- John Norris (Royal Navy officer)
Sir John Norris (1670 or 1671 – 13 or
14 June 1749 ) was a British admiral of the 17th and 18th centuries, who served as Commander-in-Chief of the Royal Navy under George II.In May 1699 he married Elizabeth Aylmer, daughter of Admiral
Matthew Aylmer , which greatly aided his distinguished career. He was knighted in 1705 and made admiral in 1709. He was aMember of Parliament from 1708 until his death.Norris, whose nickname was "foul-weather Jack", saw a good deal of service during the
War of the Spanish Succession under William III and Anne. Under George I he was sent several times with a fleet into theBaltic Sea to forward the king's policy by giving the northern nations some idea of the strength of England.In 1715 he was sent with a fleet to the Baltic Sea, officially to protect the English merchandise, but in reality to pressure Sweden on account of
Hannover , where George I was Elector. He fraternized inReval with the Russians and got on friendly terms with tsar Peter, who offered him command of the Russian navy. However, in October that year he returned to England. In May 1716 he was again sent to Nordic waters with orders to prevent a possible Swedish attempt by Jacobite interests to conquer Scotland. After some hassles and various meetings with Danish, Russian and other ships, he set sail back again in November that year.In 1717 he again negotiated with tsar Peter, now in
Amsterdam , but without results. To the Baltic Sea he returned in 1718 with minor troops.After the death of King
Charles XII of Sweden , negotiations between George I and Sweden were initiated, and John Norris was now commissioned to prevent Russian ravages on Sweden's east coast. By the time he got there, however, the Russians had already set back home, and Norris returned to England again.He was sent on some further expeditions with the purpose of holding the Russians off Sweden's back, the last one in 1727.
In 1734 he became Admiral of the Fleet and commander-in-chief.
In 1739, Norris was one of many founding governors for a new charitable ventures in London, the
Foundling Hospital , which sought to lessen the capital's problem ofchild abandonment .In 1744 he retired from the navy.
References
* [http://runeberg.org/nfbs/0801.html] Owl
*External links
* [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=1562 Biography at the "Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online"]
Further reading
* J. F. Chance, "George I and the northern war" (1909).
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