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  1. 16th March 1842. 21st July 1842 — Mentioned honorably in the Gazette. Thanks to William Richard O'Byrne's (1823-1896) idea of making a publication compiling a record of service of every living Royal Navy officer, we have Fitzjames' service record in his own words. The Admiralty's administration not always being very organised, O'Byrne relied ...

  2. Fitzjames’ private letters were made public and edited to suit the purpose of propaganda and ultimately remembrance. Let us take a look at the publication history of Fitzjames’ last letters. After over two years of no word from the Franklin Expedition, in 1847 the Admiralty made preparations to send out a three-pronged search expedition in the Spring of 1848.

  3. Fitzjames was recovering very well. The war is won by the English and the Treaty of Nanking signed aboard the Cornwallis. Henry T.D. Le Vesconte of HMS Clio (which was to be Fitzjames’ next ship) was one the attendees. 18 November 1842: Arrives in Hong Kong and stays there for the next few months 30 December 1842:

  4. Henry FitzJames (Westminster, 6 augustus 1673 – Bagnols, 16 december 1702) was een Engels en later Frans militair. Hij was een onwettige zoon van Jacobus II van Engeland en Arabella Churchill , zuster van de hertog van Marlborough .

  5. Henry FitzJames (6 August 1673 – 16 December 1702), titular 1st Duke of Albemarle in the Jacobite peerage, was the illegitimate son of King James II of England and VII of Scotland by Arabella Churchill, sister of the first Duke of Marlborough. Life. FitzJames was born in St. James's Square, Westminster, then in the county of Middlesex, England.

  6. Lord Henry FitzJames Duke of Albemarle Henry FitzJames (6 August 1673 – 16 December 1702), titular 1st Duke of Albemarle in the Jacobite peerage, was the illegitimate son of King James II of England and VII of Scotland by Arabella Churchill, sister of the first Duke of Marlborough.

  7. Hilary Carey (‘Henry VII’s Book of Astrology’, p. 685) has tentatively suggested bishop Richard Fitzjames, Warden 23 of Merton College, Oxford, as a donor on the basis of the ‘heraldic’ rendering of images of the constellations Aquila and Delphinus (f. 37) as a possible allusion to the arms of Fitzjames and Draycot.