Tuesday, 21 December 2021

Charles Ralph Boxer | Timeline

Sir Charles Ralph Boxer FBA GCIH (8 March 1904 – 27 April 2000) was a British historian of Dutch and Portuguese maritime and colonial history. In Hong Kong he was the chief spy for the British army intelligence in the years leading up to World War II. (Intro from Wikipedia)

There is only one book on the market about the life of Charles R. Boxer, a large book but very incomplete as far as dates and places are concerned. I was in doubt whether I would publish this incomplete timeline, but in the end I decided to do so with the hope of finding more details over time and getting the help that readers can also give. For now, some key moments in Boxer's life will sit in my file waiting for precise dates and locations.

March 8, 1904 - Sandown, Isle of Wight, England - Charles Ralph Boxer is born
September 21, 1905 - Tolpuddle - Beryl Alice, sister of Charles Boxer, is born 
January(?) 1(?), 1910 - Gibraltar - Hugh Boxer’s battalion was order to Gibraltar and his family accompanied its head to the Rock. At the age of six he became the only male pupil in the Catholic convent school. He also began his lifelong interest in travelling during the family’s four-year sojourn in Gibraltar, accompanying his parents on extended visits to Spain and Tangiers
June 16, 1915 - While in Shanklin, Isle of Wight - Lieutenant-Colonel Hugh Boxer, Charles' father, is mortally wounded by German artillery in Flanders. His body was never found
March(?) 1(?), 1918 - Crowthorne, Berkshire - During the Lent term, Charles enrolls at the venerable Wellington College in Berkshire, having obtained a scholarship offered to the sons of Wellingtonians killed in the war
June(?) 1(?), 1921 - Crowthorne - Wins the Parsons Prize on Speech Day at his graduation, for the best oral recitation of a selected text
July 1(?), 1921 - Tidworth Pennings - Becomes a member of "B" Company and spends July at an Officer Training Corps camp in Tidworth Pennings
December 31(?), 1921 - Crowthorne, Berkshire - Charles leaves Wellington College impressively ranking 30th out of some 200 Cadets
January(?) 1(?), 1922 - Sandhurst, Berkshire - Charles enters the Royal Military Academy of Sandhurst as a “Gentleman Cadet” and among the many graduates who preceded him were Winston Spencer Churchill and Sir Bernard Montgomery, who played prominent roles in World War II
January(?) 1(?), 1923 - Sandhurst - Charles becomes a member of the Hakluyt Society
January 31, 1924 - Sandhurst, Berkshire - Charles Boxer, shortly before reaching 20-years-old, is commissioned as a second lieutenant in His Majesty’s Lincolnshire Regiment =(START)
March 31, 1924 - Lincoln(?) - Two months later he joined his first battalion. The same year, he also made his first serious efforts to equip himself to pursue another career, that of a historian, not of Britain but of distant empires that had belonged to its rivals, Holland and Portugal
June(?) 1(?), 1924 - Lincolnshire - Charles learns the Portuguese history and language and begins teaching himself Portuguese. The same year he starts to study the Dutch language as well
June(?) 1(?), 1925 - Lisbon | Évora, Portugal - Charles visits Portugal for the first time and explores resources of Lisbon’s Biblioteca Nacional (the National Library) and the Torre do Tombo (the National Archives), as well as those of the renowned Public Library of Évora, holder of an invaluable manuscript collection concerning the old State (Estado) of India
August(?) 1(?), 1925(?) - Aldershot, SW of London - Assigned temporarily to Aldershot Military Depot
October(?) 1(?), 1925(?) - Holywood, near Belfast, N.Ireland - Stationed at Holywood, near Belfast, Northern Ireland
January 31, 1926 - Lincoln(?) - Promoted to Lieutenant
September 1(?), 1926 - London - Publication of the article "O 24 de Junho de 1622: Uma façanha dos portugueses" i.e. "the 24th of June 1622: a portuguese feat of arms" in a new scholarly portuguese bulletin
January 1(?), 1927 - London - Publication of the article "Relação da perda da Nau 'Madre de Deus' no porto de Nagasaki em Janeiro de 1610" (Report of the loss of the ship 'Madre de Deus' in the port of Nagasaki in January 1610)
January 27, 1927 - London - Charles Boxer begins his long career as a public lecturer with the first of several talks before the Japan Society
June(?) 1(?), 1927 - Amsterdam, Netherlands - Goes to Amsterdam for the first time. Meets the director of the Naval Museum, Willem Voorbeytel-Cannenburg. Meets Captain Johan Carel Marinus Warnsinck
June 24, 1927 - Lincoln - Letter to J.C.M.Warnsinck
August 27, 1927 - Lincoln - Letter to J.C.M.Warnsinck
September 7, 1927 - London(?) - Meets Sir William Foster, editor of "The English Factories in India" series
September 8, 1927 - Lincoln - Letter to J.C.M.Warnsinck
January 8, 1927 - Lincoln - Letter to J.C.M.Warnsinck
January 18, 1928 - Lincoln - Letter to J.C.M.Warnsinck: "I hope to write more about the anglo-dutch wars in [Europe?] and elsewhere, and prove...what a tough struggle the 'Hogen-mogens' really gave us!"
