Later Career - Russian Navy
Having left the Scottish Navy, a whole new world was opened to him and he went first to France to visit Queen Mary. There he met Captain Oglivie and told him that indeed he was “the famous Captain Gordon”. He had crossed the
English Channel to
Calais with Elizabeth Oglivie (Oglivie’s cousin, or possibly wife) who was employed as a messenger between the Jacobites in England and France. She was known as the “Courier of Jupiter” and wrote from Calais the following letter to Ogilvie:
"I have a countryman of ours with me, who was pinned on me by our friends in London. I was ordered to put him into your hands, and I long for an opportunity to get him off my own. I don’t know if he was designed for my guide, but I find myself under a necessity of being his, for to take him out of his wooden world, he knows no more about travelling than a child of six. He is in a prodigious hurry to be at Dunkirk before Saturday. I wish to God he maybe soon wanted. He is in such haste that I was forced to go halves with him in hiring a packet boat at the rate of £5 on purpose to be almost “drounded,” or what was very near as extravagant a reason, to humour my fellow traveller, for we came over in so prodigious a storm that nothing but our light heads could have kept us from the bottom."
He joined the Russian Navy of
Peter the Great on
June 1, 1717 and remained a Russian officer until his death on
March 18, 1741. Gordon, who was now considered as a refugee, was engaged by the
Tsar in Holland along with Captain Saunders, who is described as an Englishman, Captain Hay and Captain-Lieutenants Urquhart and Serocoled; along with two land officers, all British. After Gordon arrived in
Russia, the Jacobites saw an opportunity to interest the Tsar in their affairs. There were a number of letters sent to the Tsar for just this purpose: nine from Prince James (1721-30), two from the Earl of Mar (1716-1717), five from Captain Hay, and others.
Promotion was soon to come since there were old Russian Admirals retiring, and one Rear Admiral, Ehrenskiold, had been captured by
Finland at the battle of
Hango Head. There were also newly built ships to be manned. On New Year's Day Prince
Aleksandr Danilovich Menshikov was promoted Rear Admiral of the White, Captain-Commodore Sievers made Rear Admiral of the Blue and Captain-Commodore Gordon Rear-Admiral of the Red. The Russian Fleet was divided into three sections after the system used by the British and the Dutch.
Regrettably there was jealousy between Rear Admiral Seivers and Gordon. Seivers had been born at
Copenhagen and served the
King of Denmark in his navy about the year 1708. Having been engaged by Peter the Great as captain, he was sometimes employed on board, sometimes in the yard, as Under-Equipage Master. He was reported as a man of excellent sense, general knowledge and very exact and methodical in his conduct. He was also able to speak and write most European tongues and was fluent in Russian. But he just could not stand Thomas Gordon. Seivers refused to suffer Rear Admiral Gordon to be present at discussions upon the executions of any orders even when required by the Tsar. He felt that Peter the Great esteemed Gordon before him and indeed the Tsar appointed Gordon to take charge of a fleet over his head on the strength of his having been a British officer and trained in a better navy than Sievers had. Unlike Seivers, Gordon could not speak Russian but was fluent in Dutch.
The rift between Gordon and Sievers climaxed on
July 14, 1721 when, at a banquet commemorating the battle of 'Hango Head,' a violent quarrel broke out between the two men in the presence of the Tsar. Gordon complained about the Dane’s behaviour towards him and pointed out that, as Seivers was responsible for the appointments of lieutenants and all inferiors, he was appointing the best officers and men to the Danish and Dutch commanders. The General-Admiral, Count Apraxin, did his best to justify the actions of Rear Admiral Sievers and maintained that Gordon had falsely accused him of partiality when dividing the officers and men. During his conversation he referred to Gordon as ‘your admiral’ to Peter the Great which was not well received. As Sievers was going to leave the Tsar’s service at the end of the campaign, it was left like that. The next day Peter called the two admirals together and made them drink a glass of wine together hoping that this would end their bickering.
In 1726 Admiral Gordon took out a fleet to meet the powerful British fleet under Admiral Sir C. Wagner that had been sent to the
Baltic Sea to anticipate or prevent any action of Russia as a party to the
Treaty of Vienna. However, since Gordon had told
Catherine I that action was hopeless, courtesies were exchanged instead of cannon balls. On
May 6, 1727 he was promoted to admiral and in November he became Commander-in-Chief at Kronstadt, a position he held until he died there in 1741.
Gordon was in command of the Russian fleet that brought about the surrender of
Danzig in 1734 (the
Siege of Danzig). At that time the Russian Navy had grown in confidence and had been asserting the power of Russian ships in the Baltic. A claimant to the Polish throne,
Stanisław Leszczyński, supported by King
Louis XV of France, had been in hiding at Danzig. Eighteen hundred French soldiers had disembarked and a fleet lay at anchor nearby. The Russian
Empress Anna ordered that
Augustus III should be the new king of Poland. On May 15 it became necessary to supplement the fleet engaged at Danzig. Admiral Thomas Gordon sailed there with a squadron of fourteen battleships, five frigates, and several smaller vessels. Gordon had his flag on the 100-gun ship </i>Peter I and II
and arrived at Danzig on June 1. The French finally failed to repulse the Russian army and navy and surrendered on June 13. The dispute over, the Polish throne ended in favour of August III and Leszczyński quickly left Danzig, which was occupied by the Russian Army. This was to be Gordon's last battle and he finally took up the position as Governor of Kronstad (1). He knew the port of Danzig well since, apart from his times as a merchant seaman, he also escorted convoys of Scottish ships back to Scotland whilst in command of the Royal Mary
. France had sent sixteen warships and three regiments to Leszczyński’s aid, so it had been necessary for Russia to increase her attacking force, which she did by sending Gordon’s ships. He flew his flag in the battleship Peter1 and 11
and commanded a fleet of fourteen battleships, five frigates, and several small vessels. He discharged guns for the 60,000 Russian and Saxon army at Pillau and then bombarded the fort of Weksselmunde and the French camp outside it. He captured a French frigate and a small vessel and recaptured three Russian vessels. His countryman Field Marshall Keith, writing from Javarof to congratulate Gordon on the Danzig expedition, said:
"All the Poles that I have seen assure me that the so sudden surrender of the town was
entirely owing to appearance of the fleet which cut off all hopes of succours, and therefore they look on you, as the main instrument of the loss of their liberty, for that is their ordinary term for us who have been employed on this side of Poland."
The family name of the Admiral’s wife is disputed with one source calling her a daughter of Sir Thomas Elphinstone of Calderwood whilst another names her as the daughter of Sir James Elphinstone of Logie, Aberdeenshire, however, in 1710 his wife was definitely Margaret Ross, widow of Mr. William Monypenny of the Pitmilly family. Margaret is believed to be the daughter of George, the 11th Lord Ross. She died before 1721-2 and was buried near the grave of the Tsar’s sister. Gordon had a son, previously mentioned as being with him on the Moor<i>, and another may have been Thomas Gordon, merchant who died at
St. Petersburg in 1806. There were two daughters, Anna and Mary, the former married Sir Henry Stirling of Ardoch in 1726 and the latter was married to William Elmsal also at St. Petersburg.
Researched by Jim Binnie Shipmaster Retired
Please refer to the following website
http://www.nls.uk/broadsides/broadside.cfm/id/14475/transcript/1
to read a copy of the ballad written about the notorious Captain Gordon