Captain Sir William PeelVCKCB (2 November 1824 – 27 April 1858) was a British naval officer and recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces. He was the third son of the Prime MinisterSir Robert Peel and his wife Julia. Like his father, he was educated at Harrow School.
On 5 November at the Battle of Inkerman, he joined some of the officers of the Grenadier Guards and helped to defend the Colours of the regiment when they were hard-pressed. On 18 June 1855, he led the first scaling party at the assault on the redan and was himself severely wounded. On each of these occasions Captain Peel was accompanied by a young midshipman, Edward St. John Daniel, as Aide-de-camp.
Captain Peel wrote A Ride through the Nubian Desert (1852), detailing his travels of the preceding year.
Memorials
There is a memorial to Captain Peel and the Naval Brigade from HMS Shannon on the seafront at Southsea, England.[3]
There is a statue of William Peel by William Theed in the south transept of Saint Swithun's Church, Sandy, in Bedfordshire.[4] There are two copies of this statue, one in the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich [5] and one which was erected in Eden Gardens, Calcutta.[6] This statue was moved to Barrackpore in 1977 and was due to be moved back to Calcutta in 2004 amid some confusion over its identity: it was thought to be Peel's father, Robert Peel.[7]
Opposite Sandy church across the High Street stands the Sir William Peel pub.[8]
A plaque at The Lodge, headquarters of the RSPB in Sandy, commemorates the 150th anniversary of the death of Captain Sir William Peel. It is situated near the Swiss Cottage which he built in the 1850s, which is now the gatehouse to The Lodge, built by his brother Arthur Wellesley Peel.[9] A similar plaque is mounted on a bench on Sandy High Street.[10]