navy : a freelance journalist.
- Joseph Wheeler (shipbuilder) - shipbuilder
- John Richardson Wigham - lighthouse Engineer
- John Shaw (navy) (1773-1823) United States Navy
- David Wilkins (sailor) : silver 1980 Moscow Olympics in the Flying Dutchman class
- James Wilkinson (sailor) : silver 1980 Moscow Olympics in the Flying Dutchman class
- Thomas Wright (1799-1868) - founder of the Ecuadorian naval school [8]
Grandparent rule
edit- Molly Brown the Unsinkable Molly Brown was Born Molly Tobin (Irish born father)
- Joseph Grégoire Cazy aka O'Casey:minister of the navy
- Michael Healy - Captain of the US Revenue Cutter Bear, defender of Alaska's native Americans, inspiration for Jack London's "The Sea-Wolf," prominent figure in James Michener's "Alaska".
- Alfred Thayer Mahan (1840–1914) - US naval officer and author whose work, including "The Influence of Seapower Upon History, 1660-1783]]," inspired the creation of the modern United States Navy. (his father Dennis Hart Mahan may have been born in Ireland.
- Ange René Armand, baron de Mackau aka McCoy :(1788-1855) :French naval officer, vice-admiral, minister of the navy :Paris, Irish family
- Jeremiah O’Brien (1744–1818) : was in command of Unity when she captured HMS Margaretta in the Battle of Machias, the first naval battle of the American Revolutionary War.
- Oliver Hazard Perry(1785–1819): US Navy in the War of 1812 against United Kingdom, and earned the title "Hero of Lake Erie" for leading American forces in a decisive naval victory at the Battle of Lake Erie: Irish mother, Sarah Wallace Alexander.[9] :File:Operry.jpg
- Matthew C. Perry (1794 – 1858) was the Commodore of the U.S. Navy who compelled the opening of Japan to the West with the Convention of Kanagawa in 1854 : Irish mother, Sarah Wallace Alexander.[10] : File:Perry1852LibraryOfCongress.jpg
- ^ Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
- ^ Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
- ^ Adventuress: Webster's Quotations, Facts and Phrases. Icon Group International, Inc. 2008. p. 371.
- ^ Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen claimed to have discovered the continent three days earlier
- ^ Spanish: el padre de la Armada Argentina. Used mainly in Argentina but also in other countries like the United Kingdom, see e.g. this BBC report. URL accessed on October 15, 2006.
- ^ Spanish: Guillermo Brown or Almirante Brown, see e.g. his biography at Planeta Sedna. URL accessed on October 15, 2006.
- ^ Irish: Béal Easa, see report at County Mayo's official website. URL accessed on October 15, 2006.
- ^ Irish: Contae Mhaigh Eo, according to its official website. URL accessed on October 15, 2006.
- ^ Coogan p 325
- ^ Coogan p 325