Staying in the vicinity of the Spice Islands, on 1 March Cornwallis came across the Dutch 8-gun gun-brigMargaretta. After a chase through the day the Dutch ship fled into a small bay on Amblaw Island. Peachey was given the task of capturing Margaretta, for which he was assigned command of three boats from the ship. Setting out for the bay as night fell, it took them all night to reach the ship. In the early morning Peachey's force boardedMargaretta. The Dutch crew fought back, firing grapeshot and muskets at the British and attacking them with swords and pikes. After a short engagement in which the commanding officer of Cornwallis, CaptainWilliam Montagu, described Margaretta as "defended bravely", the ship was captured by Peachey.[2][7]
Peachey's force had five men wounded, while the Dutch had one killed and twenty wounded. Margaretta had on board money and supplies meant for Ternate.[2][7] A portrait of Peachey, depicting him just prior to the boarding of Margaretta, was exhibited by Sir William Beechey at the Royal Academy towards the end of 1816.[8]
Peachey was given command of the 18-gun brig-sloopHMS Hecate in July 1811, in which he took part in the Invasion of Java later in the year. During this period he was also promoted to commander. He continued in Hecate until he was promoted to captain on 7 August 1812. Peachey was then given command of the 36-gun frigate HMS Malacca at Madras.[9][10][11][12] Later in the year he transferred to command the 32-gun frigate HMS Sir Francis Drake.[13] Peachey returned to England with Sir Francis Drake in the following year, escorting a convoy of merchant ships valued at over £3,000,000 (equivalent to £247,300,000 in 2023).[2][9] The ship arrived at Deptford on 28 May.[13] This was Peachey's last active service in the Royal Navy.[9]
Politics
Peachey's father died on 27 June 1816 and he inherited his barony, becoming the third Baron Selsey. Taking his seat in the House of Lords, Peachey generally supported the Whig faction.[2] When George IV introduced the Pains and Penalties Bill 1820 in an attempt to divorce Caroline of Brunswick, Peachey was one of eighteen peers to enter protests against it on 6 November, arguing that adultery could not be proven and the benefit of the doubt should have been given to Caroline.[14] He also voted in favour of the Reform Act 1832.[2]
Patron of the arts
Peachey was appointed a Fellow of the Royal Society, as both previous barons had been, on 27 March 1817.[15][16] He took after his father, who had been a patron of the arts, owning Old Master paintings such as a portrait by Pompeo Batoni. Peachey's primary interest was contemporary sculpture, as well as purchasing books, drawings, and prints. He formed a collection of sculptures known as the Selsey marbles, which he intended Newsells Park in Hertfordshire to house. He also owned a townhouse, 33 Lower Grosvenor Street in London, where the collection may have been held.[17][18]
Peachey married Anna Maria Louisa Irby, a daughter of Frederick Irby, 2nd Baron Boston, on 21 October 1817. They had no issue. Peachey's younger brother John William Peachey, a clergyman, died unmarried on 6 July 1837. Peachey survived him for only a year, dying in Florence on 10 March 1838, aged fifty.[1] His body was transported back to England to be buried at West Dean Park.[3]
With no extant male relatives, the Selsey barony and attached baronetcy both became extinct. Peachey had one sister, Caroline Mary Peachey. She married the clergyman Leveson Venables-Vernon-Harcourt, but also had no children.[1] Peachey's widow survived him, dying in 1870; his sister inherited his estates and owned them until her death in 1871.[19] Peachey's library was then broken up by Ulick de Burgh, 1st Marquess of Clanricarde, who had inherited, and was sold at Sotheby's on 20 June 1872.[20][21]
Urban, Sylvanus (1838). The Gentleman's Magazine. Vol. 19. London: William Pickering; John Bowyer Nichols and Son.
Winfield, Rif (2008). British Warships in the Age of Sail 1793–1817: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates. Barnsley, South Yorkshire: Seaforth. ISBN978-1-78346-926-0.