Commodore Charles Brown, 1678/9-1753
(Updated, April 2018). Brown is shown standing, three-quarter length, turned slightly to his left in a brown coat with a powdered wig falling behind his shoulders, against a rocky coastal background of sea, dark sky and ships attacking a fort to the right. In his right hand he holds a brass-hilted hanger (a pre-regulation fighting sword) across his body. His left hand rests on his hip, just above the coping of a low stone pillar or wall on which lies his telescope, lower right. The background represents the harbour of Portobello, Panama, looking seaward, with the Iron Castle under assault from Brown's ship 'Hampton Court' and others of Admiral Vernon's squadron on 21 November 1739. Brown entered the Navy in 1693, passed for lieutenant in 1700 and became a captain in 1709. He gained very varied experience in the next 20 years and in December 1737, as relations with Spain worsened, was appointed Commodore commanding at Jamaica. When the War of Jenkins's Ear broke out he was superseded by Admiral Edward ('Grog') Vernon and was his second-in-command at the celebrated capture of Portobello 'with only six ships', as shown here. Brown's 'Hampton Court' led the bombardment of the (rather ill-manned) Iron Castle, and when the Spanish commander offered surrender and his sword to Brown, the latter declined on the grounds that accepting them was Vernon's prerogative. When Brown took the Spaniard to him, Vernon accepted the surrender and responded to the request that Brown have the sword, in compliment to the vigour of his assault, by first receiving it but then immediately giving it to him. In 1740, while Vernon continued his campaign on the Spanish Main - notably, though unsuccessfully, at Cartagena - Brown commanded at Jamaica in his stead. There his health quickly deteriorated and he arrived back in England in October 1740. In 1741 he held two brief home commands before being appointed resident Navy Board Commissioner of Chatham Dockyard, on 27 March 1742, and remained an effective holder of the post to his death on 23 March 1753. He was buried at St Mary's, Chatham, on the 27th, the eleventh anniversary of his appointment. One of Brown's daughters (Lucy) married Admiral William Parry and her daughter married Captain William Locker, Nelson's early commander and friend, and later Lieutenant-Governor of Greenwich Hospital (d. 1800). William's son Edward Hawke Locker (1777-1849) was from 1819 Secretary and later senior Commissioner of the Hospital and in 1824 founded the Naval Gallery in its Painted Hall (an earlier but unachieved idea of his father, a patron of artists). In 1838 he presented this portrait to it and also commissioned and presented George Chambers's interpretation of the attack on Portobello (BHC0355), to commemorate its centenary in 1839. The portrait relates to a mezzotint by John Faber dated 1740 (PAD4583), which shows the sitter as older and more ruggedly characterful in facial appearance, with the background scene both closer and enlarged, and the sword as a much more realistic short hanger rather than with a long cutlass blade. While previously assumed to be the source of the print the painting may therefore, on general appearances, be derived from it as a posthumous and idealised image, perhaps made for William Locker. The Spanish sword Brown received at Portobello has also been in the Museum collection since 1963 (WPN1248) when it was purchased from a later Locker descendant.
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Object Details
ID: | BHC2578 |
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Collection: | Fine art |
Type: | Painting |
Display location: | Not on display |
Creator: | British School, 18th century |
Date made: | 18th century; 1740 |
People: | Brown, Charles; Edward Hawke Locker British School, 18th century |
Credit: | National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London, Greenwich Hospital Collection |
Measurements: | Painting: 1270 mm x 1016 mm; Frame: 1450 mm x 1220 mm x 46 mm |