Granville Gower Loch
Granville Gower Loch (1813–1853) was a captain in the Royal Navy. A son of James Loch (his brother was Lord Henry Loch, and his uncle was Admiral Francis Erskine Loch), Granville Gower Loch entered the navy in 1826 and had risen to the rank of commander by 1837. He attained post rank and went on the Obina campaign as a volunteer in 1841. He published an account of the campaign The Closing Events of the Campaign in China (1843). He was employed in Nicaragua in 1848, in the same year he was awarded the C.B.. He took prominent part in the Second Burmese War, 1852–53. He was shot and killed while attacking Donabew and was buried in Rangoon.
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
primaryTopic
Granville Gower Loch
Granville Gower Loch (1813–1853) was a captain in the Royal Navy. A son of James Loch (his brother was Lord Henry Loch, and his uncle was Admiral Francis Erskine Loch), Granville Gower Loch entered the navy in 1826 and had risen to the rank of commander by 1837. He attained post rank and went on the Obina campaign as a volunteer in 1841. He published an account of the campaign The Closing Events of the Campaign in China (1843). He was employed in Nicaragua in 1848, in the same year he was awarded the C.B.. He took prominent part in the Second Burmese War, 1852–53. He was shot and killed while attacking Donabew and was buried in Rangoon.
has abstract
Granville Gower Loch (1813–185 ...... bew and was buried in Rangoon.
@en
Link from a Wikipage to an external page
Wikipage page ID
38,051,599
page length (characters) of wiki page
Wikipage revision ID
971,959,981
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
first
John Knox
@en
last
Laughton
@en
wikiPageUsesTemplate
wstitle
Loch, Granville Gower
@en
subject
hypernym
type
comment
Granville Gower Loch (1813–185 ...... bew and was buried in Rangoon.
@en
label
Granville Gower Loch
@en