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Collection Reference Number GLC03479.52
From Archive Folder Documents Relating to the 1880s 
Title Earl English to Henry Srunken[?] regarding a bill
Date 6 March 1886
Author English, Earl (1824-1893)  
Recipient Srunken, Henry  
Document Type Correspondence
Content Description Written by retired Rear Admiral English to Srunken (the name is hard to read and that spelling might not be correct). Encloses a check for 200 dollars (not included) for a bill that was sent to him.
Subjects Military History  Navy  Finance  
People English, Earl (1824-1893)  Srunken, Henry (fl. 1886)  
Place written Washington, D.C.
Theme Naval & Maritime
Sub-collection The Gilder Lehrman Collection, 1860-1945
Additional Information Earl English, Naval Officer, born in Crosswicks, Burlington County, New Jersey, 18 February 1824. He was educated in Trenton, New Jersey, and entered the naval service, 25 February 1840. His first cruise was in the U. S. frigate "Constellation" around the world, returning after an absence of four years, then being ordered to the Naval Academy in Annapolis, where he was graduated in 1846. He joined the U. S. frigate "Independence," and was actively employed on the Pacific coast,, principally in California. He was at the capture of Mazatlan, Mexico, in November 1847, and remained there till the close of the Mexican war in 1852 he was attached to the U. S. brig "Dolphin," which was engaged in "deep sea soundings" across the Atlantic Ocean from Newfoundland. He was appointed Master, 1 March 1855, and Lieutenant on 14 September In 18,57 he cruised in the East Indies, and took part in the engagement with the barrier forts, seven miles below Canton, China, in which he was wounded. He was made Lieutenant Commander, 16 July 1862, and served throughout the Civil War, being employed principally in the Gulf of Mexico and the sounds of North Carolina, and commanding at different periods the " Somerset," "Sagamore," and "Wyalusing." In 1866 he was appointed Commander, and after the war served four years on the East India station, he was then employed in Japanese waters during the struggle that resulted in the overthrow of the Tycoon. When the latter was defeated at Osaka, 13 February 1868, he received him on board the "Iroquois," which was then anchored in the Osaka River. He was commissioned Captain, 28 September 1871, Commodore, 25 March 1880, and Rear Admiral, 4 September 1884, at which time he resigned the office of chief of the Bureau of Equipment and Recruiting, which he had held for six years. He then took command of the European station, and was retired, 18 February 1886.
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Civil War, Reconstruction and the Modern Era: 1860-1945