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George Pechell Mends (baptized 10 May 1815 – 15 September 1871) was an English sailor and amateur artist.

He joined the Royal Navy in 1824, first serving on his father's ship. After ten years, he became an officer and served on several other ships. His first command was HMS Pioneer and his subsequent commands were HMS Nimrod and HMS Edgar. When the latter was paid off in 1866, he retired as a captain on half-pay. Throughout his service on naval stations all over the world, he painted watercolours which typically showed ships and nautical landscapes.

Early life

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George Pechell Mends was baptized on 10 May 1815 at St Budeaux, Plymouth, Devon, England.[1] He was born into a notable Pembrokeshire[2] naval family. His father was Vice Admiral William Bowen Mends,[3] whose brother, George's uncle, was Commodore Sir Robert Mends (c. 1767–1823). His own elder brother was Admiral Sir William Robert Mends GCB (27 February 1812 – 26 June 1897),[4] and a younger brother was to become a captain in the Royal Navy. He was the first child to go to sea.[5][6] Mends grew up in Haverfordwest.[7] He formally entered the Navy on 9 February 1824 as a volunteer on his father's ship HMS Blanche.[7]

Maritime career

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HMS Mutine (right), with Mends on board, passing to windward of HMS Helena during a sailing trial, 1 September 1845

Mends passed his lieutenant's exam on 1 April 1834.[4][8][9] He served as mate from around 1840 of the steam paddle-driven Lizard-class gunvessel HMS Locust, which was under the command of Lieutenant-Commander John Lunn, in the Mediterranean. He was first commissioned to the rank of lieutenant on 30 August 1841, and in September was appointed to HMS Malabar, of 72 guns, Captain Sir George Rose Sartorius commanding, in the Mediterranean.[9] In October 1844, he was appointed senior to the brig HMS Mutine, of 12 guns, Captain Richard Borough Crawford, which was attached to the force at the Cape of Good Hope, and from there on 17 October appointed, in a similar capacity, his first lieutenant on HMS Eurydice, 22, Captain Talavera Vernon Anson.[4] Mend's agents were Messrs. Ommanney of Portsmouth.[10] On 25 July 1850 he became first lieutenant in the 120-gun HMS Trafalgar at Sheerness under Montagu Stopford. In July 1851 Mends sailed in her for the Mediterranean (Stopford was later relieved by Henry Francis Greville), until 11 January 1854, when he was promoted Commander. From 23 January that year Mends was second-in-command to Captain George Elliot on the 91-gun HMS James Watt at Portsmouth, and served on her in the Baltic campaign of the Crimean War (1854–55).[4] On 8 February 1856, still as Commander, Mends took command of HMS Pioneer on the North American and West Indies station. Next, on 1 May 1858 he assumed command of a wood screw-gunboat HMS Nimrod in the East Indies and China; he was promoted to Captain on 20 December 1858.[4] From 22 May 1861 to 10 July 1862 Mends was appointed flag captain of HMS Edgar, a screw-propelled 91-gun second rate launched in 1858, under Rear-Admiral John Elphinstone Erskine, who was second-in-command in the Channel. From December 1861 Mends was appointed to the North American and West Indies stations. Edgar arrived in the Bahamas in January 1862 in time to see salvage operations on HMS Conqueror on Rum Cay.[4] Mends remained on Edgar until the ship was paid off at Portsmouth. On 24 March 1866 Mends went on the retired captains list.[11] At the time of his death he was on half pay, as he had been for several years.[4][9]

Art career

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Sketches and watercolours by Mends survive from as early as 1838 and as late as 1865. Over 80 of these works are in the collection of the National Maritime Museum, more than half of which are from a sketchbook that covers the period of 1850 to 1853, immediately before and during his time on HMS Trafalgar, with some examples in private hands.[4] The lithographer and artist Thomas Goldsworthy Dutton used some of his work, and other notable artists also copied it.[4]