January(?) 1(?), 1929 - London - Charles Boxer enrolls at the School of Oriental Studies at the University of London, then the only British institution offering the study of the Japanese language
June 15, 1929 - While in London - In her fifty-third year, Jeannie Boxer, Charles' mother, commits suicide at a nursing home in Weymouth, fourteen years after the loss of her husband
December 20, 1929 - London - Letter to J.C.M.Warnsinck, informing him that he was about to embark to Japan
January 24, 1930 - London - Charles departs for Japan aboard the Ocean liner "Atsuta Maru"
January 30(?), 1930 - Gibraltar - Port call at Gibraltar
February 2, 1930 - Marseille, France - Port call at Marseille
February 3, 1930 - Chateau d'If - Visit to Chateau d'If
February(?) 8(?), 1930 - Naples, Italy - Port call at Naples
February(?) 15(?), 1930 - Port Said, Egypt - Port call at Port Said
February(?) 23(?), 1930 - Colombo, Sri Lanka - Port call at Colombo
March(?) 1(?), 1930 - Singapore - Port call at Singapore
March 3, 1930 - Hong Kong - Port call at Hong Kong
March 7, 1930 - Shanghai, China - The "Atsuta Maru" reaches Shanghai
March 11, 1930 - Kobe, Japan - The "Atsuta Maru" reaches Kobe and there Charles boards a train for Tokyo
March 12, 1930 - Tokyo - Reaches Tokyo and reports to the Military Attaché at the British Embassy to begin his duties
April 18, 1930 - Tokyo - Letter to J.C.M.Warnsinck
May 26, 1930 - Tokyo - Letter to J.C.M.Warnsinck
July 1(?), 1930 - Nikko | Kyoto | Kobe | Deshima - Visits to Nikko (N. Of Tokyo) and Kyoto, Kobe and the island of Deshima
August 10, 1930 - Tokyo - Letter to J.C.M.Warnsinck, informing him he was about to travel to Formosa (Taiwan)
October 15(?), 1930 - Formosa (Taiwan) - Enjoying a visit to Formosa
November 15(?), 1930 - Tokyo - Returns to Tokyo, via Kobe and Nara
June(?) 1(?), 1931 - Kyoto, Japan - Boxer moves from Tokyo to Kyoto where he becomes attached to the 38th Nara Infantry Regiment as a LO (Language Officer) and lives with his Japanese hosts in their barracks
September 31, 1931 - Tenri, Nara, Japan - Visit to Tenri University with Minister Pabst
June(?) 1(?), 1932 - Nagoya, Japan - Boxer has a new assignment at Toyohasi Non-Commissioned Officers school in Nagoya
May 5, 1933 - Tokyo(?) - Farewell lunch with Malcolm Kennedy and George Sansom
May 7, 1933 - Shanghai, China - Boxer ends his assignment and begins a leisurely trip down the coast of China with Pabst, visiting Shanghai, Amoy, Hong Kong, Canton, Macao, Manila and the spice islands of the eastern end of the archipelago of Indonesia, always examined the city’s national libraries and inspected some of its rarities
June(?) 25(?), 1933 - Java | Jakarta - Boxer spends two and half week in Java, principally in Batavia (Jakarta)
July 12, 1933 - Jakarta, Indonesia - Boxer boards a dutch ship to Genoa, Italy
July 28, 1933 - Port Said, Egypt(?) - Boxer and Pabst sign "Merkwaerdige Moluxche Hofreis ofte"
August 2, 1933 - Genoa, Italy - The dutch ship arrives in Genoa
September(?) 1(?), 1933 - Lincolnshire - After a short period of home leave, Boxer rejoines the second battalion of the Lincolns, then stationed in Yorkshire
January 25, 1934 - London - Reads a paper at a meeting of the Japan Society
July 21, 1934 - Jaffa Lines, Catterick Camp, Yorkshire - Letter to Edgar Prestage
January 1(?), 1935 - London - Boxer is assigned to the intelligence division of the War Office in London
March 21, 1935 - While in London - His sister Alice dies
March 27, 1935 - While in London - His brother Myles, grief-stricken with her sister's death, commits suicide with a shotgun
October 1(?), 1935 - The Hague - Boxer returns to Holland at the invitation of the Netherlands Geographical Society and delivered two lectures, the first in The Hague 
October 5(?), 1935 - Amsterdam - Second lecture, in Amsterdam
November 14, 1935 - London - Reads a paper at a meeting of the Japan Society
December 1(?), 1935 - London - Boxer learns that his next assignment is in Hong Kong
December 5, 1935 - London - Letter to Edgar Prestage
June(?) 1(?), 1936 - Portugal - Boxer spends two weeks in Portugal with his sister Beryl
October 1(?), 1936 - Moscow, Soviet Union - Encounter between Charles and Beryl at the principal Moscow railroad station to cross the Eurasian continent via the famous Trans Siberian railroad
January 1, 1937 - Aberdeen, SW Hong Kong - Charles separates of Beryl and take charge at the fishing village of Aberdeen, where the Royal Navy Base was situated
February(?) 1(?), 1937 - Macao - Boxers begins spending long weekends in Macao, the Portuguese outpost that he had visited briefly on his way home from Japan in 1933
April 13, 1937 - China - By car, bus, boat and train, Boxer travels through five of China’s southern provinces with a driver and a Mandarin interpreter
July 7, 1937 - While in Hong Kong - War in the Far East begins with a clash between Japanese and Chinese troops at Lukouchiao bridge, near Beijing
May 13, 1938 - Hong Kong - Boxer sets out from Hong Kong unaccompanied to a China excursion
August 1, 1938 - Shanghai, China - Boxer undertakes another trip to China to the famous city of Shanghai to liaise with fellow intelligence officers. He meets Emily Hahn, a famous writer and correspondent of The "New Yorker’s" in China, better known as "Mickey". Both were contributors to the "T’ien Hsia Monthly", a new English newspaper with the purpose of building cultural bridges between readers
June 8, 1939 - Hong Kong - Charles Boxer and Ursula Norah Anstice Tulloch, a woman born in England in 1909 commonly called the most beautiful in Hong Kong, are married in a fashionable military wedding in Hong Kong’s Episcopal cathedral
June 13, 1939 - Japan - Honeymoon in Japan, where they spend three weeks (13 June to 7 July) visiting Kyoto, Kobe, Tokyo and Nikko. Charles Boxer combines business with pleasure and consults old friends, including Dutch and Portuguese ministers.
October 10, 1939 - Chungking, China - Boxer meets with the Generalissimo Chiang Ki-shek and hands him a memorandum that he had prepared about what the Japanese were planning to do next
September 27, 1940 - While in Hong Kong - Japan announces its signature of the Tripartite Pact with Italy and Germany
October 27, 1940 - Hong Kong - Mickey Hahn takes residence in May Road in Hong Kong next door to Boxer’s house. By that date and probably before, the two were quite openly involved in one of World War II’s most publicized love affairs
January(?) 1(?), 1941 - Hong Kong - Boxer is promoted to Major and becomes Hong Kong’ s senior intelligence officer
October 17, 1941 - Hong Kong - Daughter Carola Militia Boxer is born
November 1(?), 1941 - Hong Kong - The General Officer Commanding Hong Kong informs the War Office in London about the recent increase in Japanese naval activities which had completed a virtual encirclement of Hong Kong
December 8, 1941 - Hong Kong - Hong Kong experiences the first of many air raids, and in a few hours, Japanese forces occupiy the New Territories and Kowloon in the mainland
December 13, 1941 - Hong Kong - A launch with a white flag of truce leaves Kowloon with two Japanese officers aboard and heads for Queen's Pier in Hong Kong Island, where they were met by Major Charles Boxer. The japanese request the british surrender
December 17, 1941 - Hong Kong - Hong Kong suffers a particularly heavy air raid, followed by a severe shelling. About 9:30 a.m. that activity largely ceases and another peace launch leaves Kowloon for the Queen’s Pier, at the Hong Kong island, with a second demand for surrender. Again, Major Boxer receives the Japanese delegation
December 18, 1941 - Hong Kong - In the morning, Hong Kong is bombarded by continuous artillery, mortar and dive-bombing, which damages hospitals, destroys gun emplacements, water mains, rice storage facilities and barracks. That evening, a japanese invasion force of 7,500 men is launched
December 20, 1941 - Hong Kong - Boxer is shot in the back by an unseen sniper. He lays grievously wounded for hours before he is found and rushed to Queen Mary Hospital and placed in its morgue
December 25, 1941 - Hong Kong - Governor Mark Young, after consulting advisors, orders General Maltby to arrange a cease-fire, which officially begins at 3:25 p.m. 
