The Honourable Samuel Barrington. Vice Admiral of the Blue
A half-length portrait to right of Samuel Barrington (1729–1800) in captain’s undress uniform, 1748–1767, with a wig. He stands in front of a coastal background with distant ships on the right. Lettered beneath the image with the title: ‘The Honourable Samuel Barrington. Vice Admiral of the Blue.’ Also lettered with the production details and publication line: ‘Benjn. Wilson pinxit. / R. Earlom fecit. / London. Printed for R. Sayer & J. Bennett, No. 53 Fleet Street, as the Act directs 20th Septr. 1779.’ This print was engraved in mezzotint by Richard Earlom in 1779 after an original oil painting by Benjamin Wilson, who was friends with Barrington’s brother, the lawyer, antiquary and naturalist Daines Barrington. Wilson’s painting was produced around 1765, at which point the sitter was a post-captain. By the time the picture was engraved in September 1779, Barrington had risen to the rank of vice-admiral of the blue. He had recently returned from the West Indies, where he had worked with General James Grant to capture St Lucia in December 1778, before subsequently serving as second-in-command to Admiral John Byron in a disastrous action against the French off Grenada in July 1779. (Updated April 2019.)
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Object Details
ID: | PAG6432 |
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Type: | |
Display location: | Not on display |
Creator: | Earlom, Richard; Wilson, Benjamin Robert Sayer & John Bennett |
Date made: | 20 Sep 1779 |
People: | Barrington, Samuel |
Credit: | National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London |
Measurements: | Sheet: 387 x 286 mm; Mount: 632 mm x 480 mm |