The African mission had not been profitable …

Years: 1662 - 1662
February

The African mission had not been profitable for the Company of the Royal Adventurers, but Admiral Robert Holmes seems to have made a profit from it, since subsequently Samuel Pepys complains about Holmes's magnificent lifestyle (Diary, 22 December 1661), and wonders whether the large ape Holmes had brought back might be the offspring of a man and a she-baboon and susceptible to instruction (Diary, 24 August 1661).

Holmes, having shown himself equal to dealing with Africans, company factors, the Dutch and his own men and officers alike, had been appointed captain of the flagship, Royal Charles, which he lost quickly after having failed to force the Swedish ambassador to salute the flag, but swiftly had been granted eight hundred pounds from the Crown and the command of the newly launched Reserve.

The appointment of an inept master had led to a quarrel with Pepys, which subsided after a while, but the antagonism between the administrator and the aggressive fighter is never to be resolved.

Aboard Reserve, Holmes tests a pair of pendulum watches conceived by Christiaan Huygens in 1656.

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