January 21, 1942 - Hong Kong - Boxer is transferred to Bowen Road Military Hospital
May 23, 1942 - Hong Kong - A japanese official parades the Bowen Road Military Hospital patients and the staff and require them to sign the parole. Boxer refuses
September 23, 1942 - Hong Kong - Carola Boxer and Mickey Hahn depart for the Philippines and Mormugão, a neutral Portuguese port in Goa on the former French liner "Teia Maru" as the result of a programme of exchanges of Japanese and foreign nationals
October 15, 1942 - While in Hong Kong - Carola Boxer and Mickey Hahn arrive at Mormugão and board the swedish hospital-ship "Gripsholm"
October 22, 1942 - While in Hong Kong - The "Gripsholm" leaves Mormugão
November 13, 1942 - While in Hong Kong - The "Gripsholm" reaches Rio de Janeiro
December 1, 1942 - While in Hong Kong - Carola Boxer and Mickey Hahn arrive in New York
June 28, 1943 - Shamshuipo Gendarmerie Station - The gendarmerie begins arresting and torturing the conspirators. Boxer is implicated and sent to the Argyle Street Camp
October 19, 1943 - Stanley, Hong Kong - Boxer and others are marched to the prison assembly hall, where a japanese tribunal assembled
October 21, 1943 - Stanley Prison, Hong Kong - Boxer and others POWs are transferred to Stanley Prision after accusations of disobedience and conspiracy. Some of them are executed
October 29, 1943 - Stanley Prison - 32 prisoners are sentenced to death by a japanese tribunal and beheaded
November 5, 1943 - While in Stanley Prison - While Boxer is in Stanley Prision, in Colombo - Sri Lanka, Ursula petitions for divorce in Britain’s High Court of Justice in Colombo concerning Boxer’s infidelities with Mickey Hahn
December 1, 1943 - Stanley Prison - Officers Ford, Gray and Newnham are sentenced to death by a japanese tribunal
December 18, 1943 - Stanley Prison - Officers Ford, Gray and Newnham are executed with a shot in the back
December 23, 1943 - Stanley Prison - Boxer receives his sentence, expecting months of solitary confinement and starvation rations
April 1(?), 1944 - Stanley Prison - Conditions in stanley Prison improve
June 22, 1945 - Tungshan jail, Hebei Province, NW of China - Taken by train to Kowloon, then to Tungshan jail
August 16, 1945 - While in Tunshan jail - Surrender of Japanese forces
August 22, 1945 - Kowloon, Hong Kong - Train to Kowloon, escorted by japanese soldiers
August 29, 1945 - Hong Kong - British carrier planes fly over Hong Kong to announce the proximate arrival of a formidable fleet under command of Admiral Sir Halliday Harcourt
September 16, 1945 - Hong Kong - Two weeks after the Japanese government’s surrender aboard the battleship "USS Missouri", the oft-postponed Japanese surrender of Hong Kong takes place
September 25(?), 1945 - Hong Kong - Provides sworn deposition concerning his knowledge of the arrest, trial and execution of Col.Newnham, Capt.Ford and Flight-Lt.Gray
October 23, 1945 - Hong Kong - Boxer leaves Hong Kong on board the "Shirrabank" directly for San Francisco. It was the first (of many) visits to the United States
November 28, 1945 - New Haven, United States - Boxer and Emily or Mickey Hahn get married in New Haven’s courthouse
December 26, 1945 - New York - Boxer flies from New York to Honolulu and Japan as a member of the British Far Eastern Commission
December 27(?), 1945 - Honolulu, Hawaii - Arrives in Hawaii and boards the communication ship "Mount McKinley"
January 14, 1946 - Tokyo, Japan - Meeting with Koda Shigetomo in the Shorin Esseido bookstore
February 1(?), 1946 - Japan - Returns to Japan as a member of the British Far Easter Comission, a post in which he serves until 1947
May 1(?), 1946 - While recovering in Halloran Hospital, Staten Island - Sir William R. Halliday, principal of King’s College London invites Boxer to reconstitute the Camoens Department of Portuguese which had been suspended during the war. The Camoens chair was the first of its kind anywhere in the English-speaking world
June 1, 1946 - Halloran Hospital, Staten Island - Examined in Halloran Hospital
July 28, 1946 - New York City - Sails for Southampton on board the "RMS Queen Mary"
August 2, 1946 - Southampton - "RMS Queen Mary" arrives in Southampton
August 3(?), 1946 - Conygar (or Coneygar), Dorset, England - Taxi directly to Conygar
August 15(?), 1947 - London - Provides sworn deposition concerning his knowledge of the arrest, trial and execution of Col.Newnham, Capt.Ford and Flight-Lt.Gray
October 31, 1947 - London - Boxer presents his inaugural lecture at the King’s College, University of London, on three of the great chroniclers of Portugal’s eastern empire entitled “Three Historians of Portuguese Asia (Barros, Couto and Boccaro)"
December 23, 1947 - London - Boxer retires on disability just over a month short of having completed twenty-three years of military service
January(?) 1(?), 1948 - London - Charles Boxer publishes "Fidalgos in the Far East, 1550–1770". Fact and Fancy in the History of Macao
October 20, 1948 - New York City - Daughter Amanda is born. Boxer visits the Hispanic Society
November 1(?), 1948 - London(?) - Publishes the article "Salvador Correia de Sá e Benavides and the Reconquest of Angola in 1648"
January(?) 1(?), 1949 - São Paulo | St.Luis, Pará, Brazil - Visits to research
January(?) 1(?), 1950 - Utrecht, Netherlands - Boxer is awarded a honorary doctorate by the University of Utrecht
October 1(?), 1950 - Washington D.C. - Luso-Brazilian colloquium in Washington D.C.
