b. 1794
d. 1871-08-07
Born in
1794, John Kingcome's naval career began at the age of fourteen when he volunteered aboard
the
Emerald in
1808. Kingcome served in numerous locations, from
Lake Huron to the Baltics and East India. In
1862, Kingcome (then a rear admiral) became Commander-in-Chief of the Pacific Station,
located at
Esquimalt.
In
1864, Kingcome offered crucial assistance in the capture of twenty-five Tsilhqot'in people
accused of murdering road workers near
Bute Inlet. The attack prompted what is now known as the “Chilcotin War.” The exact number of
road workers killed is uncertain: some reports count as low as twelve, others as high
as twenty-four. The cause of the attack is also uncertain: while colonists saw it as an example of
a spreading
Indian Insurrection,
historians have suggested grievances on the part of the Tsilhqot'in- such as verbal
threats of smallpox and the forced prostitution of Tsilhqot'in women for food - as
having provoked violent retribution.
In their first attempts to capture the accused, colonist volunteers tried to enter
Tsilhqot'in territory but suffered three deaths and four wounded with no progress.
Eventually, the party appealed to
Governor Seymour, who enlisted the help of Kingcome. The rear admiral had helped with similar missions
in the past. For example, in
1863, he led the pursuit of accused Hwlitsum people for their alleged murder of
Frederick Marks and his daughter
Caroline Harvey. In
1864, Kingcome brought volunteers up the
Bentinck Arm and into Tsilhqot'in hunting grounds.
Seymour later described Kingcome's actions as
almost impossible to overrate
and credited him for the mission's success, in which five of the twenty-five accused
were captured. The accused were sentenced to death in
October 1864.
In
1865, a coastal survey named a
BC fjord as Kingcome Inlet, after the rear admiral. Little is known about Kingcome's personal life. He had at least one son, who drowned
in
1847 while he served as Kingcome's midshipman.
Kingcome retired in 1866, advancing to admiral in 1869. He died two years later, on 7 August 1871. Kingcome is buried in Plymouth, England.
- 1. William R. O'Bryne, A Naval Biographical Dictionary: Comprising the Life and Services of Every Living
Officer in Her Majesty's Navy, (London: John Murray, 1849), 616.
- 2. Sir John Kingcome, Find a Grave.; Barry M. Gough, The Record's of the Royal Navy's Pacific Station, The Journal of Pacific History, 4 (1969): 148.
- 3. John Lutz, October 26, 1864 [Chilcotin War], The Beaver 84, no. 5 (2004): 8.
- 4. Seymour to Cardwell, 10 September 1864, 10605, CO 60/19, 228; John Lutz, October 26, 1864 [Chilcotin War], The Beaver 84, no. 5 (2004): 8.
- 5. Seymour to Cardwell, 10 September 1864, 10605, CO 60/19, 228; John Lutz, October 26, 1864 [Chilcotin War], The Beaver 84, no. 5 (2004): 8.
- 6. Ibid.
- 7. William R. O'Bryne, A Naval Biographical Dictionary: Comprising the Life and Services of Every Living
Officer in Her Majesty's Navy, (London: John Murray, 1849), 616.
- 8. Sam McKinney, Sailing with Vancouver: A Modern Sea Dog, Antique Charts, and a Voyage Through Time, (Victoria: Touchwood Editions, 2004), 201.
- 9. Sir John Kingcome, Find a Grave.