Death

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Mends died of heart disease, which he had been suffering from for some time, on 15 September 1871, at his home in Seaton Terrace, off Mutley Plain, in Plymouth. He was 56 years old when he died, though obituaries at the time variously gave his age as "in his sixtieth year"[12] and "about 60 years".[9]

He had married Louise Wilcocks from Exeter, while on leave from HMS Trafalgar on 10 July 1851.[13] His daughter Mary Louise, an only child, married Captain Arnold John Errington RN in Exeter on 1 May 1877.[14]

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References

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  1. ^ "Baptism Register". FamilySearch. Saint Budeaux parish: LDS. 10 May 1815. p. 6. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
  2. ^ Laughton, J. K.; Morriss, Roger (2004). "Mends, Sir Robert". In Morriss, Roger (ed.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/18558. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 17 April 2020. Sir Robert Mends (1767?–1823) (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  3. ^ "Deaths". The Leeds Mercury, Leeds, West Yorkshire. 11 February 1864. p. 2. Retrieved 14 April 2020 – via newspapers.com. Mends, Feb.7th, at Stoke, Devonport, aged 83, Admiral Wm. Bowen Mends.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Captain George Pechell Mends (circa 1814 – 1871)". National Maritime Museum. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
  5. ^ O'Byrne, William R. (1849). "Mends, William Bowen" . A Naval Biographical Dictionary. London: John Murray. pp. 754–755.
  6. ^ "William Bowen Mends Admiral R. N." familysearch. LDS. Retrieved 17 April 2020.
  7. ^ a b Mends, Bowen Stilon (14 April 1899). "Life of Admiral Sir William Robert Mends, G.C.B., late director of transports". London : J. Murray. Retrieved 17 April 2020 – via Internet Archive.
  8. ^ O'Byrne, William R. (1849). "Mends, George Pechell" . A Naval Biographical Dictionary. London: John Murray. p. 754.
  9. ^ a b c d "Death of Captain Mends, R. N." The Morning Post. 19 September 1871. p. 6. Retrieved 7 March 2020 – via newspapers.com. For some years he has been living in Plymouth, latterly at Seaton-terrace, Mutley plain, and on Friday had just risen from his bed when he fell, and died within a short time. Disease of the heart, from which he had been suffering, is supposed to be the cause of death. Deceased was about 60 years of age, and was well known in Plymouth.
  10. ^ Green, Geoffrey (1982–1986). "Anglo-Jewish Trading Connections with Officers and Seamen of the Royal Navy, 1740—1820". Jewish Historical Studies. 29: 97–133. JSTOR 29779812.
  11. ^ "Admiralty 12 April". London, Middlesex: London Daily News. Admiralty. 14 April 1866. p. 6. Retrieved 21 May 2020. Admiralty, April 13. Frederick Thomas has this day been promoted boatswain of the second class, for gallantry in action against pirates.
  12. ^ "Notice - George Pechell Mends". The Pall Mall Gazette. 19 September 1871. p. 4. Retrieved 7 March 2020 – via newspapers.com. Captain George Pechell Mends, R.N., died suddenly on Friday last of heart disease, in his sixtieth year. He was a nephew of the late Commodore Sir Robert Mends, Knight, G.C.B., son of Admiral William Bowen Mends. He entered the navy in 1824, and at the time of his death had been for several years on half-pay.
  13. ^ "Married". Portsmouth, Hampshire, England: Hampshire Telegraph and Naval Chronicle. 19 July 1851. p. 5. Retrieved 28 May 2020.
  14. ^ "Marriages". Dublin, Ireland: The Freeman's Journal. 4 May 1877. p. 1. Retrieved 28 May 2020.
  15. ^ "The Burning of the United States steam frigate Missouri at Gibraltar Augt 26th 1843... falling of the mainmast and explosion of the last gun... everybody had quitted the vessel". National Maritime Museum. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
  16. ^ "The loss of HMS 'Conqueror',100 guns, on Rum Cay, Bahamas, 29 December 1861". National Maritime Museum. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
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