see description line  storage  25.1 

A UNIFORM BILL FROM 1855 - 
 
Arthur Auckland Leopold Pedro Cochrane was born in 1824 and he entered the Royal Navy in 1839. He was involved in the Crimean war in 1854, became a captain of several ships and served in the Anglo-Chinese war in 1858, was invalided to land duty, and made Commander-in-Chief of the Pacific Squadron, promoted to admiral in 1881, retired from the navy in 1886, knighted and died in 1905.

Arthur Cochrane (Royal Navy officer)
Sir Arthur Cochrane
Born 24 September 1824
Died 20 August 1905 (aged 80)
Allegiance United Kingdom United Kingdom
Service/branch Naval Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg Royal Navy
Years of service 1839–1886
Rank Admiral
Commands held HMS Horatio
HMS Niger
HMS Warrior
HMS Cumberland
Pacific Station
Battles/wars Oriental Crisis
Crimean War
Second Opium War
Awards Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath
Admiral Sir Arthur Auckland Leopold Pedro Cochrane, KCB (24 September 1824 – 20 August 1905) was a Royal Navy officer who served as Commander-in-Chief, Pacific Station.

Born the third son of the tenth Earl of Dundonald, Cochrane joined the Royal Navy in 1839.[] He fought at Acre where he was wounded during the Oriental Crisis in 1840[] and then served in the Baltic Sea during the Crimean War[1] where he devised a method of towing torpedoes to their target using kites in 1855.[]

Promoted to Captain in 1854, he was given command of HMS Horatio at Sheerness and then of HMS Niger in which he took part in the destruction of the Chinese Fleet in October 1856 during the Second Opium War.[2] He later commanded HMS Warrior and then HMS Cumberland.[] He was appointed Superintendent of Sheerness dockyard in 1869 and Commander-in-Chief, Pacific Station in 1873.[] He was promoted to admiral in December 1881, and retired from the navy in June 1886.[ In retirement he was involved in managing the Trinidad Lake Asphalt Company.

In a letter to The Times in 1902, Admiral Cochrane wrote about attending the enthronement festivities of King Louis Philippe I of the French in Paris in 1830, being present at the Coronation of Queen Victoria in 1838, and the (at that point) recent Coronation of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra earlier the same year.[]