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Description: Ever since C.S. Forester’s fictional hero Horatio Hornblower began to delight readers, there has been speculation as to whether his adventures were based on the career of a real naval officer. Several names were suggested, but the general conclusion was that Hornblower was a composite character. However, while researching the campaign that resulted in the burning of Washington’s public buildings, Bryan Perrett consulted Forester’s Naval War of 1812 and was surprised to discover that the author had been deliberately reticent regarding a Captain James Alexander Gordon, RN, who had led his squadron up the Potomac. Further inspection of Naval Records revealed a startling number of parallels between the careers of Gordon and Hornblower. Subsequent research spanning a period of ten years uncovered yet more similarities – too many, in fact, to be a matter of simple coincidence. It became apparent that, while Forester certainly included other historical episodes in the Hornblower cycle, he was aware of Gordon when the first of the books was written, and that when he decided to expand the series he chose Gordon’s career as the framework on which his hero’s life was based.
As a professional author, it was neither surprising that he should conceal the fact, nor that he should choose Gordon as his model. Gordon had entered the Royal Navy as a semi-literate eleven year old and rose to become an Admiral of the Fleet. He took part in major sea battles, frigate actions, single-ship duels, cutting-out expeditions and operations far behind enemy lines. It was the fire of his ships, directed against Fort McHenry, Baltimore, that inspired the American National Anthem. He was the last Governor of the Royal Naval Hospital at Greenwich, and when he died, having served more than 75 years in the Navy, ‘The Times’ commented that he was ‘the last of Nelson’s captains’. That he should have attracted Forester’s attention is not, therefore, surprising. In telling the largely unknown story of Admiral Gordon’s active service career, the author has produced a book that will be appreciated by the thousands of readers who have enjoyed the adventures of Horatio Hornblower and his successors. It will also be welcomed by anyone with an interest in the naval warfare of the Napoleonic period. |