MILNE, COLIN,
LL.D., a writer on botany, born at Aberdeen in 1744. He became
tutor to Lord Algernon Percy, younger son of the duke of
Northumberland, and entered into holy orders. He was afterwards
rector of North chapel, in Essex, and also obtained the
lectureship of Deptford. He received the degree of LL.D. from
Marischal college, Aberdeen, and was likewise D.D. and F.L.S. He
died in 1815. His works are:
Botanical Dictionary; or, Elements of systematic and
Philosophical botany. London, 1770, 8vo. 2d edit. 1777, 8vo. A
Supplement. 1778, 8vo. 3d edit. Revised, corrected, and
enlarged, 25 plates. London, 1805, 8vo.
Institutes of
Botany. In two parts. London, 1770-72, 4to. Supplement to the
same. 1778, 4to.
The Boldness and
Freedom of Apostolic Evidence; a Sermon. 1775. 8vo.
Sermon preached
at the Anniversary Meeting of the Royal Linnaean Society. 1779,
8vo.
Sermons, London,
1780, 8vo.
Indigenous
Botany, or Habitations of English Plants. Vol. i. Lond. 1793,
8vo. In conjunction with Alex. Gordon.
MILNE, WILLIAM, D.D., a distinguished missionary to the
Chinese, was born of poor parents, in the parish of Kinnethmont,
Aberdeenshire, in April 1785. He received his education at the
parish school, and afterwards resided in one or two families in
the capacity of a servant. He early began to entertain religious
impressions, and having read the Transactions of the London
Missionary Society, and the Life of David Brainerd and of Samuel
Pearce, he was induced to offer himself to that society as a
missionary. In consequence he was called up to England, and put
under the care of the Rev. David Bogue at Gosport, with whom,
having gone through a regular course of study, and made great
progress both in classical and theological knowledge, he was
ordained at Portsea, July 16, 1812.
Soon after he was
appointed colleague to Mr. Morrison in China, and having married
a young lady in his native county, he sailed with his wife from
Portsmouth, September 4, 1812, and arrived at Macao, July 4,
1813. He immediately commenced the study of the Chinese
language, but was soon compelled by the Portuguese authorities
to proceed to Canton. After remaining there a short time, he
made a tour through the chief settlements of the Malay
Archipelago for the purpose of distributing tracts and New
Testaments, and afterwards returned to China. In April 1815 he
embarked with his family for Malacca to take charge of the
missionary establishment at that place, where he also preached
once a-week to the Dutch protestants. On application to the
governor at Penang, a grant was made of ground for the erection
of missionary buildings, and a free press was allowed at
Malacca. Having established a school for the instruction of the
children of the poor, he composed for his Chinese scholars the
Youth’s Catechism, and printed various tracts for their use. He
also translated into the Chinese language a part of the Old
Testament, of which the Book of Deuteronomy, after being revised
by Mr. Morrison, was printed in 1816. In May 1817 Mr. Milne
commenced ‘The Chinese Gleaner,’ a periodical work containing
extracts from the correspondence of the Eastern missionaries,
with miscellaneous notices relative to the philosophy and
mythology of the Indo-Chinese nations. In September 1818 Malacca
was by treaty restored to the Dutch government, and on November
10 of the same year the foundation stone was laid of the
Anglo-Chinese college, on which occasion both the English and
Dutch authorities attended.
Previous to this
period, Mr. Milne, along with Mr. Morrison, had received from
the university of Glasgow the degree of D.D., which had been
granted them December 24, 1817. In March 1819 he had to mourn
the loss of his wife. In November of the same year the whole of
the Old Testament, translated by him and his colleague, was
completed, Dr. Milne having undertaken the historical portions,
and Dr. Morrison the books of Solomon and the Prophets. In 1820
Dr. Milne published ‘A Retrospect of the First Ten Years of the
Protestant Mission to China,’ in which he gives an interesting
account of the history of that country, its manners, its morals,
and its religion, and of the various attempts to introduce the
knowledge of the gospel into that benighted land. After
suffering much from the effects of the climate, Dr. Milne died
at Malacca, 1822, at the age of 37, leaving four children.
