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・ Edward Lord
・ Edward Lorenzo Holmes
・ Edward Loughlin O'Malley
・ Edward Louis Filippine
・ Edward Lovett
・ Edward Lovett Pearce
・ Edward Low
・ Edward Leeds (priest)
・ Edward Leedskalnin
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・ Edward Leeson, 6th Earl of Milltown
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Edward Legge (Royal Navy officer)
・ Edward Leier
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・ Edward Leigh (disambiguation)
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・ Edward Leigh Chase
・ Edward Leigh Pemberton
・ Edward Leigh, 5th Baron Leigh
・ Edward Leighton
・ Edward Leighton (died 1593)
・ Edward Leithen
・ Edward LeMaire
・ Edward Leo Delaney
・ Edward Leo Krumpelmann


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Edward Legge (Royal Navy officer) : ウィキペディア英語版
Edward Legge (Royal Navy officer)
Edward Legge FRS (1710 – 19 September 1747) was an officer of the Royal Navy who achieved a distinction when he was returned as member of parliament for Portsmouth on 15 December 1747 – an honour which meant little to him as he had died 87 days before.
==Life==
Legge was the fifth son of the Earl of Dartmouth. He entered the navy in 1726, on board, HMS ''Royal Oak'', one of the fleet under Sir Charles Wager for the relief of Gibraltar. He afterwards served in HMS ''Poole'', in HMS ''Kinsale'' with the Hon. George Clinton, in HMS ''Salisbury'' and HMS ''Namur'', and passed his examination on 4 July 1732. He was promoted to be lieutenant of HMS ''Deptford'' on 5 March 1734, and to be captain on 26 July 1738. In 1739, he was appointed to HMS ''Pearl'', one of the ships fitting for the voyage to the Pacific under Commodore George Anson. From her, he was moved into HMS ''Severn'', another of Anson's squadron, which after many delays sailed from St. Helens in September 1740.
In the violent storm to the southward of Cape Horn, the ''Severn'' and the ''Pearl'' were separated from the commodore on 10 April 1741. The storm, blowing from the north-west, raged continuously for forty days, during which time they beat to the westward. When the weather permitted they stood to the north, supposing that they had passed into the Pacific. They were in fact still in the Atlantic, the leeway and current together having more than nullified the laborious windward sailing, and on 1 June found themselves off Cape Frio. The case is often referred to as an instance of the extreme uncertainty of the determination of longitude by dead reckoning only. On 30 June, they reached Rio Janeiro in an almost helpless state, having lost a very great many of their men by sickness. After recruiting his ship's company, Legge returned to England, where he arrived in April 1742.
In 1745, he commanded HMS ''Strafford'' in the West Indies, and in 1746 HMS ''Windsor'' on the home station, when he sat as a member of the courts-martial on Admirals Richard Lestock and Thomas Mathews. In 1747, he went out as commodore and commander-in-chief at the Leeward Islands, with orders to supersede his predecessor, Commodore Fitzroy Henry Lee, and try him by court-martial for misconduct and neglect of duty. Lee, however, was sent home without being tried. Legge shortly afterwards died, on 19 September 1747.
After the 1747 general election, a vacancy occurred in Portsmouth because one of the elected MPs was Thomas Gore who chose to sit for Bedford. Portsmouth was under the control of the Admiralty and the Duke thought of nominating Legge. Legge's brother George (Viscount Lewisham) had been an MP until his death from smallpox, and his brother Henry was sitting on the Bedford interest in Orford.
Henry wrote back to the Duke on 4 August 1747 to say:
With Edward duly returned unopposed as a supporter of the Pelham administration, the Legge family was distressed to learn four days later that he had died three months previously.
Legge was not the only Member of Parliament returned posthumously, but he is the one returned the longest time after his death.

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