January(?) 1(?), 1951 - London - Boxer publishes "The Christian Century in Japan"
September 1(?), 1951 - Goa, Portuguese India - Stays for a month in Goa. Flies to Diu for a visit
December 7, 1951 - Hong Kong - Rendezvous with Mickey in Hong Kong
December 25, 1951 - Conygar (or Coneygar), Dorset, England - Christmas in Conygar
January(?) 1(?), 1952 - Lisbon, Portugal - Charles is awarded with a honorary doctorate by the University of Lisbon
December 1(?), 1952 - London(?) - "Salvador de Sá and the Struggle for Brazil and Angola 1602-1686" is published
January 26, 1954 - Recife, Brazil - Celebrations of the 300th anniversary of the surrender of Dutch Forces in Northeast Brazil
July 1(?), 1954 - Salvador, Brazil - Researching the city's archives
August 1(?), 1954 - Pernambuco, Brazil - Researching the city's archives
January(?) 1(?), 1955 - St.Tomé, West Coast of Africa - Visit to the Island of St.Tomé
February(?) 1(?), 1955 - Luanda, Angola - Visit to Angola. Surveys the resources of the city's archives
January(?) 1(?), 1956 - London(?) - Boxer finishes writing "The Dutch in Brazil"
January(?) 1(?), 1957 - London - Boxer publishes "The Dutch in Brazil"
June(?) 1(?), 1957 - São Paulo, Brazil - Visits to Sao Paulo, Belo Horizonte and Iguaçú waterfalls
September 1(?), 1957 - Lisbon, Portugal - Participates in a Portugal-Brazil colloquium
September 15(?), 1957 - Mombasa, Kenya - Travels to Kenya to advise Gulbenkian Foundation concerning the merits of funding a proposal to repair and rehabilitate the fortress of Fort Jesus in Mombasa
January(?) 1(?), 1959 - London - Boxer publishes "The Great Ship from Amacao"
January 30(?), 1959 - Rio de Janeiro | Belo Horizonte, Brazil - Travels to Rio de Janeiro, then to Belo Horizonte to conduct research
August 1(?), 1959 - Salvador, Brazil - Attends a conference in Bahia and spends time at the city's local archives. Honorary Doctorate from Universidade Federal da Bahia
April 30(?), 1960 - Johannesburg, South Africa - Four lectures at Witwatersrand University
August 6, 1960 - Lagos | Sagres, Algarve - Portugal - Boxer participates in three-day commemorations the Fifth Centenary of Prince Henry the Navigator's death and witnesses the political nature of the event with the presence of the Portuguese President Américo Thomaz and the President of Brazil Juscelino Kubitschek. C.R.Boxer speaks on behalf of the British representatives at the congress, citing a similar event in London at the British Museum (1960), entitled "Prince Henry the Navigator and the Portuguese Maritime Enterprise" (Catalogue of an Exhibition at the British Museum, 1960)
September 1(?), 1960 - Lisbon, Portugal - Week-long international conference on the history of the discoveries at the University of Lisbon
November 13, 1960 - Batalha, Portugal - Culmination of the Henrican celebrations at the Batalha Monastery
February 15, 1961 - London - Gives the 43rd annual Raleigh Lecture on History at a gathering of the British Academy
March 25, 1961 - Ringshall, England - Returns to Ringshall after 5 weeks in Angola
June(?) 1(?), 1961 - Manila, Philippines - 10-day trip to Manila, Philippines
January(?) 1(?), 1962 - London - Boxer publishes "The Golden Age of Brazil, 1695–1750"
September 1(?), 1962 - Utrecht, Netherlands - Historical conference in Utrecht
November 25, 1962 - London - Departs for lectures in the United States
November 28(?), 1962 - Charlottesville, Virginia, United States - Three conferences at the University of Virginia - "Morocco and West Africa", "Mozambique and India" and "Brazil and Maranhão"
December 3, 1962 - Ithaca, New York - Lecture at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York
December 5, 1962 - Cambridge, Massachusetts - Lectures at Harvard University (5th and 6th)
August 1(?), 1963 - Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - Participation in a conference at Brazil's Instituto Histórico
December 27, 1963 - While in Ringshall(?) - Lisbon's "Diário Popular" publishes the first of four articles by Armando Cortesão under the title "The Insidious book". The subtitle read "From an honest lusophile to a lusophobe of bad faith or the volte-face of Professor Boxer"
September 1(?), 1964 - Madison, Wisconsin - Lecture at the University of Wisconsin
October 1(?), 1964 - Madison, Wisconsin - Lecture at the University of Wisconsin
October 1(?), 1965 - London - Boxer publishes "The Dutch Seaborne Empire"
August(?) 25(?), 1966 - Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia - Attends the Congress of Asian Historians of 1966
April 1(?), 1967 - London(?) - Boxer receives an offer from the Department of International Relations at the Australian National University
May 9, 1967 - Oxford - Lecture at Oxford University
June 30(?), 1967 - London - Boxer retires from King's College and writing and begins an intense collaboration with the main American universities, namely Yale, Harvard and Indiana. Meeting with friends at the Braganza Restaurant in London
October 1, 1967 - Bloomington, Indiana - Arrives in Bloomington
October 12, 1968 - Bloomington - Meeting with Howard R.Lamar, chairman of Yale University
November 1(?), 1968 - Lawrence, Kansas - Lectures at the University of Kansas
November 8, 1968 - While in Bloomington - Yale's executive council and provost approve the appointment of C.R.Boxer
December(?) 1(?), 1968 - Minnesota, Minneapolis - Lectures at the University of Minnesota
January(?) 1(?), 1969 - London - Boxer publishes "The Portuguese Seaborne Empire"
September 15(?), 1969 - New Haven, Connecticut - Boxer holds a personal chair in the history of European Overseas Expansion at Yale University
November 1(?), 1969 - Chicago - Travels from New Haven to Chicago where he becomes keynote speaker at the Newberry Library Conference on Colonial Brazil
April(?) 1(?), 1970 - Angra, Terceira Island, Azores - Surveys the archives of Terceira Island, Azores, during the Spring
November 30(?), 1970 - Puerto Rico - Four days in Puerto Rico celebrating the 25th anniversary of his marriage
March 1(?), 1971 - Hong Kong - Flies to Hong Kong and Macao for a week of meetings. Honorary doctorate, University of Hong Kong
March 14, 1971 - New Haven, Connecticut - Returns to New Haven
April 1(?), 1971 - Lawrence, Kansas - Lectures at the University of Kansas
April 8, 1971 - New Haven, Connecticut - Returns to New Haven
June 15(?), 1971 - Ringshall, England - Returns to England
September(?) 1(?), 1971 - Bloomington, Indiana - Returns to Bloomington in the Autumn for 4 months
October 1(?), 1971 - New Haven, Connecticut - Spends a weekend in New Haven
October 15(?), 1971 - Antigua - Spends 4 days in Antigua
November 1(?), 1971 - New Haven - Annual meeting of the Society of the Discoveries
