Thomas Masterman Hardy

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Sir Thomas Hardy
Flag of England
Vice-Admiral
Sir Thomas Hardy
Born 5 April 1769
Kingston Russell or Martinstown, Dorset
Died 20 September 1839
Greenwich, Kent
Occupation Royal Navy Officer
This article is about the naval officer. For other people with the same name, please see Thomas Hardy (disambiguation).

Vice-Admiral Sir Thomas Masterman Hardy, 1st Baronet (5 April 176920 September 1839), was a British naval officer. He served as Flag Captain to Admiral Lord Nelson, and commanded HMS Victory at the Battle of Trafalgar. Nelson was shot as he paced the decks with Hardy and as he lay dying, Nelson's famous remark of "Kiss me Hardy" was directed at him (although these were not Nelson's last words, as is sometimes claimed).

During the War of 1812, Hardy led the fleet that escorted and transported the army commanded by John Coape Sherbrooke that captured significant portions of eastern coastal Maine (then part of Massachusetts), including Eastport, Machias, Bangor, and Castine.[1] Hardy would later serve as First Sea Lord and Governor of Greenwich Hospital.

Hardy was born to Joseph and Nanny Hardy in 1769 in Dorset, either at Kingston Russell House in the parish of Long Bredy, 3 miles west of their home in Portesham, or at Martinstown, 2 miles east where he grew up. There is a monument to him (the Hardy Monument) within walking distance of his home at Portesham House in the village. Hardy Bay and the District of Port Hardy, on Northern Vancouver Island, British Columbia, and Hardy Island on the Sunshine Coast, British Columbia, Canada are named after him. Hardy was created a Baronet, of the Navy, in 1806. He died in September 1839, aged 70. The title became extinct on his death.


Military Offices
Preceded by
Sir George Cockburn
First Sea Lord
1830–1834
Succeeded by
George Dundas
Baronetage of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
New creation
Baronet
(of the Navy)
Succeeded by
Extinct

  • The Trafalgar Captains, Colin White and the 1805 Club, Chatham Publishing, London, 2005, ISBN 1-86176-247-X

  1. ^ Maine League of Historical Societies and Museums (1970). in Doris A. Isaacson: Maine: A Guide 'Down East'. Rockland, Me: Courier-Gazette, Inc., 336. 

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