Provo Wallis
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Sir Provo William Perry Wallis (born in Halifax on May 12, 1791 - died April 26, 1892) was a naval war hero and Admiral of the Fleet for the Royal Navy.
His father, Provo Wallis Sr., wanted a naval career for his son and, knowing the rules for officers' entry into the navy, managed to get his son officially registered in 1795 as an able seaman on the 36-gun frigate HMS Oiseau at the age of four. In 1796 young Provo became a volunteer in the 40-gun frigate Prevoyante where he remained (on paper at least) for two years before returning in the 64-gun Asia where he served until 1800, then was promoted as a midshipman into the 32-gun frigate Cleopatra.
Provo Wallis was then commissioned as a lieutenant on the 38-gun frigate, Shannon in 1811. It was here that Provo Wallis gained most of his notoriety. The story is that the Shannon fought with the USS Chesapeake near Boston on June 1, 1813, during the War of 1812. The relevant fact is that the Captain, Philip Bowes Vere Broke, was badly wounded during the action and the Shannon's first lieutenant was killed. Provo Wallis served as temporary captain of the British frigate for a period of exactly six days as she made her way back to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with the Chesapeake flying the Blue Ensign above the Stars and Stripes.
Admiral Wallis died in 1892, only a few weeks shy of his 101st birthday.