Édouard Thomas Burgues de Missiessy

Édouard Thomas Burgues de Missiessy
1850 portrait of Missiessy by Charles-Alexandre Debacq
Born(1756-04-23)23 April 1756
Toulon, France
Died24 March 1837(1837-03-24) (aged 80)
Toulon, France
AllegianceKingdom of France
French First Republic
First French Empire
BranchFrench Navy
French Imperial Navy
Service years1766–1832
CommandsPygmée
Censeur
Belette
Modeste
Centaure
ConflictsAmerican Revolutionary War
French Revolutionary Wars
Napoleonic Wars
AwardsCount of the Empire
Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour
Knight Commander of the Holy Spirit
Other workMaritime Prefect, Paris
Maritime Prefect, Le Havre
Maritime Prefect, Toulon

Vice-Admiral Édouard-Thomas de Burgues, comte de Missiessy (French pronunciation: [edwaʁ tɔmɑ byʁɡ misjesi]; 23 April 1756 – 24 March 1837) was a French Navy officer. He joined the navy in April 1766 as a volunteer aboard his father's ship and spent most of his early service in the Mediterranean, in the frigates of the Levant Fleet. When France entered the American Revolutionary War, Missiessy joined the 64-gun Vaillant in Admiral Charles Henri Hector, Count of Estaing's fleet, where he took part in the initial engagements off Newport, Saint Lucia and Grenada, and in September 1779, the failed siege of Savannah. Missiessy's first command came in 1782 when he was promoted to ship-of-the-line lieutenant on the cutter Le Pygmée. He was soon after captured by the British but later released in a prisoner exchange.

In 1789, the year of the outbreak of the French Revolution, Missiessy was a frigate captain in the Mediterranean. Promoted to ship-of-the-line captain in January 1792, he received the command of the ship Centaure in Vice-admiral Laurent Jean François Truguet's squadron. In January 1793, he was promoted to counter admiral. The Revolution became more radical and Missiessy was arrested on 21 May 1793 for being of noble birth. He was released and returned to duty on 30 June but when Toulon declared for the King, Missiessy fled to Italy. He did not return to France until 1795 and despite being acquitted by a court of enquiry, he was not given a ship and spent the next six years working ashore.

In 1804, Missiessy was appointed commander-in-chief of the Rochefort squadron with a key role in Napoleon's planned invasion of the United Kingdom. The Rochefort squadron was intended to rendezvous with Vice-admiral Pierre-Charles Villeneuve's fleet in the West Indies and draw British ships there, before racing back across the Atlantic and seizing control of the English Channel. The failure of this plan was blamed in part on Missiessy and he was dismissed from the navy. He was not employed again until February 1808 when he was made commander-in-chief of the defences at the Scheldt, foiling the British Walcheren Campaign that occurred between July and September 1809. Missiessy ceased active service on 17 September 1824 and was officially acknowledged as retired on 23 April 1832, when his name was entered on the retirement list. He died at Toulon on 24 March 1837, aged 80.