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Duncan Gordon Boyes

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Duncan Gordon Boyes (November 5, 1846January 26, 1869) was an English recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces.

The gallant deed which earned the V.C.

Boyes was 17 years old, and a Midshipman in the Royal Navy during the Shimonoseki Expedition, Japan when the following deed took place for which he was awarded the Victoria Cross.

"On 6 September 1864 at Shimonoseki, Japan, Midshipman Boyes of HMS Euryalus displayed great gallantry in the capture of the enemy's stockade. He carried the Queen's Colour into action with the leading company and kept the flag flying in spite of direct fire which killed one of his colour sergeants. Mr. Boyes and the other colour sergeant (Thomas Pride) who was badly wounded, were only prevented from going further forward by direct orders from their superior officer."

The life of Boyes

Duncan Gordon Boyes was born at 3 Paragon Buildings, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, the son of John Boyes Esq. on the 5th November 1846. His sister Louisa Mary was later to marry Thomas James Young, who won a Victoria Cross at Lucknow, India in 1857.

Duncan was educated at Cheltenham College (hence their reason for having the Cross until 1998) and joined the Royal Navy, after being prepared at North Grove House Academy, and was assigned to H.M.S. Euryalus on the East Indies station.

He won his VC at the age of 17, for his part in action at Shimonoseki, Japan on the 6th September 1864. The citation was published in the London Gazette of the 21st April 1865 and read:

"Duncan Gordon Boyes, Royal Navy, Midshipman of Her Majesty's Ship Euryalus

For the conspicuous gallantry, which, according to the testimony of Capt. Alexander CB, at that time Flag Captain to Vice-Admiral Sir Augustus Kuper KCB, Mr. Boyes displayed in the capture of the enemy's stockade. He carried a Colour with the leading company, kept it in advance of all, in the face of the thickest fire, his colour-sergeants having fallen, one mortally, the other dangerously wounded, and he was only detained from proceeding yet further by the orders of his superior officer. The Colour he carried was six times pierced by musket balls."

Sir Ernest Satow mentioned Duncan Boyes in his memoirs entitled A Diplomat in Japan (London, 1921) in the following terms: "Lieutenant Edwards and Crowdy of the Engineers were ahead with a middy named D.G. Boyes, who carried the colours most gallantly; he afterwards received the V.C. for conduct very plucky in one so young." (A Diplomat in Japan, first edition, p.112)

Duncan was invested with his Victoria Cross on the 22nd September 1865 by Admiral Sir Michael Seymour GCB (Commander-in-Chief to Portsmouth) on the Common at Southsea, along with William Seeley and Thomas Pride who also won VCs at Shimonoseki. Hugh Talbot Burgoyne VC, John Edmund Commerell VC and others also attended the ceremony.

Duncan's short life was to take a turn for the worse from then on. On the 9th February 1867, he and another midshipman were court-martialled for disobedience of the Commander-in-Chief's Standing Order by breaking into the Naval Yard at Bermuda after 11 pm, after they had been previously refused admittance by the Warder at the main gate for not having a pass. Both admitted their guilt and were sentenced to be dismissed from the service. There is some speculation that there was more to this to warrant such a harsh penalty.

File:Boyes headstone.jpg
Photo by Terry Macdonald

The disgrace of this was too much to bear for Duncan and he began to suffer tremendously from fits of depression and began drinking heavily. For the sake of his health he went to New Zealand to work with his brother on his sheep station, but the scandal appears to have followed him, for he was to suffer a complete nervous breakdown and he took his own life on the 26th January 1869 at Dunedin, aged just 22 years 2 months. On his death certificate, the cause was listed as delirium tremens.

He was buried locally in the Southern Cemetery with a stone at his head and feet, though on the 4th May 1954 the Dunedin branch of the Royal New Zealand Returned Services' Association (RSA), in consequence of his VC, reburied him in the servicemen's section of Anderson's Bay Cemetery.

Boyes' grave/memorial headstone is at Anderson's Bay Cemetery, New Zealand. Anglican Southern Section. Block 6. Plot 24. An image of the headstone is here.

The medal

The Boyes VC realised GBP 51,750 and was sold at Spink's, the auctioneers in London, on July 21, 1998 (lot 212) on behalf of Cheltenham College for the purpose of establishing a scholarship in Boyes' name. (See article by John Vincent in the Sunday Times, July 22, 1998). Since then the Boyes scholarship has apparently been established.

Currently the medal is believed to be in the hands of the private collector who bought the medal at the auction in 1998.

Recent developments

A series of posters of Duncan Boyes VC and other medal winners is now on the Victoria line in London (November 11, 2004). See the BBC Report here. The Gloucestershire Echo reports are here and here.


This page has been migrated from the Victoria Cross Reference with permission.