November 25, 1971 - New Haven - Thanksgiving
December 25, 1971 - Ringshall, England - Christmas in Ringshall
January(?) 1(?), 1972 - São Paulo, Brazil - Trip to São Paulo, Brazil
April(?) 1(?), 1972 - Ponta Delgada, S.Miguel Island, Azores - Examines the archives of St.Miguel Island during the Spring
October 25, 1972 - Near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania - Spends 4 weeks at the Bryn Mawr College and delivers 4 lectures until November 15th
December(?) 1(?), 1972 - New Haven, Connecticut - Retires from Yale University
January(?) 1(?), 1973 - Bloomington, Indiana - Returns to Bloomington to teach
January 15(?), 1974 - Charlotesville, Virginia - From mid january to mid-May he teaches at the University of Virginia
June(?) 1(?), 1974 - Ringshall, England - Summering in Ringshall
September 1(?), 1974 - St.Louis, Missouri - Boxer travels to St.Louis to teach at the University of Missouri
July(?) 1(?), 1975 - Bloomington, Indiana - Teaching at the University of Indiana during the second semester of 1975
November 1(?), 1975 - While in Bloomington - Mickey establishes her permanent residence in New York to avoid british taxes
March 1(?), 1976 - Baltimore, Maryland - Delivers James Schouler lectures at John Hopkins University
April(?) 1(?), 1976 - Bloomington, Indiana - Returns to Bloomington in the Spring
January(?) 1(?), 1977 - Bloomington, Indiana - Teaching at the University of Indiana
February 1, 1977 - Bloomington, Indiana - Letter to Frank Lequin
November 29, 1977 - Lisbon, Portugal - At his friend Armando Cortesão's deathbed
January 5, 1978 - Ann Harbor, Michigan - At the University of Michigan until May 5th
December 17, 1978 - Little Gaddesden, Hertfordshire - Letter to Frank Lequin
January 3, 1979 - Little Gaddesden - Departs for Indiana
May 1(?), 1979 - Bloomington, Indiana - Retires from teaching in Indiana
July 25, 1979 - Melbourne, Australia - Public Lecture at La Trobe University on the "Iberian Dutch World War 1600-1650"
August 15, 1979 - Perth, Australia - Conference on the Indian Ocean in Perth (until 22th)
August 25, 1979 - Sydney, Australia - Leaves Australia for Britain
August 27(?), 1979 - Ringshall, England - Returns to England
November 1(?), 1979 - Lisbon, Portugal - Spends 5 days in Lisbon
November(?) 15(?), 1979 - Ringshall, England - Returns to England
December(?) 1(?), 1979 - Abu Dhabi | Muscat, Oman - 10-day conference that included a visit to Muscat
February 1(?), 1980 - Japan - Spends a month visiting Japan, Hong Kong, Sri Lanka and Goa
March 1(?), 1980 - Peradeniya, Sri Lanka - Honorary doctorate, University of Peradeniya
April 22, 1980 - Little Gaddesden, Hertfordshire - Letter to Frank Lequin
May 1(?), 1980 - United States
June 1(?), 1980 - Amsterdam | Leiden | Groningen | The Hague
July 1(?), 1980 - Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
October 1(?), 1980 - Lisbon, Portugal
November 1(?), 1980 - Muscat, Oman - Spends 12 days in Oman
September 1(?), 1981 - Macao, Portugal (today China) - Returns to Macao
January(?) 1(?), 1982 - Beijing, Guangzhou, China - Spends a month visiting China at the invitation of China's academy of sciences
May 1(?), 1982 - Alto Minho, Northern Portugal - Spends two weeks in Alto Minho with a family of friends, the Wilsons
June 14, 1982 - Leiden, Netherlands - Attends Frank Lequin's "promotie" in Leiden
January(?) 1(?), 1983 - Stockholm, Sweden - Visits an exhibit of chinese porcelain in Stockholm
January(?) 1(?), 1985 - New York City - Travels to New York for meetings
January(?) 1(?), 1986 - Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - Gold Medal from the "Instituto Historico e Geografico Brasileiro"
January 1(?), 1987 - Florence, Italy - Visit to Harold Acton, an old China friend. Invited for a Seminar
February(?) 1(?), 1987 - Pisa, Italy - Invited for a Seminar
May 1(?), 1987 - Paris , France - Lecturing at the "École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales"
August(?) 1(?), 1987 - New York City - Travels to New York for meetings
January(?) 1(?), 1989 - New York - Travels to New York for meetings
March 8, 1989 - While in London(?) - Letter from the President of Portugal, Mário Soares, congratulating Professor Boxer on his birthday, thanking him for his important work on the Portuguese Expansion and informing him of the decision to award him with the Grand Cross of the Military Order of Santiago da Espada, whose badges will be imposed on him in a timely public ceremony....
July 25, 1989 - Greenwich, London - Awarded the Caird Medal of the National Maritime Museum
December (?) 1(?), 1989 - Funchal, Madeira Island - Portugal - International conference in Funchal
January(?) 1(?), 1990 - Lisbon, Portugal - Charles R.Boxer is decorated with the Grand Cross of the Order of Prince Henry the Navigator and the Grand Cross of the Military Order of Santiago da Espada (St.James of the Sword)
January(?) 1(?), 1991 - Tenri, Nara, Japan - Spends 3 weeks in Japan at the invitation of Tenri University
January 1(?), 1992 - Macao, Portugal (today China) - Receives another honorary Doctorate from the University of Macao
June(?) 1(?), 1992 - Florence, Italy - Last trip abroad to give his final seminar at the invitation of K.N.Chaudhuri, holder of the Vasco da Gama chair at the European University in Florence
January(?) 1(?), 1993 - Little Gaddesden, Hertfordshire - Boxer starts going blind
March 8, 1994 - Little Gaddesden - 90th anniversary celebrations in a pub in Little Gaddesden
January(?) 1(?), 1995 - Manchester - Publishes "The Golden Age of Brazil. Growing Pains of a Colonial Society, 1695-1750" - Manchester
April 26, 1996 - While in Little Gaddesden - His first wife, Ursula Churchill-Dawes, dies
February 18, 1997 - While in Little Gaddesden - Mickey Hahn dies in New York, 10 days after suffering a serious fall
April 27, 2000 - St.Albans, Hertfordshire - Charles Ralph Boxer dies, aged 96 =(END) 

~Work in Progress~

Friday, 17 December 2021

Charles William Dabney | Timeline

Charles William Dabney
(March 19, 1794 - December 3, 1871) was an American businessman who succeeded his father John Bass Dabney as US Consul in the Azores from 1826 to 1871. He moved with his family to Fayal Island as a child and in early adulthood followed in his father's footsteps, becoming his vice-consul. When his father died in 1826, Charles William succeded him as US Consul, expanding the family's business in the area of shipping, support to whalers and exporting of azorean wines and fruit. Charles William is also remembered in the Azores for his humanitarian role, when the central islands of the archipelago were hit in the middle XIX century by famine and atlantic bad weather.

