Naval General Service Medal 1793-1840, 1 clasp, Syria to a Gunroom Steward, HMS Pique
Impressed naming to : Chas Saunderson
He Jacob served as a Gunroom Steward aboard H.M.S. Pique.
GVF, signs of claw being tightened.
Ex Glendinings June 1904 (23/-).
Pique was the first of a new class of medium-sized frigates designed by Sir William Symonds, Chief Surveyor of the Navy. Following commissioning she formed part of an experimental squadron, which were groups of ships sent out in the 1830s and 1840s to test new techniques of ship design, armament, building and propulsion.
In September 1835 she ran ashore in the Strait of Belle Isle. She was refloated and crossed the Atlantic rudderless and taking on water. In October the vessel arrived in Portsmouth for repairs where a large rock, which had plugged the hole in her hull, was removed. This stone remains on display in the Porter's Garden, Portsmouth Historic Dockyard.
Under the command of Captain Edward Boxer (3 August 1837 – August 1841), Pique sailed to North America, the West Indies and the Mediterranean, including operations on the coast of Syria, as part of the squadron led by HMS Cambridge, and including Zebra and Vesuvius.
A weathered stone wall with a section broken away in the centre. Two cannonballs are partly visible, deeply embedded in the broken section of the wall.
Cannonballs lodged in the Acre city wall, having been fired by Pique during a bombardment in 1840.
In 1840 Pique saw service in the bombardment of the city of Acre under the command of Admiral Robert Stopford. For the engagement, Pique was assigned to the far northern end of the line, north-northeast of the much larger HMS Waterloo and at a greater distance from the city than the rest of Stopford's fleet. Despite this unfavourable position, accurate gunnery enabled Pique to score several hits on the town. In 2012 renovation works along Acre's city wall uncovered three cannonballs fired by Pique during the battle, the shots having struck within three metres (9.8 ft) of each other and embedded in the wall at depths of up to 65 centimetres (26 in).