- Henry Coey Kane
Admiral Sir Henry Coey Kane, KCB, (d. 30th January 1917) was a
Royal Navy officer.He was the second son of Sir Robert Kane, the Irish chemist, and entered the
Royal Navy as a cadet in 1853. He was promoted to Captain in 1882, Rear-Admiral in 1897, and Admiral in 1907.He saw active service during the
1882 Anglo-Egyptian War , and from 1883 to 1887 he was aNaval Attaché . In 1887 he was appointed to command the new cruiser HMS "Calliope" in the Pacific, and after service in China and Australia was sent toSamoa to watch over a growing international crisis there. This posting is generally remembered for a remarkable act of seamanship; when in harbour, the island was struck by a powerful cyclone. Of the eleven ships present, only "Calliope" was able to successfully escape the harbour and ride out the cyclone at sea; the others were beached or wrecked, with over two hundred lives lost.This event made Kane's career; he was made CB in the
Queen's Birthday Honours for 1891, and given command of HMS "Victory", a highly prestigious posting, the following year. In 1894, he was appointed as theDirector of Naval Ordnance , holding the office until he retired in 1898. He was made a Knight Commander of the Bath in 1911.References
*Obituary: p. 158, "The Annual Register: a review of public events at home and abroad, for the year 1917". London: Longmans, Green and Co. 1918.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.