b. 1810-11-18
d. 1890-01-01
In December 1856, Sulivan was given control of navigation and harbour design after
being promoted to professional officer to the marine department of the Board of Trade.
1 During this time, he stressed the importance of constructing two lighthouses on
Vancouver Island: one at
Race Rocks and another in
Esquimalt Harbour.
2 Sulivan provided the plans for the construction of the lighthouses, as well as proposed
costs. Construction of the lighthouses began in 1859 and concluded in 1860.
3
Captain B.J. Sulivan was born in Tregew, England, on 18 November 1810.
4 Sulivan enrolled in the Royal Naval College in September 1823, graduating with distinction.
In 1848, he took a three-year leave of absence and relocated his family to the
Falkland Islands.
5
Sulivan returned to England in 1851, and after several years as an admiral he applied
for command. He was rejected from command, but chosen as a surveying officer aboard
the
Lightning.
6 He spent the British 1854 campaign against Russia surveying the Baltic Sea in Finland
and Bothnia. Sulivan later provided the strategy for the capture of Kronstadt in 1856.
7
Sulivan died at his home in Bournemouth on 1 January 1890.8
- 1. J. K. Laughton, Sulivan, Sir Bartholomew James, Oxford University Press.
- 2. Douglas to Lytton, 8 August 1859, No. 32, 9571, CO 305/11, p. 62.
- 3. Douglas to Newcastle, 18 June 1860, No. 31, 7738, CO 305/14, p. 309.
- 4. Laughton, Sulivan, Sir Bartholomew James.
- 5. Ibid.
- 6. Ibid.
- 7. Ibid.
- 8. Ibid.