Admiral Sir
David Milne, GCB, RN (May 1763 – 5 May 1845) was a Royal
Navy admiral.
Sir David Milne was born in May, 1763, at Musselburgh, near
Edinburgh, and died 5 May, 1845, while on his passage, in the
Clarence steamer, from London to, Granton Pier, in Scotland. He
was son of David Milne, Esq., merchant, of Edinburgh, by a
daughter of ___ Vernor, Esq., of Musselburgh.
This officer entered the Navy, 26 May, 1779, as Midshipman, on
board the Canada 74, Capts. Hugh Dalrymple, Sir Geo. Collier,
and Hon. Wm. Cornwallis. While in that ship, in which he
continued until the close of 178$, he accompanied Admiral Darby
to the relief of Gibraltar in 1780; assisted, after having been
repeatedly engaged with the Spanish gun-boats and batteries, at
the capture, despite a brave defence, of the Santa Leocadia
Spanish frigate of 44 guns; was with the fleet under Sir Sam.
Hood when thrice attacked, in Jan. 1782, by the Comte de Grasse
at St. Kitt’s; enacted a warm part in Rodney’s famous actions of
9 and 12 April (for his conduct on the latter of which occasions
he was awarded the rating of Master’s Mate); and was present in
the ensuing Sept. in a dreadful hurricane, which only allowed
the Canada and Jason, out of 10 ships of war, all homeward
bound, to reach their destination. On leaving the Canada, as
above, Mr. Milne was received on board the Elizabeth 74, Capt.
Kingsmill, fitting for the East Indies; but being in a few weeks
paid off, and having no immediate prospect of employment in his
own profession, he entered the merchant service, in which he
continued, part of the time in the East Indies, until the
renewal of war with France in 1793, when he was afforded an
opportunity of joining the Boyne 98, bearing the flag of Sir
John Jervis, who, on his arrival in the West Indies, promoted
him, 13 Jan. 1794, to a Lieutenancy in the Blanche of 38 guns,
Capts. Christopher Parker, Robt. Faulkner, and Chas. Sawyer.
Under the second-named of those officers we find him actively
employed in the proximate operations against the French islands,
particularly in an attack upon one of the Saintes, where he
landed and assisted in taking the enemy by a coup-de-maln. On
her return to the West Indies, after conveying H.R.H. the Duke
of Kent to Halifax, the Blanche was stationed off Guadeloupe,
the whole of which island, with the exception of Fort Matilda,
had again fallen into the hands of the French; and Lieut. Milne
was in consequence repeatedly employed on detached service. On
one occasion he so distinguished himself by the manner in which
he boarded and brought a vessel out from under a pelting fire
from the batteries in Mahout Bay, that Capt. Faulknor, on being
presented by him with the French commander’s sword, returned it
to him with many flattering compliments; and on another, 30 Dec
1794, with an equal degree of gallantry, he cut out a large
armed schooner of 8 guns irom beneath a destructive fire from a
fort and a body of troops, not fifty yards distant, in the
island of Deseada. On 5 Jan. 1795 it was his fortune to be
Second-Lieutenant of the Blanche when, after a deadly action of
nearly four hours and a half, and a loss to herself, out of 198
men, of 8 persons (including Capt. Faulknor) killed and 21
wounded, she effected the capture of the French frigate La
Pique, of 38 guns and about 279 men, of whom 76 were killed and
110 wounded. As the boats of both ships, at the end of the
conflict, were either completely destroyed or unable to float,
Mr. Milne, followed by 10 seamen, swam to the conquered vessel,
and took possession of her.[1] As a reward for his valour on so
dashing an occasion, he was promoted, as soon as the
intelligence reached the Admiralty, to the command of the
Inspector sloop; but, prior to the receipt of his commission, he
appears to have been further present in the Blanche in the
unsuccessful attack on Ste. Lucie, and, until the troops were
obliged to re-embark and return to Martinique, to have been
constantly employed in her boats. When at length apprized of his
promotion, the Inspector being on a distant service, Capt. Milne
was successively nominated Acting-Captain of the Quebec 32 and
Alarm 32; in the latter of which frigates, having previously
escorted convoy to the northward of the islands, he destroyed,
in the neighbourhood of Puerto Rico, 30 May, 1795, the French
corvette La Liberté of 20 guns, with clothing and ammunition on
board for the French army at Guadeloupe. On the departure of the
Inspector, shortly after he had joined her, for England, he was
induced, by an offer from Sir John Laforey, the
Commander-in-Chief, of the first Post vacancy that should occur,
to take charge of the transport department under him; a service
