Peter Warren
Royal Navy admiral
Died when: 48 years 141 days (580 months)Star Sign: Pisces
Vice-Admiral Sir Peter Warren, KB (10 March 1703 – 29 July 1752) was an Anglo-Irish naval officer and politician who sat in the British House of Commons representing the constituency of Westminster from 1747 to 1752.
Warren is best known for his career in the Royal Navy, which he served in for thirty-six years and participated in numerous naval engagements, including most notably the capture of the French fortress of Louisbourg in 1745.
Born in Ireland c. 1703 to an Irish Catholic family, Warren's parents raised him as a Protestant in order to allow him to pursue a career at sea.
In 1716, Warren enlisted in the Royal Navy, largely spending the next decade serving off the West African coast or in the Caribbean, participating in anti-piracy operations and confrontations with Spanish coast guard vessels.
Eleven years later in 1727, Warren was promoted to the rank of post-captain.From 1728 to 1745, Warren served almost continuously in the Americas.
He commanded the Solebay off New York, where he married Susannah Delancey in 1731; they had six children together.During the War of Jenkins' Ear, he participated in failed attacks on St.
Augustine and Cartagena.In 1745, Warren joined an expeditionary force to attack the fortress of Louisbourg, leading a blockade which led to the garrison capitulating on 28 June.
Warren participated in a naval battle in May 1747, being made a Knight Companion, before returning to England to pursue a political career.
He was elected to Parliament in the 1747 general election, attending several parliamentary committees in addition to opposing a clause in the 1749 Consolidation Act.
Warren died in Dublin on 29 July 1752.The towns of Warren, Rhode Island and Warren, New Hampshire were named for him.