William Luard


Sir William Garnham Luard, was a British Royal Navy officer.

Naval career

Born in 1820, he was the eldest son of a local magistrate, William Wright Luard J.P., D.L. of Witham Lodge, Witham, Essex and Charlotte Garnham, only child of Thomas Garnham of Belchamp Hall in Suffolk. The Luards were a prominent family of Protestant Huguenot merchants who had fled to England from Caen, Normandy in the late 17th century as part of the mass exodus of Huguenots from France to England that followed the 1685 revocation of the Edict of Nantes.
Luard entered the Royal Naval College at Portsmouth at the age of 13 and later studied at Portsmouth Naval College. He served extensively and saw action in the South China Sea, for which he was recognized in dispatches and decorated for gallantry and bravery several times including being named Companion of the Order of the Bath.
After a distinguished career as a naval officer, including as captain and commander of and HMS Conqueror, he served as superintendent of the Sheerness Dockyard and the Malta Dockyard. From 1882 to 1885, he was President of the Royal Naval College, Greenwich.
He was awarded the Burmese War Medal for dispersing the pirates of Chui-a-poo and received the Legion of Honour, 4th Class, from Emperor Napoleon III. He was promoted rear-admiral in 1875, vice-admiral on 15 June 1879, and admiral in 1885. The Luard Islands, an archipelago off the coast of Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea were named after him.
Luard was advanced to KCB by Queen Victoria in 1897, during her diamond jubilee year.
Luard married Charlotte Du Cane in 1858, with whom he had 13 children. She was from another French Huguenot family, with landed estates at Braxted Park and Coggeshall.
A staunch Liberal and supporter of Prime Minister William Gladstone, Luard retired to his estate in Essex where he served as a justice of the peace and as an active member of the court of Quarter Sessions. He died in 1910 as a result of injuries sustained in a carriage accident. His funeral cortege in his home town of Witham, Essex attracted thousands of mourners.