Captain Hugh Talbot Burgoyne VC RN (
17 July 1833 –
7 September 1870) was an
Irish recipient of the
Victoria Cross. Born in
Dublin, he was the son of
John Fox Burgoyne and the grandson of
John Burgoyne.
Burgoyne was a 21-year-old
Royal Navy lieutenant, serving in the
Crimean War when he performed the following deed for which he was awarded the VC.
Details
On
29 May 1855, in the
Sea of Azov,
Crimea, Lieutenant Burgoyne of
HMS Swallow, with
Lieutenant Cecil William Buckley from
HMS Miranda and
Gunner John Robarts from
HMS Ardent, volunteered to land at a beach where the Russian army were in strength. They were out of covering gunshot range of the ships offshore and met considerable enemy opposition, but managed to set fire to corn stores and
ammunition dumps and destroy enemy equipment before embarking again.
Burgoyne was
Commander on
HMS Ganges under
Captain John Fulford during that vessel's service in the waters of the
Colonies of Vancouver Island and
British Columbia during the fledgling years of the latter colony's establishment. "When the American merchant ship
Northern Eagle was burned in
Esquimalt Harbour, Captain Burgoyne was highly commended for his efforts to save everything possible from the burning ship. Seamen from the
Ganges,
Pylades,
Tribune, and
Plumper also assisted."
Later career
Burgoyne later achieved the rank of captain and was killed when in command of
HMS Captain (1869), which capsized off
Cape Finisterre during a
gale on
7 September 1870. This revolutionary masted
turret ship was the subject of considerable controversy during its design and construction and its loss was attributed to its poor stability.
Burgoyne is buried in
Brompton Cemetery, London.
Legacy
Burgoyne Bay in
British Columbia was named after him in 1859.

Funerary monument, Brompton Cemetery, London