March 19, 1794 - Alexandria, Virginia - Charles William Dabney is born
January(?) 1(?), 1797 - Alexandria - John Bass Dabney returns to France with his wife to take up permanent residence. His son Charles stays with one of Dabney's sisters
January(?) 1(?), 1801 - France - Charles William Dabney travels alone to France
August(?) 1(?), 1804 - Bordeaux | Plymouth | Boston - His mother Roxanne "Roxa" Dabney departs Bordeaux for America, with young Charles, as well as the three younger children, Roxalina, John Lewis and Nancy, who had all been born in France. They make a stopover in Plymouth, England
September 1(?), 1807 - Fayal Island, Azores - Roxa Dabney and her four children arrive at Fayal, where John Bass Dabney had established his business
May 1, 1808 - St.António, Fayal Island - Dabney hears noises like cannons in the distance, and concludes there was some Sea engagement in the vicinity of the Island, but soon after casting his eyes towars the Island of São Jorge (St.George), he perceives a dense column of smoke rising to an immense height, it was soon judged that a Volcano had burst out about the center of that Island, and this was rendered certain when night came on, the fire exhibiting an awful appearance
May 3, 1808 - Velas, São Jorge Island, Azores - Being desirous of viewing this wonderful exertion of nature, Dabney embarks with the british consul to Velas, and find the inhabitants perfectly panic struck, and wholly give up to religious ceremonies and devotion.
May 4, 1808 - Urzalina, São Jorge Island - Dabney and the british consul go by water to a small sea port town two leagues to the southward called Urzalina, which was partly covered with cinders, and had turned valuable vineyards into a frightful desert
May 5, 1808 - Fayal Island - Dabney watches small volcanos brake out in the fields he had traversed on May 3rd
May 20, 1808 - Fayal Island - 13-year old Charles Dabney, already fluent in french and portuguese, is sent by his family to a Mr.Wheaton in the United States to serve "as an apprentice to learn business in his counting room", aswell as morals and handwriting
January(?) 1(?), 1810 - Fayal Island - Charles Dabney returns to Fayal because Mr.Wheaton had found him unmanageable and no longer wanted to take the responsability for him
February 19, 1812 - Fayal Island - Letter to his brother John
June 1(?), 1812 - Fayal Island - Letter to his brother John about the "Bagatelle" house in Fayal
June 1, 1813 - Fayal Island - Letter to his brother about the sulfurous baths of Furnas in São Miguel (St.Michael's) Island
Battle of Fayal - The "General Armstrong"
is attacked by the british, 1814
September 27, 1814 - Horta, Fayal Island, Azores - Three british warships enter the Bay ofHorta, the 18-gun brig "Carnation", the 44-gun frigate "Rota" and the 74-gun ship-of-the-line "Plantagenet", under overall command of Captain Robert Lloyd, known as "Mad Lloyd". Captain Reid thinks about escaping but the wind had died down. Sensing that there would be trouble, Dabney sends his 21-year old son Charles on board the "General Armstrong" with a message 'to recommend Capt. Reid to slip his castle and warp his vessel close-in under the guns of the castle'". As Charles Dabney returned to shore, Captain Reid carried out the suggestion. During a first attack, the british boats with sailors and marines are repelled with devastating losses: 120 dead and 130 wounded, to 1 dead and 7 wounded americans =(START)
September 28, 1814 - Horta, Fayal Island - Charles delivers another message to Captain Reid from Dabney, in which he is praised for his ferocious defence and advised to scuttle his ship to bring his crew and wounded ashore. After exchanging broadsides with the "Carnation", Reid orders it scuttled. The boatswain cuts off the figurehead of the ship, a bust of General Armstrong, so the enemy couldn't have it. Soon after the british board her and set it on fire
September 30, 1814 - Horta, Fayal Island - The british ships "Thais" and "Calypso" enter the Bay of Horta. Captain Lloyd appropriates them to take his wounded men back to England
October 5, 1814 - Horta, Fayal Island - Letter to the US Secretary of State in Washington D.C. "Thais" and "Calypso" depart Horta to England, each carrying 25 badly wounded men
January(?) 1(?), 1815 - Fayal Island - Dabney sends the ship "Dona Maria Thereza", with Captain Cushing in command, to St.Petersburg. Accompanying the ship as supercargo was his son Charles. Pico wine was a favourite in the Czar's household and shipments of it to Russia by the Dabneys became routine. Later, the russians visited Fayal and one visit even resulted in a marriage between a young woman of the island and a Russian Nobleman
December(?) 1(?), 1817 - Fayal Island - Charles Dabney returns to Fayal, with his appointment as Vice-Consul having been accepted
May 5, 1818 - Fayal Island - Letter to William Stoddard and Andrew Malcolm, captains of the "Solon" and the brigue "Poacher"
May 9, 1818 - Fayal Island - Letter to the US Secretary of State about the "Solon" and the "Poacher"
June 26, 1818 - Fayal Island - Letter from his sister Roxalina in Nantucket
July 27, 1818 - Fayal Island - Letter from his sister in Boston
August 26, 1818 - Fayal Island - Letter to his mother
April(?) 1(?), 1819 - Boston, Massachusetts - Charles Dabney goes to America to pick up his bride
June 10, 1819 - Brighton, Boston(?) - Charles Dabney marries Frances Alsop Pomeroy
April 2, 1820 - Brighton, Boston(?) - Clara Dabney, the first daughter, is born
April 15(?), 1820 - While in Brighton, Boston(?) - Letter from his father, John Bass Dabney, with priceless pieces of wisdom gathered during his life's experiences to increase his success in all aspects of life
July 18, 1821 - Fayal Island - Entertains the officers of a dutch frigate from Batavia, during 5 days in his first time as US Consul while his father John Bass Dabney was in St.Miguel Island
August 19, 1821 - Fayal Island - Letter to his brother John
February 17, 1822 - Fayal Island - Letter to his brother John
May(?) 15(?), 1822 - Fayal Island - Sails for Boston with the Cunninghams on board the brigue "Wave"
June 22, 1822 - Brighton, Boston - Purchases a pair of ponies from Horatio Sargeant
July 7, 1822 - Brighton, Boston - Letter to his brother John
October 22, 1822 - Boston - Sails for the Azores on board the brig "Swiftsure"
March 24, 1823 - Fayal Island - Sails for Plymouth, England
April 2, 1823 - Plymouth, England - C.W.Dabney arrives at Plymouth after 9 days
