Early years The fifth of six children, Edward Edwards was born in
Water Newton, a village near
Peterborough, to Richard Edwards of Water Newton and Mary Fuller of Caldicot. He was born in about 1742 and christened in St Remegius' Church, Water Newton. He never married. On 7 September 1759, age 17, he was commissioned as a lieutenant. To qualify for this commission he would have been required, in addition to passing a lieutenant's exam, to produce evidence of at least six years of sea time. No documents have been located to date which would establish exactly when, and under whose patronage, he started his naval career. It is likely he first went to sea as a captain's servant when about 10 years old and subsequently completed at least part of the required sea time as a midshipman. A signature, 'Edwd Edwards', inscribed on a document witnessing the Will of one Isaac Bishopbridge serving "on Board His Majestys Ship of Warr the
Devonshire," suggests that Edwards may have sailed under Captain John Moore on HMS
Devonshire in April 1756. His naval career after he was commissioned included service in the following ships, before being appointed to
Pandora: • , a 64-gun
third rate, as fourth lieutenant • , a 32-gun
fifth rate, as second lieutenant • HMS
Zephyr, a 14-gun sloop, as first lieutenant, under Captain J. Inglis • HMS
Ferret, a 14-gun sloop, as first lieutenant • , a 28-gun
sixth rate, as second lieutenant • , a 60-gun fourth rate, as third lieutenant, later promoted to first lieutenant • , a 64-gun third rate, as first lieutenant, under Captain
Francis Reynolds (later the Earl of Ducie) • , an 8-gun
bomb vessel, 22 April 1778 – 5 December 1780, commanding officer • HMS
Hornet, a 14-gun sloop, commanding officer; service in the Caribbean. Promoted to
post captain on 25 April 1781, and transferred to command HMS
Narcissus • , a 20-gun sixth rate, (25 May 1781), paid off on 27 March 1784
Pandora and the Bounty He spent the following six years on
half-pay after the end of the American Revolutionary war; until 6 August 1790, when he was appointed to take command of the frigate
Pandora. He received new orders on 11 August to prepare his new command for a journey to "remote parts", on a mission in pursuit of the
Bounty mutineers. foundering, 29 August 1791; 1831 etching by
Robert Batty, from a sketch by Heywood With the help of former
Bounty midshipman
Thomas Hayward - a
Bligh loyalist recently returned to England from the South Pacific - Edwards succeeded in finding fourteen men (Bligh had stated that four of these were loyal but could not be accommodated on the over-full launch with the other loyal men; so Edwards found ten mutineers). The ship finally sailed on 8 May, to search for Christian and
Bounty among the thousands of southern Pacific islands. At Tubai a
Bounty anchor was recovered by . Apart from a few spars discovered at
Palmerston Island, no traces of the fugitive vessel were found. Edwards continued the search until August, when he turned west and headed for the Dutch East Indies. Ironically, a set of islands the Pandora sailed to but did not land at were the
Pitcairn Islands; had he checked his charts and found that this uncharted island was at the correct latitude but wrong longitude for Pitcairn Island, he could very well have fulfilled his mission of taking into custody the last nine Bounty mutineers. The
Pandora foundered on the
Great Barrier Reef on 29 August 1791 during the journey home from the South Pacific. Four of the ten mutineers and 31 of
Pandoras crew died in the destruction of the ship. After an arduous open boat voyage from the wreck to
Timor and on to Batavia (Jakarta), only 78 men of
Pandoras original 134-strong crew eventually reached England, accompanied by six mutineers and four loyalists. For Hayward this was the second time in as many years that he had found himself in an open boat making for a safe haven in the Dutch East Indies. Edwards was
court-martialed on 17 September 1792 for the loss of the
Pandora. Immediately prior to the proceedings, he submitted to the Admiralty his account of the events leading up to the sinking. All of his officers supported Edwards' contention that the frigate had been lost due to circumstances beyond anyone's control. The court-martial was attended by
William Dillon, then a midshipman, who later became a vice-admiral in the Royal Navy and described Edwards in his memoirs as a "fine, venerable-looking officer. His appearance completely absorbed all my attention during the trial, and I felt an inward satisfaction at the result, after all the hardships and dangers he had overcome". Captain Edwards and his officers were exonerated. Edwards subsequently served for a few years as a 'regulating' captain (recruiting officer) in
Argyll and
Hull and then resigned himself to inactivity on the half pay list. However, he was promoted to
vice-admiral in 1809 and eventually ended his career as
Admiral of the White, titularly the third most senior officer in the Royal Navy. He died in his native place - Stamford, Lincolnshire - aged 73, in 1815. Edwards was buried in St Remigius Church in Water Newton, a village in
Huntingdonshire. His reputation and character were effectively blackened by members of the Heywood family, who were unable to forgive him for what they perceived as excessively harsh treatment of their son,
Bounty midshipman
Peter Heywood, who was tried and convicted as a mutineer and pardoned. Yet Edwards had staunch supporters among other officers who had served under his command and he was also remembered by his niece as a "sweet old man", often out on a walk in the country lanes around his native Water Newton and Uppingham where he owned several farms. According to an obituary in the
Lincoln, Stamford & Rutland Mercury (21 April 1815), he suffered for the rest of his life from the effects of the hardships he endured during the open boat voyage to Timor after the loss of the
Pandora. This could be the reason the Admiralty never appointed him to a seagoing command after his court-martial in 1792. ==Legacy==