Thomas MacKenzie, also known as Foma Fomich Mekenzi, was a Scottish-Russian rear admiral who founded the city of in service of the Russian Empire in 1783.
Background
Of Scottish Catholic origin, the son of another Thomas MacKenzie (Foma Kalinovich Mekenzi, Фома Калинович Мекензи) who was also a rear admiral in the service of Russia, MacKenzie entered into the Russian Navy in 1765 with the rank of michman, initially serving in the Baltic Sea.
Career
Later, with a rank of captain lieutenant, he took part in a number of battles in the Russo-Turkish War (1768-1774), including the Battle of Nauplia (1770). He was wounded in the Battle of Chesma, where he commanded a fireship and served under Scottish-born admiral Samuel Greig. Foreign distinction in this battle he was also promoted to captain of the second rank (equivalent to commander).
On 21 April 1777 he was promoted to captain of the first rank (equivalent to captain).
On 28 June 1782 he was promoted to captain of major-general rank, and on 1 January 1783 to rear admiral in the Black Sea fleet. With a squadron of nine frigates and some smaller ships, he wintered in the practically uninhabited bay of Akhtiar on the Crimean peninsula.
He cleared the shore of forests and founded the city of on 14 June 1783. At MacKenzie"s initiative the city was developed, with a shipyard, shops, hospital and church, as well as barracks and living quarters for officers.
He worked to establish limestone quarries and developed the land to meet the supplies required by the wooden fleet, as well as food supplies.
He is considered the first commander-in-chief of the port of The MacKenzie Hills (Мекензиевые горы) on the outskirts of the city are named in his honour, and he was given a farmstead there by Potemkin as a reward for his service. He had a house in the city where Empress Catherine the Great would once later stay. This undermined his health, and he died in on 10 January 1786.