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Auction archive: Lot number 50

GEORGE SIEVERS (MASTER AT ARMS ON THE BELLEISLE ), FL.1794-1805)

Auction 19.10.2005
19 Oct 2005
Estimate
£1,000 - £1,500
ca. US$1,763 - US$2,645
Price realised:
£5,040
ca. US$8,887
Auction archive: Lot number 50

GEORGE SIEVERS (MASTER AT ARMS ON THE BELLEISLE ), FL.1794-1805)

Auction 19.10.2005
19 Oct 2005
Estimate
£1,000 - £1,500
ca. US$1,763 - US$2,645
Price realised:
£5,040
ca. US$8,887
Beschreibung:

GEORGE SIEVERS (MASTER AT ARMS ON THE BELLEISLE ), FL.1794-1805) Autograph letter signed to Thomas Tunnard, 'His Majesty's Ship Belleisle at Gibraltar', 27 October 1805, 2 pages, 4to , integral address leaf, contemporary endorsements (four small splits in folds in 1st leaf without loss of text, address slightly faded, splits in folds of 2nd leaf, small area of worming, seal tears, slightly browned). Provenance. Thomas Tunnard, and by descent to the present owner. A FIRST-HAND ACCOUNT OF THE BATTLE OF TRAFALGAR. 'I have the satisfaction to inform you of a most compleat victory gained by our Fleet over the combined fleet of France and Spain on Monday the 21st of October ... When they commenced a most awful fire on us we were at first engaged by Eleven sail of the Line when we were totally dismasted they cut our Bowsprit in Pieces and dismounted a number of our Guns [and] left us a compleat wreck. I am happy to inform you that after three hours in this dreadful situation I had the satisfaction to see one three Decker and two seventy fours strike to the Belleisle and one Frigate we sunk and every soul on board perished in the Ocean All our boats were by the Enemy's shot cut in Pieces, the Royal Sovereign and Victory suffered must dreadfully ... the Gallant Lord Nelson fell by the first Broad side from the Enemys ship which was a Spanish four Decker ... The French Adm[ira]l Villeneuve is now a Prisoner on board the Mars'. Sievers, who had been on the Marlborough at the battle of the Glorious First of June in 1794 ('Lord Howe's action of the first of June was but a fool to this'), describes the shot which killed Nelson as coming from a Spanish ship. The Naval Chronicle published a corrected account of this widely circulated report early in 1806, saying that it had at first been understood that Nelson received the fatal shot from the main round-top of the Santissima Trinidada , but information since received from Mr Beatty (Dr William Beatty, the surgeon on the Victory ) and Mr Bourke (the purser) indicated that the ball had come from the Redoutable. The Belleisle took part in the pursuit of the French to the West Indies and back. At Trafalgar she followed immediately after the Royal Sovereign (Collingwood's ship) in the Lee Division and was totally dismasted. In the action two of her lieutenants and thirty-one men were killed and ninety-three wounded. She then narrowly escaped being wrecked off Cape Trafalgar and Tarifa. Her captain, William Hargood, a protégé of the Duke of Clarence (later King William IV) was himself wounded. As master at Arms Sievers would have been a junior lieutenant, and responsible for teaching the use of small arms, supervising prisoners and the enforcement of rules on board. He was a tenant on the Tunnard estate in Lincolnshire

Auction archive: Lot number 50
Auction:
Datum:
19 Oct 2005
Auction house:
Christie's
London, King Street
Beschreibung:

GEORGE SIEVERS (MASTER AT ARMS ON THE BELLEISLE ), FL.1794-1805) Autograph letter signed to Thomas Tunnard, 'His Majesty's Ship Belleisle at Gibraltar', 27 October 1805, 2 pages, 4to , integral address leaf, contemporary endorsements (four small splits in folds in 1st leaf without loss of text, address slightly faded, splits in folds of 2nd leaf, small area of worming, seal tears, slightly browned). Provenance. Thomas Tunnard, and by descent to the present owner. A FIRST-HAND ACCOUNT OF THE BATTLE OF TRAFALGAR. 'I have the satisfaction to inform you of a most compleat victory gained by our Fleet over the combined fleet of France and Spain on Monday the 21st of October ... When they commenced a most awful fire on us we were at first engaged by Eleven sail of the Line when we were totally dismasted they cut our Bowsprit in Pieces and dismounted a number of our Guns [and] left us a compleat wreck. I am happy to inform you that after three hours in this dreadful situation I had the satisfaction to see one three Decker and two seventy fours strike to the Belleisle and one Frigate we sunk and every soul on board perished in the Ocean All our boats were by the Enemy's shot cut in Pieces, the Royal Sovereign and Victory suffered must dreadfully ... the Gallant Lord Nelson fell by the first Broad side from the Enemys ship which was a Spanish four Decker ... The French Adm[ira]l Villeneuve is now a Prisoner on board the Mars'. Sievers, who had been on the Marlborough at the battle of the Glorious First of June in 1794 ('Lord Howe's action of the first of June was but a fool to this'), describes the shot which killed Nelson as coming from a Spanish ship. The Naval Chronicle published a corrected account of this widely circulated report early in 1806, saying that it had at first been understood that Nelson received the fatal shot from the main round-top of the Santissima Trinidada , but information since received from Mr Beatty (Dr William Beatty, the surgeon on the Victory ) and Mr Bourke (the purser) indicated that the ball had come from the Redoutable. The Belleisle took part in the pursuit of the French to the West Indies and back. At Trafalgar she followed immediately after the Royal Sovereign (Collingwood's ship) in the Lee Division and was totally dismasted. In the action two of her lieutenants and thirty-one men were killed and ninety-three wounded. She then narrowly escaped being wrecked off Cape Trafalgar and Tarifa. Her captain, William Hargood, a protégé of the Duke of Clarence (later King William IV) was himself wounded. As master at Arms Sievers would have been a junior lieutenant, and responsible for teaching the use of small arms, supervising prisoners and the enforcement of rules on board. He was a tenant on the Tunnard estate in Lincolnshire

Auction archive: Lot number 50
Auction:
Datum:
19 Oct 2005
Auction house:
Christie's
London, King Street
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