Frederick William Sutton

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Born(1832-08-29)29 August 1832
Died28 January 1883(1883-01-28) (aged 50)
Occupation(s)Naval Engineer, Photographer
Spouse
Georgina Margaret Drummond
(m. 1858)
Frederick William Sutton
Studio portrait of Tokugawa Yoshinobu, taken by Sutton (1867)
Born(1832-08-29)29 August 1832
Died28 January 1883(1883-01-28) (aged 50)
Occupation(s)Naval Engineer, Photographer
Spouse
Georgina Margaret Drummond
(m. 1858)

Frederick William Sutton (29 August 1832 - 28 January 1883) was an English early amateur photographer and naval engineer best known for photographing in Meiji period Japan.

Sutton was born in Woolwich, United Kingdom on 29 August 1832, the son of a civil engineer. He joined the Royal Navy in 1854 as a Third Class Assistant, around the beginning of the Crimean War, on HMS St Vincent, later transferring to HMS Simoom on course to the Black Sea. Landing in Constantinople, the Simoom acted as a supply ship to Crimea and in May 1855 at Sevastopol in an Anglo-French naval raid, she fought against the Russian opposition on the Sea of Azov. In 1858 he was assigned to HMS Exmouth as an Assistant Engineer, and in 1861 he was promoted to Engineer and again in 1864 to Chief Engineer.

In 1858 he married Georgina Margaret Drummond. Sutton's time in Japan influenced Sutton to name his youngest daughter Ume, and his last home was named 'Nihon'. After returning to England in 1879, he suffered with further health problems in 1881 and died of heart problems and Dropsy.[1]

Japan

References

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