'Sir George Pocock',
KB (
March 6 1706-
April 3 1792) was a
British admiral, son of Thomas Pocock, chaplain in the navy, entered the navy under the protection of his maternal uncle, Captain Streynsham Master (1682-1724), in ''Superbe'' in 1718.
He became lieutenant in April 1725, commander in 1733, and
post-captain in 1738. After serving in the West Indies he was sent to the East Indies in 1754 as captain of the ''Cumberland'' 58 with Rear-Admiral
Charles Watson (1714-1757). Watson's squadron co-operated with
Clive in the conquest of
Bengal. In 1755 Pocock became rear-admiral, and was promoted to vice-admiral in 1756.
Command of British naval forces in Indian waters
On the death of Watson he took the command of the naval forces in the eastern seas. In 1758 he was joined by
Commodore Charles Steevens (d. 1761), but the reinforcement only raised the squadron to seven small line-of-battle ships. War being now in progress between France and England the French sent a naval force from their islands in the
Indian Ocean into the
Bay of Bengal to the assistance of
Pondicherry. To intercept the arrival of these reinforcements for the enemy now became the object of Pocock. The French force was indeed of less intrinsic strength than his own. Count D'Aché (1700?-1775), who commanded, had to make up his line by including several Indiamen, which were only armed merchant ships. Yet the number of the French was superior and Pocock was required by the practice of his time to fight by the old official fighting instructions. He had to bring his ships into action in a line with the enemy, and to preserve his formation while the engagement lasted.
All Pocock's encounters with D'Aché were indecisive. The first
battle, on
April 29 1758, failed to prevent the Frenchmen from reaching
Pondicherry. After a second and more severe
engagement on
August 3, the French admiral returned to
Mauritius, and when the
monsoon set in Pocock went round to
Bombay. He was back early in spring, but the French admiral did not return to the Bay of Bengal till September. Again Pocock was unable to prevent his opponent from reaching Pondicherry, and a well-contested
battle between them on
September 10,
1759 proved again indecisive. The French government was nearly
bankrupt, and D'Aché could get no stores for his squadron. He was compelled to return to the islands, and the British were left in possession of the
Coromandel and
Malabar coasts. Pocock went home in 1760, and in 1761 was made Knight of the Bath and admiral.
Later career
In 1762 he was appointed to the command of the naval forces in the combined expedition which took
Havana. The
siege, which began on
June 7 and lasted till
August 13, was rendered deadly by the climate. The final victory was largely attributable to the vigorous and intelligent aid which Pocock gave to the troops. His share in the prize money was no less than £122,697. On his return to England Pocock is said to have been disappointed because another officer, Sir Charles Saunders (1713-1775), was chosen in preference to himself as a member of the admiralty board, and to have resigned in consequence. It is certain that he resigned his commission in 1766. His monument is in
Westminster Abbey.
References
★