French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars visible in the background Napier became a
midshipman in 1799 aboard the 16-gun sloop , but left her in May 1800 before she was lost with all hands. He next served aboard , flagship of Sir
John Borlase Warren. After this, in November 1802, he transferred to the frigate under Captain
William Hoste. The following year, he moved to
Égyptienne for a voyage to St Helena escorting a convoy of ships and then in the English Channel and off the coast of France. (In later years, feeling he had been badly treated as a midshipman by her captain,
Charles Fleeming, Napier challenged that officer to a duel, though they were eventually reconciled by their seconds.) In 1804–5 he served briefly on
Mediator before moving to off Boulogne. He was promoted
lieutenant on 30 November 1805. He was appointed to , and was present in her in the West Indies at the action in which the squadron under Admiral
Warren took the French
Marengo (80 guns) and
Belle Poule (40 guns), on 13 March 1806. After returning home with Warren, he returned to the
West Indies in and having been promoted to commander on 30 November 1807, he was appointed acting commander of the brig of 16 guns, formerly the French
privateer Austerlitz. In August 1808 he became captain of the brig-sloop (18 guns), and in her fought a hot action off
Antigua with the French sloop
Diligente (18 guns), in which his thigh was smashed by a cannonball. In April 1809, Napier took part in the capture of the
Caribbean island of
Martinique, and subsequently distinguished himself in
the pursuit of three escaping French ships of the line, handling the small
Recruit so well that the British were able to capture the French flagship
''D'Hautpoul''. As a result, he was promoted acting
post captain and briefly given the command of the captured 74-gun ship-of-the-line. His rank was confirmed on 22 May 1809, but he was put on half-pay, when he came home as temporary captain of the frigate escorting a
convoy. While on half-pay he spent some time at the
University of Edinburgh. Napier, still on half-pay, then went to Portugal to visit his three cousins, (all
colonels serving in
Wellington's army, and one of whom was
Charles James Napier, the future conqueror of
Sindh). He took part in the
Battle of Buçaco, during which he saved his cousin Charles's life and was himself wounded. In 1811, he was appointed captain of the frigate (32 guns) and served in the
Mediterranean Fleet under
Sir Edward Pellew, disrupting enemy shipping. Among his principal exploits was the 1813 capture of the island of
Ponza, which was a possible haven for corsairs. In 1813 he moved to command the frigate (36 guns), operating mainly off the French and Spanish Mediterranean coast.
War of 1812 and Hundred Days After the surrender of
Napoleon and his first period of exile in 1814, Napier and his ship were transferred to the coast of North America, where the
War of 1812 with the
United States was still in progress, now commanded by Vice Admiral
Sir Alexander Cochrane. In the
Chesapeake Bay campaign, he took part in the August expedition up the
Potomac River to
Alexandria (southeast of the American national capital), Arriving several days after the
Burning of Washington and the
Battle of Bladensburg under Maj. Gen.
Robert Ross and Rear Admiral
Sir George Cockburn, he was second in command to Captain
James Alexander Gordon. The British squadron took 10 days to travel upriver, with many strandings and damage from a tornado/thunderstorm (after the Washington fires), but on 28 August 1814 before attempting a bombardment, they captured
Fort Washington on the north shoreline which was blown up by the Americans prior to the attack. The town of Alexandria capitulated with a ransom paid and the shipping there was seized. The squadron successfully withdrew downriver with their prizes despite frequent harassing American attacks from the shores downstream. During the withdrawal, Napier was wounded in the neck. He next distinguished himself in the following attack on
Baltimore, Maryland, by a British Army accompanied by 16 warships, 12–14 September 1814, under
Admirals Cochrane, and
Cockburn. HMS
Euryalus was involved in the bombardment of
Fort McHenry, protecting the city on the Northwest Branch of the
Patapsco River that began early in the morning of the 13th. At. the same time, earlier on the 12th, Gen.
Ross had been put ashore to the southeast at North Point with his regiments to attack the town from the east. He was shot in a brief skirmish just before his troops met the City Brigade regiments of the
Maryland Militia under Brig. Gen.
John Stricker at the
Battle of North Point that afternoon. After pausing for the night to tend to the substantial wounded and now under the command of Col.
Arthur Brooke, the regiments waited outside the substantial American dug-in fortifications with opposing approx. 20,000 troops and 100 artillery at old Loudenschlager's Hill in present-day Hampstead Hill in western
Patterson Park until the naval forces were able to subdue the fort and move upriver to attack the eastern land redoubts. The critical period of the attack developed shortly after midnight when a picked British force in longboats armed with scaling ladders under Napier's command penetrated the Middle or Ferry Branch of the
river along the southern opposite shore, today's
Brooklyn and
Fairfield areas of southern Baltimore and
Anne Arundel County to the west of the fort with the intention of storming it from the rear flank. Before they could land, however, they were detected and subjected to a withering fire from the still active guns of Fort McHenry and two smaller forts to the west, batteries
Covington and
Babcock. The British fought back strongly with cannon and rockets, but Napier's force eventually retreated to the warships with substantial casualties, and Cochrane's fleet later withdrew on the morning of the 14th.
Euryalus proceeded to
Halifax, Nova Scotia for refitting and then took part in the ongoing blockade of the eastern seaboard of the U.S.A.. Bored by such duties, Napier issued a challenge to the American frigate , which had been lying in on the
Elizabeth River harbor near the
U.S. Naval base at
Norfolk, Virginia, (since making her only war cruise during the first year of the War) to come out and fight a single-ship duel. The challenge was accepted and due arrangements were made 'in the most gentlemanly fashion', but
Euryalus was made part of the squadron that Admiral Cochrane took to Florida and Louisiana in December 1814 in the operations that climaxed in the
Battle of New Orleans on 8 January 1815, and before she could return to fulfil her engagement with
Constellation news of the peace
treaty of Ghent reached the USA. With Napoleon's escape from
Elba and brief return to power, the
Hundred Days,
Euryalus returned to Britain. Napier's last mission of the Napoleonic wars was to land troops at the mouth of the River
Scheldt to guard against the French advance into Belgium. ==Personal life==