Background
Born into a well-to-do family from Audley, Staffordshire, Smith Child entered the Royal Navy in 1747 through a connection between his father (also named Smith Child) and First Lord of the Admiralty George Anson.
Born into a well-to-do family from Audley, Staffordshire, Smith Child entered the Royal Navy in 1747 through a connection between his father (also named Smith Child) and First Lord of the Admiralty George Anson.
He served in the Seven Years" War, the American War of Independence, and the French Revolutionary Wars, rising to the rank of admiral. He also established a pottery manufactory in Tunstall, Staffordshire. Serving first aboard HMS Chester, he rose through the ranks, seeing service in the Seven Years" War supporting the Siege of Louisbourg in 1758 and the Siege of Pondicherry in 1760.
They had two sons.
One was lost at sea, and the other died two years before his father. By the American War of Independence he had been promoted to captain. He was in command of HMS Europe as part of Admiral Marriot Arbuthnot"s fleet in the March 1781 Battle of Cape Henry, in which the British fought off a French fleet attempting to enter Chesapeake Bay, and again later that year in the critical Battle of the Chesapeake in early September, in which the British lost control of the bay, enabling the Franco-American victory at Yorktown.
In November 1795 he was given command of the HMS Commerce de Marseille, a French ship that had been given over to the Royal Navy in the 1793 Siege of Toulon.
The ship, originally a 118-gun three-decker, had been converted to a store and transport ship, and was loaded with 1,000 men and stores for transport to the West Indies. Child was promoted to Vice Admiral of the Blue in February 1799, but saw no further action.
He is buried at Saint Margaret"s Church in Wolstanton. In 1893 a clocktower was erected in Tunstall commemorating his civic contributions.