During the next two years Taylor held several temporary commands—the Magnanime, Neptune, Magnanime again, Royal William—and early in 1758 was appointed to the Ramillies, the flagship of Sir Edward (afterwards Lord) Hawke [qv.], with whom he continued through 1758 and the blockade of Brest in 1759, while Hawke was teaching the navy what the blockade of Brest meant. After the many months at sea the Ramillies was in need of refitting, and when preparing to leave Torbay on 14 Nov. Hawke struck his flag in the Ramillies and went on board the Royal George. Taylor remained in the Ramillies, and took her round to Plymouth to be repaired. In the following February (1760) she sailed, one of a squadron of three-deckers under the command of Admiral Boscawen. A violent westerly gale drove them back; the ships were separated; the weather was thick and hazy, and the Ramillies was suddenly found in dangerous proximity to the Bolt Head. She let go her anchors, which brought her up for the moment; but the storm was at its height, the cables parted, and the ship was hurled on the rocks. Out of the crew of 734, twenty-five only and one midshipman, improbably said to have been William Falconer (1732-1769) [qv.], author of The Shipwreck—whose name does not appear in the ship's paybook—were saved.
Sources:
The memoir in Charnock's Biog. Nav. vi. 151, is very meagre
further details are to be looked for in the logs, pay-books, and captain's letters in the Public Record Office.
Contributor: J. K. L. [John Knox Laughton]
Published: 1898
Citations
- [S18] Matthew H.C.G., editor, Dictionary of National Biography on CD-ROM (Oxford, U.K.: Oxford University Press, 1995), reference: Taylor, Wittewronge. Hereinafter cited as Dictionary of National Biography.
- [S247] Gery Milner-Gibson-Cullum, Pedigree of Witterwronge of Ghent in Flanders, Stanton Barry (Bucks) and Rothamstead House (Herts): Together With Those of Their Descendants, Lawes, Capper, Brooke, Gery, Le Heup, and Cullum (n.p.: n.n., 1905), page 12. Hereinafter cited as Pedigree of Witterwronge.




