Lord Nelson's protégé's rare gold naval medal estimated to fetch £60-80,000 at auction
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, November 21, 2024


Lord Nelson's protégé's rare gold naval medal estimated to fetch £60-80,000 at auction
The superb and exceptionally rare small Captain’s Naval Gold Medal for The Battle of Lissa in 1811, awarded to Captain Sir William Hoste K.C.B., Royal Navy (1780 –1828), the protégé of Admiral Lord Nelson.



LONDON.- Morton and Eden announced the forthcoming auction of the superb and exceptionally rare small naval gold medal for the Battle of Lissa in the Adriatic Sea in 1811, awarded to Captain Sir William Hoste K.C.B., Royal Navy, one of Admiral Lord Nelson’s most highly regarded protégés. The medal is estimated to fetch £60,000 - 80,000 when it is included in the sale of Medals, Orders and Decorations on 13 July 2021.

David Kirk, Morton and Eden’s medal specialist said: “This is a superb group of awards to an extremely important naval figure who, not only served with but was also a great friend of Nelson. Just four naval gold medals were awarded for the Battle of Lissa, and this medal to Hoste, who led the victorious British squadron, is without doubt the finest of the four. For dedicated collectors of naval medals from this period, opportunities to buy historic groups like this at public auction do not come along very often.”

Captain Sir William Hoste K.C.B. (1780-1828) was born on 26 August 1780 at Ingoldsthorpe, Norfolk and entered the navy at an early age. Shortly afterwards an introduction was engineered by Hoste’s father to another great Norfolk naval officer Horatio Nelson. This sowed the seeds of a firm friendship between the two, and soon after Hoste was accepted by Nelson to serve as his Captain’s Servant aboard the newly refitted H.M.S. Agamemnon.

Hoste was by Nelson’s side from 1793 and 1798 and was present at the Battle of St Vincent and the Battle of the Nile. Letters written by Nelson to his wife during this time mentioned that he considered Hoste to be ‘without exception, one of the finest boys I ever met with’, stating also that he considered that Hoste’s ‘…gallantry can never be exceeded, and each day rivets him stronger to my heart. Hoste rose swiftly to the rank of Captain and would go on to become, in his own right, one of the great frigate captains of the Napoleonic Wars.

In 1805 he was sent by Nelson to deliver diplomatic gifts and messages to the Dey of Algiers, thereby missing the great sea battle of Trafalgar and the tragic death of his mentor. On hearing of Nelson’s death, Hoste wrote to his father: ‘Not to have been in this battle is enough to make one mad; but to have lost such a friend besides is really sufficient to almost overwhelm me…’

In Hoste’s finest hour, however, during the opening stages of the Battle of Lissa (the island today known as Vis in the Adriatic Sea, near modern day Dubrovnik off the coast of Croatia) on 13 March 1811, Hoste raised the memorable signal ‘Remember Nelson’ from H.M.S. Amphion in honour of his friend, which was met with loud cheers.

Hoste then led his ships in a devastating attack upon the larger French and Venetian squadron. Given the numerical superiority of the enemy, this battle has been considered ‘one of the most brilliant naval achievements during the war’ (Dictionary of National Biography), with a British loss of 190 killed and wounded, to the French and Venetian loss of over 700, with one French frigate driven ashore and destroyed and another taken as a prize alongside two further Venetian frigates.

Hoste continued to distinguish himself. Appointed Captain of the Bacchante, he was responsible for the capture of and destruction of more ships near Apulia and Ancona. In December 1813 he led the attack on Cattaro, which surrendered on 5 January 1814. From there, Hoste and his men also went on to capture Ragusa, which capitulated in precisely the same way when faced with Hoste’s battery of guns.




Due to failing health, however, Hoste was then obliged to return to England, but his country had not forgotten him. In July 1814 he was made baronet and on the reorganisation of the Order of the Bath in 1815 he was nominated K.C.B. His Knight Commander’s neck badge, 1814 for The Most Excellent Order of the Bath, K.C.B. (Military Division) has an estimate of £4,000-5,000.

With his health remaining fragile, Hoste undertook very little subsequent service, but in 1822 he accepted the command of the Albion guardship at Portsmouth, and then in 1825, he was appointed to the Royal Yacht. Hoste died of tuberculosis in London on 6 December 1828.

