b. 1832-03-10
               
               d. 1907-08-04
               
               
               
                  
                  Richard Meade was a naval officer who captained the 
Tribune in the Pacific between 
1862 and 1866. He was the senior officer stationed at 
Esquimalt during the so-called Chilcotin War.
1 After the massacre in 
April 1864, Governor 
Frederick Seymour acquired a gunboat from Meade to carry a party of constables to apprehend the murderers.
2Meade, who went by Lord Gillford until 
1879, was the fourth earl of Clanwilliam.
3 He was born 
3 October 1832, educated at Eton College and joined the navy 
17 November 1845, at the age of thirteen.
4 He rose steadily through the ranks, reaching captain in 
1859.
5 His captaincy of the 
Tribune brought him to the Pacific in 
1862.
6At his request, Meade provided the incumbent governor, 
Seymour, with the gunboat 
Forward to carry him into 
New Westminster to take office in 
1864. 
The reception would have lost half its formality had I landed from a common trading
                        Steamer amid a crowd of miners,
 said 
Seymour in a despatch to 
Newcastle.
7 Less than two weeks later, the Chilcotin War broke out.
8 Meade personally brought the 
Forward back to 
New Westminster 15 April 1864, to transport 
Chartres Brew, the police magistrate, along with twenty-eight special constables, to 
Bute Inlet to track down the Tsilhqot’in who had massacred 
Alfred Waddington’s party of road builders.
9Seymour took issue with Meade’s initial hesitance to provide the ship and his request that
                     the ship should be returned 
as early as possible
 despite the lack of a suitable replacement.
10 In a despatch to 
Newcastle, 
Seymour pointed to the incident as proof of the 
defenceless state of this colony
 but also called Meade 
someone so obliging and anxious to please in other respects.
11 Meade took the remarks about the colony’s security personally when they ended up
                     in the Victoria papers, and 
Seymour apologized to him.
12 
                  
                  Meade’s wife, Elizabeth Henrietta, was the daughter of former Governor of Vancouver
                     Island Sir 
Arthur Kennedy. They had four sons and four daughters together.
13 Meade received his admiralship in 
1895, and died of pneumonia at Badgemore, Henley-on-Thames, 
4 August 1907.
14
                     
                        - 1. L. G. C. Laughton, Meade, Richard James, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography; Edward Sleigh Hewlett, "The Chilcotin Uprising of 1864"BC Studies, 19 (Autumn 1973), 67.
- 2. Seymour to Newcastle, 20 May 1864, 6960, CO 60/18, p. 302. 
- 3. Laughton, Meade. 
- 4. Ibid.
- 5. Ibid.
- 6. Ibid.
- 7. Seymour to Newcastle, 26 April 1864, 5302, CO 60/18, p. 215.
- 8. Laughton, Meade; Hewlett, The Chilcotin Uprising, 67.
- 9. Seymour to Newcastle, 20 May 1864, 6959, CO 60/18, p. 273.
- 10. Seymour to Newcastle, 20 May 1864, 6960, CO 60/18, p. 302.
- 11. Ibid.
- 12. Seymour to Cardwell, 4 October 1864, 10955, CO 60/19, p. 298.
- 13. Laughton, Meade; Hewlett, The Chilcotin Uprising, 67.
- 14. Ibid.