April 12, 1823 - Plymouth - Letter to his brother John
April 21, 1823 - Liverpool - Letter to his brother John
June 19, 1823 - Fayal Island - Returns to Fayal Island
August 30, 1823 - Fayal Island - Letter to his brother John
September 16, 1823 - Fayal Island - Letter to his brother John
June 24, 1824 - Furnas, St.Miguel Island, Azores - Letter to his father, John Bass Dabney
November 7, 1824 - Fayal Island - Letter to his brother John
December 14, 1824 - Fayal Island - Letter to his brother John
January 3, 1825 - Fayal Island - Sails with his mother (Roxa Dabney) on board the "Neptune" for Terceira Island to visit his sister Nancy
January 4, 1825 - Terceira Island, Azores - Arrives at Terceira Island
January 9, 1825 - Terceira Island - Sails back for Fayal Island
January 12, 1825 - Fayal Island - Returns to Fayal Island
May 14, 1825 - Fayal Island - Letter to his brother John
July 7, 1825 - Fayal Island - Letter from his mother Roxa Dabney from Boston
August 20, 1825 - Fayal Island - Letter to his brother John
November 12, 1825 - Fayal Island - Letter to his father, John Bass Dabney, in the US
September 1, 1826 - Pico Island, Azores - Message from uncle James informing him that his father was not well and asking him to return quickly to Fayal
September 2, 1826 - While in Pico Island - His father John Bass Dabney dies suddenly of appoplexy in Fayal Island, aged 59
November 14, 1826 - Fayal Island - Letter to Albert Gallatin, US Plenipotentiary Minister at the Court of St. James
July 31, 1828 - Fayal Island - Letter to Henry Clay, US Secretary of State
August 14, 1828 - Fayal Island - Letter to Thomas L.L.Brent, chargé d'affaires in Lisbon
August 28, 1828 - Fayal Island - The brazilian frigate "Isabel" under the command of Count Teodoro de Beaurepaire anchors at Fayal Island
September 3, 1828 - Fayal Island - More than 20 members of the brazilian frigate "Isabel" take the Castle of Santa Cruz, the main fortress of Fayal Island
September 19, 1828 - Fayal Island - He goes aboard the Brazilian frigate to expose to his captain the views of the Governor and the damage that the presence of the frigate was causing to the inhabitants
September 26, 1828 - Fayal Island - Letter to Henry Clay, US Secretary of State
September 28, 1828 - Fayal Island - Letter to José Maria d'Avellar Brotero
November 4, 1828 - Fayal Island - C.W.Dabney takes a set of firearms from his arsenal
January 16, 1829 - Fayal Island - Letter to Martin van Buren, US Secretary of State
August 7, 1830 - Fayal Island - Letter from the chargé d'affaires in Lisbon inducing CWD to leave immediately for Lisbon to defend himself against accusations relating to the episode of the Brazilian frigate and the removal of firearms from its facilities
August 18, 1830 - Fayal Island - Letter to Martin van Buren, US Secretary of State (proposing that American whaling ships have a surgeon's aide on board, as several crew members are injured in Azorean waters while hunting whales
September 4, 1830 - Fayal Island - Letter to the President of the United States, Andrew Jackson, explaining his conduct
October 2, 1830 - Lisbon, Portugal - Letter to Martin van Buren, US Secretary of State
October 27, 1830 - Fayal Island - Returns to Fayal Island
January 15, 1831 - Fayal Island - Letter to Thomas L.L.Brent, Chargé d'affaires in Lisbon
June 23, 1831 - Fayal Island - 800 portuguese soldiers under the Earl of Vila Flor take Fayal. Maria II is proclaimed Queen of Portugal
June 30, 1831 - Fayal Island - Letter to the US Secretary of State
July 9, 1831 - Fayal Island - Letter to the Earl of Vila Flor at Angra, Terceira Island
January(?) 1(?), 1832 - Fayal Island - Departs for Boston and then travels to New Orleans and up the Mississippi (8 months travelling)
May 9, 1832 - New Orleans, United States - Letter of Frances Dabney, with Charles William Dabney in New Orleans
November 16, 1832 - Fayal Island - Letter from Fayal, after his return from 8 months in the United States
November 26, 1833 - Fayal Island - Daughter Frances Alsop Dabney is born
January 2, 1834 - Fayal Island - Letter to Louis McLean, US Secretary of State
January 21, 1834 - Fayal Island - Letter to Louis McLean, US Secretary of State
September 22, 1834 - Fayal Island - The french frigate "La Sirène", commanded by the Count of Oysonville, arrives at Fayal bringing the Prince of Joinville on board. He is received by Charles William Dabney and stays in the island for six days
September 30, 1834 - Fayal Island - Letter to John Forsyth, US Secretary of State
March 19, 1842 - Fayal Island - The ship "Olive and Eliza", from St.Joseph(Florida) to Liverpool, docks in Horta Harbour in flames after being struck by lightning 8 days earlier, carrying 1100 bales of cotton
February 20, 1844 - Fayal Island - Letter to his daughter Roxana Dabney
November 7, 1845 - Fayal Island - His mother, Roxanne "Roxa" Dabney, dies, aged 73
November 25, 1845 - Fayal Island - Letter to Charles F.Lester
January 10, 1846 - Fayal Island - Letter to the US President, James K.Polk
December 10, 1846 - Fayal Island - Letter to John S.Minchin, British Vice-Consul to the islands of Fayal and Pico
April 15, 1847 - Fayal Island - Letter to the owners of the ship "Tally Ho"
June 18, 1848 - Boston, Massachusetts - Meeting with relatives at the Boston docks, when the ship "Harbinger" was to have departed, but the wind and tide did not allow it
October 3, 1848 - Boston - Letter to his lawyer, Daniel Lord
November(?) 1(?), 1848 - Fayal Island - Returns to Fayal Island on board the barque "Francia"
June 14, 1849 - Fayal Island - Letter to General W.Hopkins, US minister in Lisbon
February 4, 1851 - Fayal Island - Letter to Josiah Quincy
January 10, 1852 - Fayal Island - Letter to Daniel Webster, US department of State
December 13, 1852 - Fayal Island - Letter to Roxana Dabney
April 3, 1853 - Fayal Island - Letter to Roxana Dabney
August 27, 1855 - Fayal Island - Letter from the officers of the USS Constellation, at anchor in Fayal (with USS Potomac)
September 12, 1855 - Fayal Island - Letter from Captain H.Paulding of the USS Potomac, at anchor in Fayal
September 15, 1855 - Fayal Island - Letter from Captain H.Paulding of the USS Potomac, at anchor in Fayal
January 15, 1856 - Off Fayal Island, Azores - Salvage of the wreck of the ship "Ravenswood" from New York
January 17, 1856 - Fayal Island - Letter to Edward Walter, Secretary of the Board of Maritime Insurers, New York
January 31, 1856 - Fayal Island - Letter to his sons Samuel Wyllys and Charles William Jr.
