As a post-captain, Baynes was not given a command immediately was only assigned to command the 26-gun HMS Andromache on the Cape Station beginning 2 February 1838. He remained aboard the ship until March 1843, after which he was placed on half-pay. On 8 July 1846, he married Frances Denman, the daughter of Lord Denman, Lord Chief Justice.[3] Baynes was reactivated and from 23 September 1847 to 7 November 1850, he commanded HMS Bellerophon a troopship that was assigned first to the Western Station, then the Mediterranean.[7] Baynes was promoted to rear admiral on 7 February 1855 and he was the third in command in the Baltic Sea during the final year of the Crimean War in 1855.[2]
Pacific Station and final years
He was appointed Commander-in-Chief, Pacific Station in on 8 July 1857, with his flag aboard HMS Ganges. Baynes arrived as the gold rush in the British Pacific Northwest was happening and the Royal Navy was expected to enforce the laws enacted by the Governor of the Colony of Vancouver Island, James Douglas. While Baynes was away at Callao, Peru, the San Juan border dispute erupted.[2] On 27 July 1859, United States troops under the command of Brigadier-GeneralWilliam Selby Harney landed on San Juan Island off the Colony of Vancouver Island at the behest of 22 American settlers who claimed to be threatened.[8] The settlers had killed a pig that belonged to the Hudson's Bay Company, and feared British punishment. San Juan Island was British territory, and though the British Ambassador to the United States Lord Lyons initially sought to conquer an American-held island that the British also laid claim to, he ordered Baynes to assist but not to escalate the issue.[9][10] Douglas also sought military intervention, who demanded the landing of Royal Marines on the island. Baynes refused and his patient handling of the situation led to joint-occupation of the island until a formal decision could be made.[2] In 1872, the British recognized American sovereignty over the island.[11]
After the gold rush and the San Juan dispute, Baynes sought to transfer the headquarters of the Pacific Station to the North Pacific. Esquimalt was Baynes' suggestion in 1859, to which the Admiralty agreed in 1862. On 18 April 1860 he was made a knight commander of the Bath.[2] He remained Commander-in-Chief, Pacific Station until 1861.[6] He returned to the United Kingdom and never held command again, though he was promoted to vice-admiral of the blue on 5 August 1861.[12] He was made vice admiral of the red in 1863 and admiral in 1865.[2][6]
Dod, Robert P. (1865). Dod's Peerage, Baronetage, Knightage etc. of Great Britain and Ireland (25th ed.). London: Whitaker and Co.
Finlay, George (1878). A History of Greece: From Its Conquest By the Romans to the Present Time B.C. 146 to A.D. 1784. Vol. VII. London: Clarendon Press.
Jenkins, Brian (2014). Lord Lyons: A Diplomat in an Age of Nationalism and War. Montreal, Quebec & Kingston, Ontario: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN978-0-7735-4409-3.
Neering, Rosemary (2011). The Pig War: The Last Canada–US Border Conflict. Vancouver: Heritage House Publishing Company. ISBN978-1-926936-01-7.
Walbran, John T. (1971), British Columbia Place Names, Their Origin and History (Facsimile reprint of 1909 ed.), Vancouver/Toronto: Douglas & McIntyre, ISBN0-88894-143-9
Woodhouse, C. M. (1965). The Battle of Navarino. London: Hoddler & Stoughton. OCLC278453607.