in which, by collecting a great number of transports from all
parts of the West Indies, which had been uselessly lying there
at a great expense, and sending them to England, he saved an
immense sum to the nation. He was also employed at Martinique,
which was daily threatened with an attack from Guadeloupe and
Ste. Lucie; and had the satisfaction, while there, of witnessing
the perpetual repulse of the enemy. On 2 Oct. 1795, as had been
promised, he was made Post into the Matilda frigate; but so
necessary did the Commander-in-Chief find it to have by him an
officer of his experience and active disposition, that he
ordered that ship to cruize under her First-Lieutenant. At the
close of the year, however, the command of La Pique, the frigate
he had so materially contributed to capture, becoming vacant, he
solicited the Admiral for the appointment with claims that were
not to be denied; and he accordingly, in Jan. 1796, joined her
at Barbadoes. On 9 of the ensuing March, being on a cruize in
the neighbourhood of that island in quest of a part of the
convoy which had been dispersed in the memorable gales under Sir
Hugh Cloberry Christian, Capt. Milne succeeded in making prize
of the Lacédémonien French privateer of 14 guns and 90 men, and
in chasing a ship of 20 guns, a brig, and a schooner off the
station. He next, in April, 1796, accompanied the expedition
against the Dutch colonies of Demerara, Essequibo,. and Berbice;
and in the course of the same year, feeling himself justified by
circumstances, although without any orders to do so, he took
charge of a valuable convoy and returned to England – a step,
however, which the Admiralty sanctioned with its approbation.
After the general mutiny at Spithead, and a second exhibition of
insubordination on board La Pique in particular, which was
completely subdued by a mixture of intrepidity, firmness, and
clemency on the part of Capt. Milne, he continued attached to
the force on the coast of France, until there wrecked at the
capture, 29 June, 1798, of the French frigate La Seine of 42
guns and 610 men (including troops), after a running action of
about five hours, in which the enemy sustained a loss of 170
killed and 100 wounded, and the British (whose force consisted,
in addition to La Pique, of the Jason 38, and Mermaid 32) of 9
killed and 18 wounded.[2] Being acquitted by court-martial of
all blame in the loss of his ship, Capt. Milne was soon
afterwards appointed to the command of La Seine, whose armament,
upon her being added to the British Navy, had been increased to
48 guns, and her complement of men fixed at 281. In Oct. 1799 he
sailed with the annual store-ship for the coast of Africa,
whence, at the end of four months, during which period he had
gallantly gone in pursuit of three French frigates, and had
lost, owing to the sanitory nature of his arrangements, but one
man from the unhealthiness of the climate, he proceeded with
convoy to the West Indies; subsequently to his arrival on which
station, and when in the Mona Passage, he had the good fortune
to effect, 21 Aug. 1800, the capture of La Vengeance of 52 guns
and 326 men, an achievement which was the result of a brilliant
action of two hours and a half, attended with a loss to La Seine
of 13 men killed and 29 wounded, and to her opponent of more
than twice that number. Notwithstanding that the performance was
highly and justly lauded in the despatches of the
Commander-in-Chief, Lord Hugh Seymour,[3] and that it was
allowed to glitter among the brightest exploits of the war,
Capt. Milne received neither honour nor reward. After passing
some time in the blockade of the Mississippi, where he made
prize of several vessels, he returned to England, and in April,
1803, was paid off. Resuming command of La Seine in April of the
following year, he joined the force under Admiral Thornbrough in
the North Sea; where, on 21 July, 1803, while proceeding to
blockade the Texel, he had the misfortune, owing to the
ignorance of his pilots, to be wrecked, by running on a sandbank
off Schelling Island. In 1811, having been for about six years
very efficiently employed in command of the Frith of Forth
district of Sea Fencibles, he obtained an appointment to the
Impétueux 74; in which ship, and in the Dublin 74, Royal
Charlotte yacht, and Venerable and Bulwark 74’s, he served with
activity on the Baltic, North Sea, Lisbon, Channel, and North
American stations until informed of his advancement to
Flag-rank, which took place 4 June, 1814. While in the
last-mentioned ship, he had command of a squadron in Boston Bay,
and was engaged in blockading the different harbours and rivers
along that part of the American coast, where he destroyed bo
many of the enemy’s vessels that their trade was totally ruined.