July 26, 1856 - Fayal Island - Letter to the owners of the "Ravenswood", William Nelson and son, New York
November 5, 1856 - Fayal Island - Letter to Roxana Dabney
January 12, 1857 - Fayal Island - Letter to Roxana Dabney
February 3, 1857 - Fayal Island - Letter to Roxana Dabney
May 16, 1857 - Boston, Massachusetts - Arrives in Boston on board the "Azor"
May 29, 1857 - Watertown, Massachusetts - Visit to Susan Heard Dabney
August 15(?), 1857 - Boston - Returns to Boston
November 24, 1857 - Boston - Sets sail for the Azores on board the "Azor"
December 7, 1857 - N. of Graciosa Island, Azores - Graciosa Island is sighted
December 8, 1857 - Fayal Island - Returns to Fayal Island
December 25, 1857 - Fayal Island - Christmas in the "Bagatelle"
December 29, 1857 - Fayal Island - His brother Frederick dies
June 29, 1858 - Fayal Island - Letter to J.L.O'Sullivan, former US minister to the Court in Lisbon
November 7, 1858 - Fayal Island - Official visit of Prince Luís, brother of the King of Portugal, Pedro V. Charles William Dabney and Samuel Wyllys Dabney welcome them
December 27, 1858 - Fayal Island - Letter from J.Judson Barclay, US Vice-Consul in Beirut, informing him of the death of his son Francis O.Dabney from typhus
January 6, 1859 - Fayal Island - Letter from J.Augustus Johnson, US Consul in Beirut, about his son's death
May 25, 1859 - Angra do Heroísmo, Terceira Island - Azores - Sails with 3 daughters for St.Miguel Island. Reaches Angra at sundown
May 26, 1859 - St.Miguel Island, Azores - Arrives at St.Miguel Island
June 3, 1859 - Lagoa das Sete Cidades, St.Miguel Island - Visit to Lagoa das Sete Cidades (Lagoon of the Seven Cities), St.Miguel Island
June 29, 1859 - While in St.Miguel Island - Letter from the city of Boston in response to his previous letter, stating that 10,000 bushels of corn were sent to the Azores to help the population after the bad weather destroyed all the crops
July 24, 1859 - Ponta Delgada, St.Miguel Island - Sails for Fayal Island aboard the steamer "Estefânia"
July 27, 1859 - Fayal Island - Returns to Fayal Island, after a short landing at Velas, St.Jorge Island. Fayal residents flock to the pier to express their gratitude for the help of the US Consul
March 2, 1861 - Fayal Island - Letter to Rev. T.W.Higginson
May 2, 1861 - Fayal Island - Departs for Boston
May 27, 1861 - Boston, Massaschusetts - Arrives in Boston
September 21, 1861 - St.Louis, Missouri - Arrives at St.Louis (near the Mississippi)
September 25, 1861 - Cincinnati - Arrives in Cincinnati
December 6, 1861 - Fayal Island - Letter to Roxana Dabney
February 23, 1862 - Fayal Island - A Confederate propeller driven merchant ship, the "Annie Childes" arrives at Fayal en route to Liverpool
February 28, 1862 - Fayal Island - Letter to William H.Seward, US Secretary of State
May 1, 1862 - Fayal Island - Letter from the American Geographical and Statistical Society constituting and declaring Charles William Dabney a member of the Society
May 22, 1862 - Fayal Island - Letter to F.R.Camroux on the issue of coal supply
October 26, 1863 - Horta, Fayal Island, Azores - Beleago Street in Horta becomes Consul Dabney Street
June 10, 1864 - Fayal Island - Letter to Josiah Quincy
September 21, 1864 - Fayal Island - Letter to Eliza S.Quincy
June 18, 1865 - Fayal Island - Sails to the United States on board the "Fredonia"
(We have no information about this voyage)
April 10, 1867 - Fayal Island - Charles Dabney sends the figurehead of the "General Armstrong" to the museum of the Navy Yard at Charlestown, Massachusetts, because the wood began to show signs of decay in Fayal's humid climate. With it, Charles gave a complete description of this heroic boatswain's deed in a letter he sent to the Boston Naval Library and Institute after they elected him an honorary member
July 18, 1867 - Fayal Island - Letter to Louis S.Dabney
December 13, 1867 - Fayal Island - Letter to Eliza S.Quincy
January 30, 1868 - Fayal Island - Letter to Charles Hickling
July 1, 1868 - Pico Island - Takes the Treat family to Pico Island
September 17, 1868 - Fayal Island - Letter to Charles William Dabney Jr.
April 28, 1869 - Fayal Island - Letter to R.B.Forbes
June 1, 1869 - Fayal Island - Letter from the White House suspending Dabney as US Consul in Fayal. Signed Ulisses S. Grant
June 4, 1869 - Fayal Island - Boston's "Traveler" newspaper reports that "J.C.Cover" has been named US Consul in Fayal
September 30, 1869 - Fayal Island - Letters to Moses Grinnell and John M.Forbes
November 29, 1869 - Fayal Island - Letter to Roxana Dabney
December 27, 1869 - Fayal Island - Letter to Arthur Lillienhof von Adelstein
March 16, 1870 - Fayal Island - Letter to Roxana Dabney
July 7, 1870 - Fayal Island - Letter to Roxana Dabney
July 19, 1870 - Fayal Island - After delivering his position to J.C.Cover, Dabney says goodbye to the people of Fayal and departs for a visit to Great Britain
August 8, 1870 - Malvern, Worcestershire(?) - Arrives in Malvern, Worcestershire(?), where his son Charles William Dabney Jr was living
August 25, 1870 - Hereford, England - Listens to Mendelssohn's Reformation Symphony "Christus" and "Psalm 42"
September 15, 1870 - Malvern, Worcestershire - Returns to Malvern
October 2, 1870 - Crystal Palace, England - Letter to Roxana Dabney
October 3, 1870 - Malvern, Worcestershire - Returns to Malvern
October 11, 1870 - Llangollen, Wales - Arrives at Llangollen
October 15, 1870 - Edinburgh, Scotland - Arrives in Edinburgh
October 27, 1870 - London, England - Visit to London
November 2, 1870 - Malvern, Worcestershire - Returns to Malvern
November 7, 1870 - Southampton, England - Boards the steamer "Oneida" to Lisbon
November 13, 1870 - Lisbon, Portugal - Arrives in Lisbon
November 15, 1870 - Lisbon - Sails for the Azores
November 19, 1870 - St.Miguel Island - Arrives in St.Miguel Island
December 4, 1870 - Fayal Island - Dinner with prussian officers
December 22, 1870 - While in Fayal Island - His son, Charles William Dabney Jr dies in Malvern, England, aged 47
March 12, 1871 - Horta, Fayal Island, Azores - Charles William Dabney dies, aged 76 =(END)

Bibliography

ABDO, Joseph C. - "On the edge of History"

JARNAGIN, Laura - "A Confluence of Transatlantic Networks"
MÓNICA, Maria Filomena | SILVEIRA E SOUSA, Paulo - "The Dabneys - A bostonian family in the Azores"