d. 1902
               
                   
                  During the British and American joint occupation of 
San Juan Island (
1859-1872), Captain Delacombe, an 
experienced officer who had served in the Baltic during the Crimean War and had survived
                        the explosion on board the HMS Bombay,
 replaced 
Captain Bazalgette, the English commandant stationed there, in 
1867.
1 Until the British departed from 
San Juan in 
1872, Captain Delacombe was the commandant of the Royal Marine detachment at the English
                     Camp, on the northern end of the Island, where he lived with his wife (Isabella Anne
                     Harris, 
1835-1922) and children.
2
                     In the English Camp, Captain Delacombe oversaw the replacement of old buildings, and
                     the construction of several new structures including the elaborate new quarters for
                     the commanding officer and his family.3 Delacombe and his wife planted an English formal garden at the camp, in an area which
                     had been made fertile during generations of its use as a shell midden by the W̱SÁNEĆ.4
                     
                  
                  The relatively equal ranks of the two English and American commanding officers on
                     the Island allowed for 
relaxed relations
 until the balance was offset by the arrival of a new American officer with a higher
                     rank.
5 In response, Captain Delacombe requested the promotion of his own rank to Lieutenant
                     Colonel, to set the two officers on “equal footing.”
6 However, Rear Admiral 
George Fowler Hastings (Commander-in-Chief in the Pacific) opposed and prevented the promotion.
7
                     
                     
                     
                        - 1. E.C. Coleman, A New Commander, in The Pig War: The Most Perfect War in History (Gloucestershire: The History Press, 2009/13), n.p.
                           
- 2. Royal Marine Light Infantry Garrison San Juan Island, 1860-1872,  Royal Engineers.
- 3. Cathy Gildert, Historic Landscape Report: American Camp and British Camp, San Juan Island National
                              Historical Park, Washington, 99.
- 4. National Park Service, The Formal Garden, San Juan Island National Historical Park Washingto.
- 5. Coleman, A New Commander, in The Pig War: The Most Perfect War in History, n.p.
- 6. Seymour to Buckingham, 1 August 1868, National Archives of the UK, 9907, CO 60/33.
                           The Colonial Despatches of Vancouver Island and British Columbia 1846-1871. Ed. James
                           Hendrickson and the Colonial Despatches project. Victoria: University of Victoria.
                           http://bcgenesis.uvic.ca/getDoc.htm?id=B68080SP.scx. Accessed 27 March 2019.
                           
- 7. Coleman, A New Commander, in The Pig War: The Most Perfect War in History, n.p.