Hoste’s first son, Rear-Admiral Sir William Legge Hoste, would also go on to serve with distinction in the Royal Navy (Sir William’s son’s pair of campaign medals for the Second China War, 1857-60 is also included in the auction with an estimate of £2,000- 3,000). And, perhaps not surprisingly, Sir William named his third son Wyndham Horatio Nelson Hoste, in honour of his great patron.

As recorded in his significant and detailed entry in Laughton’s ‘Dictionary of National Biography’, it is concluded that: ‘Hoste's long and successful command in the Adriatic, his brilliant victory at Lissa, and his reduction of Cattaro have given him a naval reputation far beyond that achieved by any other officer of his age and rank.’

Hoste was also awarded the Insignia of a Knight of Maria Theresa, conferred upon him by the Emperor of Austria for his subsequent services at Cattaro in 1813 and Ragusa in 1814. The lot of insignia is estimated to fetch £12,000-15,000.

The last member of the family to bear the name Sir William Hoste was killed in action on 9 May 1915, aged 20, during a two-day offensive near the Sailly-Fromelles Road in France, whilst serving in the 2nd Battalion, Rifle Brigade. Lieutenant Sir William Graham Hoste’s Great War 1914-15 Trio of medals and Memorial Plaque are also included in the auction, together with the campaign awards bestowed on his grandfather as well as those of his great-grandfather. The Great War medals are estimated to fetch £400-600 and the young Sir William Graham Hoste’s death marked the end of the direct line of Hoste descendants, which then passed to other relations of the name Fortescue.

A spokesperson for the family of Sir William’s five x great granddaughter said: “After considerable thought we have now made the difficult decision to part with these historic medals. Owning them has been a great honour, but it has also been a considerable responsibility and we believe now is the time to share the achievements of our illustrious forebears with a wider audience.”

Captain Sir William Hoste K.C.B. (1780-1828) was born on 26 August 1780 at Ingoldsthorpe, Norfolk, the second son of the Reverend Dixon Hoste, rector of Godwick and Tittleshall, and Margaret Hoste (née Stanforth). He was educated at King’s Lynn and then later at Paston School, which Horatio Nelson had also attended some years earlier.

In April 1817 he married Lady Harriett Walpole (1792-1875), daughter of the third Earl of Orford, with whom he had five children. Hoste died of tuberculosis in London on 6 December 1828 and was buried in St John's Chapel, London. There is a memorial to him at St Paul's Cathedral.










Today's News

June 2, 2021

French heir gives Pissarro stolen by the Nazis to a U.S. university

Kafka letters, drawings made publicly available online

Hindman's May Antiquities and Ancient Art Auction realizes over $1 million

Rijksmuseum receives exceptional seascape by Ludolf Bakhuysen

Searching for Gertrude Bell, colonial 'mother' of modern Iraq

First European physical art event after Covid lockdowns, now doubled in size

A temporary export bar has been placed on a late 15th century bronze roundel valued at £17 million

The Hepworth Wakefield opens an expansive exhibition of Barbara Hepworth's work

Lines never felt so good: Crowds herald New York's reopening

Doyle to auction Fine Art on June 9

Charleston opens first Nina Hamnett retrospective

Christie's Classic Week presents Isaac Newton's Philosophiae naturalis principia mathematica

Desde el Salón (From the Living Room): Sol Calero explores the Hiscox Collection

Original Spider-Man comic art heads to Heritage Auctions in June

Unique 1854 New Orleans gold coin returns home

Lord Nelson's protégé's rare gold naval medal estimated to fetch £60-80,000 at auction

Ketterer Kunst announces results of Rare Books Auction in Hamburg

Rag'n'Bone Man, Woodkid to top Montreux Jazz Festival

Cannes 'can't wait' for film fest after 'horrible' year

The new detectorists

Lance Loud was an early reality star. He was also a gay punk pioneer.

Raimund Hoghe, choreographer of strength and frailty, dies at 72

Bonhams announces new modern and contemporary art leadership in Asia

Bach's cello suites, now on violin, with a folksy feel

Parimatch: How to bet on basketball and win



Commercial and Residential Moving Solutions with Same Day and Next Day Booking Options in Utah

Perfect Online Moving Solutions for Commercial & Residential Moving Issues

Does vitamin C serum darken skin?

Top 10 Flower Stage Decoration Ideas for Weddings!!!

How to Create Your Own Lottery?

Modern Bathroom Renovation Tips To Inject Art Into Your Bathroom




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful