Downs Station
The Downs Station also known as the Commander-in-Chief, the Downs or
Admiral Commanding at the Downs was a formation of the Kingdom of Great Britain and then the United [Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|United Kingdom]'s Royal Navy based at Deal. It was a major command of the Royal Navy from 1626 until 1834.
The Downs is a roadstead in the southern North Sea near the English Channel off the east Kent coast. It is primarily known in naval history for the Dutch defeat of the Spanish in the Battle of the Downs in 1639.
History
The Downs served as permanent base for naval vessels operating out of Deal, Kent.It served as a base for warships patrolling the North Sea. The command generally covered an area in the southern North Sea near the English Channel off the east Kent coast. The station lasted until 1815, when it was absorbed into the Commander-in-Chief, The Nore's control, whose role and geographic area of responsibility was re-defined by the Admiralty.
Commanders in chief
Incomplete list includes:= died in post
- Commodore Henry Palmer (Royal [Navy officer, born 1582)|Sir Henry Palmer], 1626
- Rear-Admiral Sir John Penington, 1626–1631
- Vice-Admiral Sir John Penington, 1638–1645
- Vice-Admiral Sir John Mennes, 1645–1649
- Rear-Admiral Richard Badiley, 1649–1650
- Vice-Admiral John Lawson, 1650–1656
- Vice-Admiral Richard Badiley, 1656
- Admiral Sir Edward Montagu, 1657–1663
- Commodore Thomas Allin, 1st Baronet|Thomas Allin], 1663–1664
- Admiral Sir William Penn, 1664–1666
- Vice-Admiral Sir John Holmes, 1667–1679
- Commodore Stafford Fairborne, 1695–1697
- Rear-Admiral Basil Beaumont, 1699–1703
- Commodore Richard Griffith, 1707
- Commodore Gerard Ellwes, 1707–1708
- Commodore Charles Cornwall, 1709–1710
- Commodore Tudor Trevor, 1711–1712
- Rear-Admiral Sir Charles Wager, 1712–1714
- Captain Edward Vernon, 1716
- Commodore Philip Cavendish, 1716
- Admiral Edward Vernon, 1745
- Vice-Admiral William Martin, 1745
- Commodore Matthew Michell, 1745–1748
- Admiral Thomas Smith, 1755–1758
- Commodore Sir Peircy Brett, 1758–1761
- Commodore John Moore, 1st Baronet|John Moore], 1761–1766
- Rear-Admiral John Montagu, 1771
- Commodore John Elliot, 1777–1778
- Vice-Admiral Matthew Buckle, 1778–1779
- Vice-Admiral Francis William Drake, 1779–1782
- Rear-Admiral John Evans, 1780–1781*
- Rear-Admiral Sir [Richard Hughes, 2nd Baronet|Sir Richard Hughes], 1781–1782*
- Rear-Admiral Sir [Richard King, 1st Baronet|Sir Richard King], 1790–1791
- Rear-Admiral John MacBride, 1793–1794
- Vice-Admiral Joseph Peyton, 1794–1799
- Rear-Admiral John Bazely, 1796–1797*
- Vice-Admiral Skeffington Lutwidge, 1799–1802
- Rear-Admiral Edward Thornbrough, 1803
- Vice-Admiral Philip Patton, 1803–1804
- Vice-Admiral John Holloway, 1804–1807
- Vice-Admiral Bartholomew Rowley, 1807–1808
- Vice-Admiral George Campbell, 1808–1811
- Vice-Admiral Sir Thomas Foley, 1811–1815
- Rear-Admiral William Hall Gage, 1833.