Robert Lambert Baynes

Royal Navy admiral
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroRoyal Navy admiral
isMilitary leader Admiral Noble
Work fieldMilitary Royals
Gender
Male
Death7 September 1869Upper Norwood
The details

Biography

Admiral Sir Robert Lambert Baynes KCB (1796 – 7 September 1869) was a Royal Navy officer who went on to be Commander-in-Chief, Pacific Station.

Naval career

Baynes joined the Royal Navy in 1810. He was on board the HMS Asia, the British flagship, during the Battle of Navarino in 1827. Promoted to Captain in 1828, he commanded HMS Andromache and then HMS Bellerophon. As a Rear Admiral he was a senior officer in the Baltic Sea during the Crimean War in 1855.

He was appointed Commander-in-Chief, Pacific Station in 1857. Baynes refused to obey orders from the Governor of the Colony of Vancouver Island, James Douglas, to land marines on San Juan Island to engage American soldiers under the command of Brigadier-General William Selby Harney that had occupied the island on 27 July 1859. Accordingly, he is credited with adopting a policy of non-intervention that helped to defuse the San Juan Boundary Dispute of 1859 between Britain and the United States of America.

Baynes Sound in British Columbia is named for him, and the town of Ganges on Saltspring Island and the waters offshore, Ganges Harbour, are named for his flagship, HMS Ganges.:198

He died at Upper Norwood, and was buried at West Norwood Cemetery.

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