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  1. www.encyclopedia.com › encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps › john-byronJohn Byron | Encyclopedia.com

    Admiral John Byron of the British Navy, sent to find the elusive "southern continent," discovered the Falkland Islands as well as many other smaller islands in what would be the fastest circumnavigation at the time.

  2. Hon. John Byron - more than Nelson. 1723-86. He was born on 8 November 1723, the second son of William, 4th Lord Byron, and his wife, Hon. Frances Berkeley, the daughter of the 4th Lord Berkeley. He was the grandfather of the poet Lord Byron.

  3. Captain John Byron (1757 – 2 August 1791) was a British Army officer and letter writer, best known as the father of the poet Lord Byron. In 1824, an obituary of his son gave him the nickname " Mad Jack Byron ", and though there is no evidence for this in his own lifetime, it has since stuck – certainly he was called "Jack" by his family ...

  4. Overview. In 1764, John Byron (1723-1786) left England in command of a two-ship expedition to circle the globe. He returned slightly less than two years later, having set a record for the fastest circumnavigation to date, and the first commander to circle the globe without losing a ship. While Byron did not accomplish some of his goals of ...

  5. www.encyclopedia.com › encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps › byron-johnByron, John | Encyclopedia.com

    History. Encyclopedias almanacs transcripts and maps. Byron, John. views 2,853,382 updated. Byron, John. BYRON, JOHN. (1723–1786). British admiral. Second son of the fourth baron Byron, and later father of the poet, George Gordon Byron, John Byron was born on 8 November 1723.

  6. Feb 26, 2024 · February 26, 2024. People who have never read a line of Byrons verse may still have heard that he was “mad—bad—and dangerous to know.” Illustration by Cecilia Carlstedt. It is almost two...

  7. BYRON, JOHN (Foulweather Jack) 1723 - 1786 from England naval officer and explorer, was born on 8 November 1723, the second son of William, fourth Baron Byron and his third wife Frances, née Berkeley. He joined the Navy in 1737, and as a midshipman sailed in the ill-fated Wager on ANSON's voyage round the world in 1740-44. In May ...

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