Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Bedford Clapperton Trevelyan Pim

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Political party
  
Conservative

Name
  
Bedford Trevelyan

Succeeded by
  
Thomas Bevan

Allegiance
  
United Kingdom

Party
  
Conservative Party

Profession
  
Member of Parliament

Education
  
Royal Naval School

Spouse(s)
  
Susanna Locock

Role
  
Author


Bedford Clapperton Trevelyan Pim

Preceded by
  
Sir Charles John Wingfield

Born
  
12 December 1826 Bideford, Devon, England (
1826-12-12
)

Alma mater
  
Royal Naval School, London

Died
  
September 30, 1886, Deal, United Kingdom

Books
  
The Negro and Jamaica, Dottings on the Roadside, in Panama, Nicaragua, and Mosquito

Similar People
  
William Cormack, James Fitzjames, August Heinrich Petermann, Jane Franklin, James Clark Ross

Admiral Bedford Clapperton Trevelyan Pim, RN, MP, FRGS (12 June 1826 – 30 September 1886) was a Royal Navy officer, Arctic explorer, barrister, and author. He was the first man who traveled from a ship on the eastern side of the Northwest Passage to one on the western side.

Contents

Early years

Pim was born in Bideford, Devon, England, son of Edward Bedford Pim of Weirhead, Exeter, a British navy officer who died of yellow fever in 1830 off the coast of Africa while engaged in the suppression of the slave trade, and Sophia Soltau Harrison, eldest daughter of John Fairweather Harrison, Esquire of Totnes. Educated at the Royal Naval School, the younger Pim went to India in the British Merchant Navy, and in 1842, upon his return to England, was appointed a volunteer in the Royal Navy.

Career

In 1845, Pim was posted to the survey ship, HMS Herald, under Captain Henry Kellett. For the next six years, he took part in surveys in the Falkland Islands, the western coast of South America, and north to British Columbia. During this time, he took part in three detours to search for the missing Sir John Franklin expedition. He transferred from the Herald to HMS Plover, wintering at Chamisso Island in Kotzebue Sound 1849-1850, spending considerable time with the local Malemiut, before returning to the Herald. He was promoted to lieutenant in 1851, and in April 1852, he returned to the Arctic, taking part in the rescue of Robert McClure and the crew of HMS Investigator. Pim was the first man to travel from a ship on the eastern side of the Northwest Passage to one on the western side.

Pim served in the Baltic in 1855 during the Crimean War commanding HMS Magpie where he was wounded. He was wounded again in 1857 while commanding HMS Banterer in Chinese waters. He was made a commander in 1858. The following year, he investigated the possibility of a transoceanic canal and became a proponent of the Nicaragua Canal. Pim went to the West Indies in command of the HMS Gorgon in 1860 and returned home on HMS Fury. He made post captain in 1868 and was compulsorily retired in 1870. He studied law after retirement and was called to the Bar of the Inner Temple in 1873. Pim practiced law in Bristol, mainly on admiralty cases, and became a magistrate for the county of Middlesex. He wrote, When Do Sheriffs Take Office? in 1879.

A Conservative, Pim unsuccessfully stood for election in Totnes in July 1865 and Gravesend in December 1868. He was elected a Member of Parliament for Gravesend in 1874 and 1880. Pim was made rear-admiral in 1885.

Pim wrote several articles, books, and pamphlets. "Remarks on the Isthmus of Suez, with Special Reference to the Proposed Canal" was published in the Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society of London in 1859, and Proposed Transit-Route across Central America, from a New Harbour in Nicaragua was published three years later. His 1839 A Brief sketch of the life of the late Zachary Macaulay, Esq., F.R.S. As connected with the subjects of the abolition of the slave trade and slavery was his only biography. His journals as a Midshipman aboard the Herald provided most of the discussion for the Arctic portions of the six-year cruise.

Organizations

Pim belonged to several scientific organizations. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society in 1854.In 1861, he became an associate of the Institute of Civil Engineers. He was also an honorary member of the Dulwich College Science Society.

Personal life

Pim was a major landowner in Central America and the Caribbean. He married Susanna Locock on 3 October 1861 and they had two sons, including the Rev. Henry Bedford Pim. They lived for a time at Belsize and Dulwich. Pim died at Deal, Kent, England, on 30 September 1886. A brass plaque honoring Pim was moved in 1981 from The Missions to Seamen Institute to St. Nicholas Church, Bristol, England.

Legacy

  • Pim Island, Nunavut, Canada.
  • Pim's Bay (variant Monkey Point), 40 mi (64 km) of Greytown, Nicaragua
  • Partial works

  • (1857) An earnest appeal to the British public on behalf of the missing Arctic Expedition.
  • (1858) Notes on Cherbourg.
  • (1863) The Gate of the Pacific.
  • (1868) The negro and Jamaica. Read before the Anthropological Society of London, etc.
  • (1869) Dottings on the Roadside in Panama, Nicaragua, and Mosquito ... Illustrated with plates and maps.
  • (s.d.) War chronicle, with memoirs of the emperor Napoleon III, the emperor-King William I, map and official documents, from the breaking out of the war to the final evacuation of French territory by the German troops.
  • (1876) British Manufacturing Industries series, vol. 10: "Ship-building"
  • (1877) The Eastern question, past, present and future : with official documents.
  • (1881). Gems from Greenwich Hospital.
  • (1883). Transit across Central America.
  • References

    Bedford Clapperton Trevelyan Pim Wikipedia