Hugo Pearson
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Sir Hugo Pearson | |
|---|---|
Admiral Sir Hugo Lewis Pearson | |
| Born | 30 June 1843[1] |
| Died | 12 June 1912 (aged 68) Goodrich, Herefordshire, England |
| Allegiance | |
| Branch | |
| Service years | 1855–1908 |
| Rank | Admiral |
| Commands | HMS St Vincent HMY Osborne HMS Colossus HMS Excellent HMS Collingwood HMS Barfleur Australia Station Nore Command |
| Awards | Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath |
Admiral Sir Hugo Lewis Pearson, KCB (30 June 1843 – 12 June 1912) was a Royal Navy officer who served as both Commander-in-Chief, Australia Station and Commander-in-Chief, The Nore.
Hugo Lewis Pearson was born at Barwell,[2] into a notable Staffordshire family with a long tradition of service in India and the British Armed Forces. He was the grandson of John Pearson (1771–1841), a barrister and senior East India Company official who served as Advocate-General of Bengal from 1824 to 1840.[3] His father General Thomas Hooke Pearson CB (1806–1892) served as an ADC to the Earl Amherst, then Governor-General of India.[3] He married in 1837 Frances Elizabeth Ashby Mettam, eldest daughter of George Mettam, Rector of Barwell.[3][4]
Pearson attended private schools in Southwell, Nottinghamshire and Wimbledon, London.[2]
Naval career
Pearson joined the Royal Navy in 1855, at the age of 12 years.[5] In his early career, he was promoted to Lieutenant on 14 September 1863 and only 3 weeks later, on 20 October, Captain Henry Boys reported on Pearson's "active conduct in a fire breaking out out in the Pelorus."[6] In February, 1865 Pearson destroyed piratical junks in Jungwa Bay.[6]
Pearson was promoted to Commander with seniority of 6 February 1872, and was promoted to the rank of Captain with seniority of 9 December 1879.[7]
He was Captain of the first-rate HMS St Vincent, the Royal yacht Osborne and the second-rate, HMS Colossus.[5] He went on to command the shore establishment HMS Excellent and, later, the battleships HMS Collingwood and HMS Barfleur.[5] Between 1892 and 1895 he was Aide-de-Camp to Queen Victoria,[8] and was the Rear Admiral of the Reserve Fleet during the Jubilee Review in 1897.[5]
In 1898 he became Commander in Chief, Australia Station and served as such for two years until late 1900, when he returned to the United Kingdom and bought Rocklands House in Goodrich, Herefordshire. On 19 March 1901, he was promoted to vice-admiral[9] and in 1903 he became Commander-in-Chief, The Nore, a post he held until 1907.[10] He retired on 30 June 1908.[11]