This is a listing of the fleets that participated in the Bombardment of Algiers on August 27, 1816. [1] [2]
Ship | Guns | Commander | Casualties | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Killed | Wounded | ||||
Queen Charlotte | 104 | Adm. Lord Pellew Capt. James Brisbane | 8 | 131 | First-rate ship of the line |
Impregnable | 98 | Rear-Adm. David Milne Capt. Edward Brace | 50 | 160 | Second-rate ship of the line |
Albion | 74 | Capt. John Coode | 3 | 15 | Third-rate ship of the line |
Minden | 74 | Capt. Joseph Prior | 7 | 37 | Third-rate ship of the line |
Superb | 74 | Capt. Charles Ekins | 8 | 84 | Third-rate ship of the line |
Leander | 50 | Capt. Edward Chetham-Strode [3] | 17 | 118 | Fourth-rate ship of the line |
Glasgow | 40 | Capt. Hon. Anthony Maitland | 10 | 37 | Frigate |
Severn | 40 | Capt. Hon. Frederick William Aylmer | 3 | 34 | Frigate |
Granicus | 36 | Capt. William Furlong Wise | 16 | 42 | Frigate |
Hebrus | 36 | Capt. Edmund Palmer | 4 | 15 | Frigate |
Heron | 18 | Capt. George Bentham | - | - | Brig-sloop |
Mutine | 18 | Cdr. James Mould | Brig-sloop | ||
Prometheus | 18 | Cdr. William B. Dashwood | - | - | Brig-sloop |
Britomart | 10 | Cdr. Robert Riddell | - | - | Brig-sloop |
Cordelia | 10 | Cdr. William Sargent | - | - | Brig-sloop |
Beelzebub | 10 | Cdr. William Kempthorn | 1 | 3 | Bomb vessel w/two mortars |
Fury | 10 | Cdr. Constantine Richard Moorsom | - | - | Bomb w/two mortars |
Infernal | 12 | Cdr. Hon. George James Perceval | 2 | 17 | Bomb w/two mortars |
Hecla | 12 | Cdr. William Popham | - | - | Bomb w/two mortars |
Express [4] | 4 | - | - | - | Advice boat tender to Revenge |
Also the "Battering Flotilla", under the command of Capt. Frederick Thomas Michell, and comprising 55 vessels; gun-boats, mortar-boats, launches with carronades, rocket-boats, barges, and yawls.
Although James lists these three vessels as leaving England with the flotilla for Algiers, none actually served there.
Ship | Guns | Commander | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Saracen | 18 | Cdr. Alexander Dixie | Brig-sloop. Left behind at Gibraltar. Although James refers to Saracen in his account of the preparations for the bombardment, he is in error. By 1816 Commander Alexander Dixie was no longer in command of Saracen, and she was at Bermuda. |
Satellite | 18 | Capt. James Murray | Brig-sloop. This was probably the vessel left behind at Gibraltar, with Saracen being a typographical mistake for Satelite |
Jasper | 10 | Cdr. Thomas Carew | Brig-sloop. Only as far as Gibraltar, then returning home with dispatches. |
Ship | Guns | Commander | Casualties | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Killed | Wounded | ||||
Amstel | 44 | Capt. Willem Augustus van der Hart | 4 | 6 | Frigate |
Diana | 44 | Capt. Petrus Zievogel | 6 | 22 | Frigate |
Frederica | 44 | Capt. Jakob Adrian van der Straaten | - | 5 | Frigate |
Melampus | 44 | Vice-adm. Jonkheer Theodorus Frederik van Capellen Capt. Antony Willem de Man | 3 | 15 | Frigate, flagship |
Dageraad | 36 | Capt. Johannes Martinus Polders | - | 4 | Frigate |
Eendragt | 20 | Capt. Jan Frederik Christiaan Wardenburg | - | - | Corvette |
Ship | Guns | Notes |
---|---|---|
4 Frigates | 44 | 1 scuttled, the rest burnt? |
5 Corvettes | 24-30 | Burnt? |
30-40 Gunboats and Mortar vessels | Burnt? | |
55 Others? | ||
James mentions that a French frigate of 40 guns, named Ciotat, had warned the Algerines of the coming attack. [5] However, there was no vessel by that name in the French Navy between 1786 and 1861. [6] Other sources refer to Ciotat as a gabarre or a corvette, and make no mention of her being a man-of-war.
HMS Tonnant was an 80-gun ship of the line of the Royal Navy. She had previously been Tonnant of the French Navy and the lead ship of the Tonnant class. The British captured her in August 1793 during the Siege of Toulon but the French recaptured her when the siege was broken in December. Rear-Admiral Horatio Nelson captured her at Aboukir Bay off the coast of Egypt at the Battle of the Nile on 1 August 1798. She was taken into British service as HMS Tonnant. She went on to fight at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805, during the Napoleonic Wars.
HMS Euryalus was a Royal Navy 36-gun Apollo-class frigate that saw service in the Battle of Trafalgar and the War of 1812. During her career she was commanded by three prominent naval personalities of the Napoleonic and post-Napoleonic period: Henry Blackwood, George Dundas and Charles Napier. After the end of the Napoleonic Wars she continued on active service for a number of years, before spending more than two decades as a prison hulk. She ended her career in Gibraltar where, in 1860, she was sold for breaking up.
