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William Johnstone (VC)

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William Johnstone
Born(1823-08-06)6 August 1823
Vaasa district, Finland
Died20 August 1857(1857-08-20) (aged 34)
Buried
Buried at sea
AllegianceUnited Kingdom
Service / branchRoyal Navy
RankStoker
UnitHMS Arrogant
Battles / warsCrimean War
AwardsVictoria Cross

William Johnstone VC (6 August 1823 – 20 August 1857) was a Royal Navy sailor and a recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces. He enlisted and served as John Johnstone.[1]

He is listed as being born in Hanover, according to his Royal Navy file [2], however he is now known to have been born Johan Fredric Lindroth, in the Vaasa district, Finland, on 6 August 1823.[3] He served on four ships; the St. Vincent, an emigrant ship transporting people to Australia (1845-1849),[4] HMS Reynard (1849-1852) which operated in the China Seas, fighting pirates and was shipwrecked near Pratas Island in the South China Sea on 31 May 1851. The whole crew survived the sinking when HMS Pilot rescued them. After that, he moved on to HMS Arrogant and then to HMS Brunswick.

Victoria Cross

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Johnstone's Victoria Cross

He was 31 years old, and a stoker in the Royal Navy during the Crimean War when the following deed took place for which he was awarded the VC.

On 9 August 1854 in the Baltic, Leading Stoker Johnstone and a Lieutenant (John Bythesea) from HMS Arrogant, landed on the island of Vårdö, Åland off Finland in order to intercept important despatches from the tsar which were being sent via Vårdö to Bomarsund.[2] The two men spent two nights reconnoitring the island, being helped by a local farmer and his daughter to evade capture by the Russians and on 12 August when the despatches arrived, they ambushed the five Russians carrying them. Two of the carriers dropped their mail bags and ran, but the other three surrendered and were taken to the Arrogant.[2] In this action the Officer and Leading Stoker were armed with just one pistol and a knife.[5][6] Upon their return, the Commanders of both the English and French ships in the fleet were delighted.

Johnstone was not in England when Queen Victoria held the first VC investiture at Hyde Park, London, on 26 June 1857. The medal was sent for presentation to the Commanding Officer of HMS Brunswick, who returned it to the Admiralty on 16 October 1857, Johnstone having died nine weeks earlier. His widow was sent his Victoria Cross by registered post.[7]

His RN records in the UK National Archives show he was a Leading Stoker until May 24, 1856 when he was made Ship's Cook until his demise. It is worth noting that ship's cooks were often older, retired or injured seamen.[8] As Johnstone was aged 33, it might be assumed that he had been injured.

Birth

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In 2022, Finnish researchers discovered a Russian police report on the 1854 incident which resulted in Johnstone being awarded the Victoria Cross. In the report, a witness mentioned in passing that one of the Englishmen (ie Johnstone) spoke poor Swedish and claimed to be from Kristinestad in Finland, but had lived in England since his youth. This discovery was reported by Lord Michael Ashcroft in 2024. [9]

So although John Johnson, alias William Johnstone, claimed to be born at Hanover, he was actually born somewhere near Kristinestad, Finland.

Further research has revealed a candidate for the birth of the VC holder. Johan Fredric Lindroth was born on 6 August 1823. He arrived in Kristinestad in 1837 aged fourteen from a nearby village, Ilmola or Ilmajoki, after his father, a shoemaker with the same name, had died. His name occurred a second time in this list in 1841, registered as “gone”. After that, he vanished from Finnish records, at about the same time as John Johnson, born on the same day, started his career as a British seaman. DNA matches between descendants of William Johnstone and the Lindroth family confirm this hypothesis. [10]

Death

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He died on 20 August 1857 from self-inflicted wounds while serving aboard HMS Brunswick in the West Indies.[1] He cut his own throat after attacking another man with a knife and felt the remorse of his actions, taking his own life by the same knife. He was then buried at sea in the St Vincent Passage, West Indies.[1]

William Johnstone's medal was sold after his death and became part of a collection which on the death of the new owner, was gifted to and displayed in the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.

His Naval pay records show that he made provision for his wife Eliza. A newspaper report on the death of William Johnstone VC recorded that he left a wife and three children. [11]

He married Eliza Littlefield, as John Johnson, on 2 February 1847, at Portsmouth, Hampshire.[12] In the 1861 England Census, widow Eliza Johnson was at Alverstoke, Hampshire, with her parents and her three children.[13] Eliza married two more times, and died as Eliza Treen, aged 90, on 13 October 1919 at Southsea, Hampshire, England.[14]

A pencil sketch exists in the Imperial War Museum's catalogues pertaining to information on Victoria Cross winners.

Notes

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  1. ^ a b c Arthur, Max (2004). "The Crimean War/1854". Symbol of Courage – A Complete History of the Victoria Cross (First ed.). London: Sidgwick & Jackson. p. 5. ISBN 0-283-07351-9.
  2. ^ a b c Royal Naval Museum Library (2005). "Biography: John Bythesea VC". Royal Naval Museum Library. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 24 February 2011.
  3. ^ “New evidence about the identity of William Johnstone VC”, by Mikael Apel and Jean Ffrench, in “The Ancestral Searcher”, journal of the Heraldry and Genealogy Society of Canberra, Vol 48, No 1, March 2025, pp20-25
  4. ^ The St. Vincent made a number of voyages to the Australian colonies and was the last convict ship that reached Tasmania in 1853 but did not transport convicts to the Australian colonies while Johnstone was aboard.
  5. ^ "£100,000 tag on early Crimea VC". The Telegraph. London. 5 April 2007. Retrieved 24 February 2011.
  6. ^ "No. 21971". The London Gazette. 24 February 1857. p. 654.
  7. ^ The Victoria Cross and the George Cross: The Complete History - Volume 1 1854-1914, Published by Methuen, London, 2013, ISBN 978-0-413-77218-3, pp. 6–7
  8. ^ Royal Navy ranks, rates, and uniforms of the 18th and 19th centuries, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Navy_ranks,_rates,_and_uniforms_of_the_18th_and_19th_centuries
  9. ^ ”The British war heroes awarded Victoria Crosses whose stories you’ve never heard before”, https://www.lordashcroft.com/2024/08/the-british-war-heroes-awarded-victoria-crosses-whose-stories-youve-never-heard-before/, accessed 16 March 2025
  10. ^ “New evidence about the identity of William Johnstone VC”, by Mikael Apel and Jean Ffrench, in “The Ancestral Searcher”, journal of the Heraldry and Genealogy Society of Canberra, Vol 48, No 1, March 2025, pp20-25
  11. ^ ”Attempt at Murder, and Suicide of the Assassin”, Hampshire Telegraph and Naval Chronicle, 24 Oct 1857, p5
  12. ^ England, Select Marriages, 1538-1973, https://www.ancestry.co.uk/search/collections/9852/records/16063365?ssrc=pt&tid=39275965&pid=252337041742, accessed 5 March 2025
  13. ^ 1861 England Census, https://www.ancestry.co.uk/search/collections/8767/records/7881598?tid=39275965&pid=252620034885&ssrc=pt, accessed 15 March 2025
  14. ^ England Marriage and Death indexes at freebmd.org.uk