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TENCH, WATKIN (c. 1758-1833), lieutenant-general, author,
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was born, probably in Great Britain, between May 1758 and May 1759; he was 74
at the time of his death in May 1833. He was well educated, and entering the
British forces was commissioned a lieutenant in 1778. On 13 May 1787 he left
England as a captain-lieutenant of marines, so described in an official
document, but he was generally called captain, and arrived at Botany Bay on 20
January 1788. He remained in Australia until 18 December 1791 and kept a diary
throughout his stay. In 1789 he published at London A Narrative of the
Expedition to Botany Bay, a most interesting account of the voyage and the
early days at the settlement. This went into three editions and was also
translated into French, German, Dutch, and Swedish. After his return to Europe
Tench wrote A Complete Account of the Settlement at Port Jackson, which
was published in 1793. This carried his account up to the end of 1791 and is a
well-balanced and interesting document. Towards the end of 1794 Tench became a
prisoner of war, his ship, the Alexander, having been captured by the
French. He published in 1796 an account of his experiences, Letters written
in France to a Friend in London. He had been promoted major in 1794, became
a colonel in the army in 1808, major-general in 1811 and lieutenant-general in
1821. The last years of his life were spent at Plymouth and Devonport, where he
died on 7 May 1899. He married Anna Maria Little, who survived him.
A fellow officer, Lieutenant Daniel Southwell, described Tench as "polite and
sensible". He was a good officer and appears to have had a charming personality,
though like nearly everyone else, he fell foul of Major Ross. He did some useful
exploring, and wielding a lighter pen than most writers of the time, his two
books on the beginnings of Australia are both very readable and valuable.
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