HMS Starr was a 16-gun Merlin-class ship sloop of the Royal Navy. She was built by Tanner, of Dartmouth, to plans by Sir William Rule, and launched in July 1805. As a sloop she served on convoy duty, though she also participated in the invasion of Martinique in early 1809. She was rebuilt as a bomb vessel in May 1812 and renamed Meteor. As Meteor she served in the Baltic and then off the United States, participating in attacks on up the Potomac and on Baltimore and New Orleans. She was sold in October 1816.
HMS Bedford was a Royal Navy 74-gun third rate. This ship of the line was launched on 27 October 1775 at Woolwich.
HMS Mutine was a Royal Navy 18-gun Cruizer-class brig-sloop, built by Henry Tucker at Bideford and launched in 1806. During her career she was in combat in Danish waters, in the Bay of Biscay, and at Algiers. She also visited North America, South America, and the West Coast of Africa. She was sold in 1819.
HMS Volage was a Laurel-class sixth-rate post-ship of the Royal Navy. She served during the Napoleonic War, capturing four privateers and participating in the Battle of Lissa (1811). She was sold in 1818. Her new owners renamed her Rochester and she served in a commercial capacity for another 12 years, first sailing between England and India, and then making two voyages to the South Seas as a whaler. She was last listed in Lloyd's List in 1831.
HMS Topaze was a Royal Navy 32-gun frigate, originally completed in 1791 as a French Magicienne-class frigate. In 1793 Lord Hood's fleet captured her at Toulon. The Royal Navy took her into service under her existing name. She was broken up in 1814.
HMS Hesper was a British Royal Navy 18-gun ship-sloop of the Cormorant class, launched in 1809 at Dartmouth. Her original builder, Benjamin Tanner, became bankrupt during her construction, so John Cock completed her. In 1810 she was reclassed as a 20-gun sixth-rate ship ; in 1817 she was again re-rated, this time as 26 guns. She served primarily in the Indian Ocean. In 1810 she participated in the Invasion of Isle de France. The next year Hesper participated in the capture of Java, which she followed in 1812 by capturing Timor. She was sold in 1817.
HMS Magpie was a Royal Navy Cuckoo-class schooner that William Rowe of Newcastle built and launched on 17 May 1806. Like all her class, she was armed with four 12-pounder carronades and had a crew of 20. She had been in British service for less than a year when she grounded on the coast of France, which led to her capture. She then served in the French navy until 1828, including a few years as a prison ship.
During the period of the Napoleonic Wars, two vessels have served the British Royal Navy as His Majesty's Hired armed cutter Idas, named for Idas, a figure from Greek mythology.
His Majesty's Hired armed cutter Lurcher was a 12-gun cutter that served the Royal Navy from 15 August 1795 until 15 January 1801 when a French privateer captured her in the Channel.
HMS Sandfly was a Musquito-class floating battery of the Royal Navy. The two-vessel class was intended to defend the Îles Saint-Marcouf (Marcou) situated off the Normandy coast. During her brief career Sandfly shared in the capture of one privateer and participated in a battle that would earn her crew the Naval General Service Medal. The Peace of Amiens returned the islets to France in May 1802; Sandfly was paid off in June 1802 and broken up in 1803.
Cruelle was a schooner-cannoniere (gun-schooner), launched in 1793. The British captured her in June 1800 and commissioned her as HMS Cruelle. She spent a little over a year in the Mediterranean, serving at Malta and Alexandria before the Royal Navy sold her in 1801.
The French frigate Mignonne was a one-off design by Jean-Baptiste Doumet-Revest; she was launched in 1767 at Toulon. Some notable French captains commanded her before the British captured her at Calvi in 1794 and took her into the Royal Navy as HMS Mignonne. She was burnt in 1797 as useless.
HMS Dangereuse was a tartane named Duguay-Trouin that the French Navy requisioned in May 1794 to serve as an aviso. The Navy renamed her Dangereuse either in May 1795 or on 2 March 1796. She was one of a flotilla of seven gun-vessels that Commodore Sir Sidney Smith in HMS Tigre took at Acre on 18 March 1799, all of which the British took into service. At capture Dangereuse carried six guns and had a crew of 23 men. Smith put her under the command of Lieutenant Robert William Tyte (acting).
César was a mercantile brig launched in 1802 that the French Navy purchased at Bordeaux in 1803. The Royal Navy captured her in July 1806 and took her into their service, but she was wrecked in early 1807.
The French tartane Marie-Rose was a tartane that the French Navy requisitioned in March 1798 at Marseille and commissioned as a transport of four guns and 22 men. The British Royal Navy captured her in March 1799 off Syria and her captors took her into service as the gunbrig HMS Marie Rose. The Royal Navy disposed of her in 1800.
HMS Express was the American merchant vessel Achilles, launched in 1809 in America. Her owners in 1813 renamed her Anna Maria. In 1814 she served the British Royal Navy in North American waters as an advice boat. In 1815 the Royal Navy commissioned her as HMS Express, a ship's tender serving in the Mediterranean. In 1816 she was at the bombardment of Algiers. The Navy sold her at Malta in 1827.
HMS Challenger was a Cruizer-class brig-sloop launched at Redbridge, Southampton, in 1813. She participated in the capture of a French privateer and then sailed to the East Indies. She was laid up in 1819 and sold in 1824.
HMS Nymphe was a 38-gun fifth rate frigate of the Royal Navy, launched on 13 April 1812 at Woolwich Dockyard, and commissioned later that month. She was a Lively class of 18-pounder frigates, designed by the Surveyor of the Navy, Sir William Rule. It was probably the most successful British frigate design of the Napoleonic Wars, to which fifteen more sister ships would be ordered between 1803 and 1812.