He also served at the capture of Castine, in the Penobscot; and
when afterwards, in Oct. 1814, at Halifax, there being at the
time no line-of-battle ship off Boston, he volunteered and was
sent thither for the purpose of watching such vessels as might
be in the port fitting for sea. He continued on this service
(capturing intermediately the Harlequin privateer, of 300 tons,
10 long 12-pounders, and 115 men) until the close of the month;
and then, having been superseded in the Bulwark in consequence
of his promotion, returned to England a passenger in the Loire
frigate. On 2 May, 1816, Rear-Admiral Milne (who, to his
mortification, had been omitted in the extension of the Order of
the Bath in the preceding year) hoisted his flag on board the
Leander 50, as Commander-in-Chief in North America and on the
Lakes of Canada. At his urgent request, however, he was allowed,
previously to his departure, to join, as second in command, the
expedition fitting out under Lord Exmouth against Algiers;
where, on the memorable 27 Aug., with his flag in the
Impregnable 104, he afforded his Lordship such honourable and
cordial support, that he was induced to send him home in charge
of the despatch announcing the glorious result of the battle.[4]
Owing to the dilapidated condition of his own ship, the Leander,
the Rear-Admiral was under the necessity of returning to England
in the Glasgow 50. Subsequently to his arrival he had the
gratification, as well for the brilliancy of his former services
as for his recent meritorious conduct, of being nominated a
K.C.B., with additional armorial bearings, 19 Sept. 1816. He was
voted also the thanks of both Houses of Parliament; obtained the
Royal permission to accept and wear the insignia of the Orders
of Wilhelm of the Netherlands and St. Januarius of Naples,
conferred upon him by the Sovereigns of those countries;
received from the city of London its freedom, accompanied by a
handsome sword; and was presented by Lord Exmouth with a gold
snuff-box, having on it a device expressive of the effects
resulting from the ever-famous battle in which they had fought.
In 1817 Sir David Milne proceeded to Halifax for the purpose of
assuming command, as originally intended, of the British
squadron in North America, whence he returned in the summer of
1819 – receiving, previously to his departure, a very flattering
address frotn the merchants at Bermuda. He attained the rank of
Vice-Admiral 27 May, 1825; was created a G.C.B. 4 July, 1840;
and became a full Admiral 23 Nov. 1841. From 21 April, 1842,
until within a few days of his decease, he filled the post of
Commander-in-Chief at Devonport, with his flag on board the
Caledonia 120.
Sir David Milne, who was a Magistrate and Deputy-Lieutenant for
co. Berwick, was returned to Parliament in 1820 as Member for
the town of Berwick-upon-Tweed. He married, first, in 1804,
Grace, daughter of Sir Alex. Purves, Bart.; and (that lady dying
in 1814), secondly, 28 Nov. 1819, a daughter of the late Geo.
Stephen, Esq., of the island of Grenada. By his former marriage
he had issue two sons, the younger of whom, the present Capt.
Alex. Milne, R.N., is a Lord of the Admiralty. Agents – Messrs.
Halford and Co.
See also:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Milne_(Royal_Navy_officer)
See also: Sir Alexander Milne, 1st Baronet at:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_Alexander_Milne,_1st_Baronet