Battle between the French frigates Nymphe, Amphitrite, and the 44-gun two-decker HMS Argo, 17 February 1783, by Auguste-Louis de Rossel de Cercy. | |
History | |
---|---|
France | |
Name | Nymphe |
Namesake | Nymph |
Ordered | 5 December 1781 [1] |
Builder | Brest |
Laid down | December 1781 [1] |
Launched | 30 May 1782 [1] |
In service | August 1782 [1] |
Fate | Wrecked at Noirmoutier |
General characteristics [1] | |
Class and type | Nymphe-class frigate |
Displacement | 750 tonnes |
Length | 46.9 m (153 ft 10 in) |
Beam | 11.9 m (39 ft 1 in) |
Height | 5.8 m (19 ft 0 in) |
Sail plan | Full-rigged ship |
Nymphe was a 40-gun Nymphe-class frigate of the French Navy.
In January 1783, Nymphe was in the Caribbean, with Concorde. On 7, they captured the corvette HMS Raven. On 17 February of the same year, Nymphe was with the 32-gun Amphitrite when she captured the 44-gun HMS Argo. [1]
On 20 January 1785, Nymphe arrived at Brest, ferrying Lafayette. [1]
In July 1792, she was under Coëtnempren de Kerdournan. Along with Dromadaire and Curieux, she sailed to Cayenne to ferry troops, as well as the new governor, Frédéric Joseph Guillot. She then returned to Lorient and was put in the ordinary. [1]
In July 1793, Nymphe was brought into active again under Lieutenant Pitot to fight the Chouan royalist insurgency. [1]
On 30 December 1793, Nymphe was wrecked while battling Chouan coastal artillery near Noirmoutier. [1]
HMS Babet was a 20-gun sixth-rate post ship of the British Royal Navy. She had previously been a corvette of the French Navy under the name Babet, until her capture in 1794, during the French Revolutionary Wars. She served with the British, capturing several privateers and other vessels, and was at the Battle of Groix. She disappeared in the Caribbean in 1800, presumably having foundered.
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The Nymphe class was a class of four 34/44-gun frigates of the French Navy, designed in 1781 by Pierre-Augustin Lamothe. The prototype (Nymphe) was one of the earliest of the frigates to be armed with 18-pounder long guns. The first two - Nymphe and Thétis - carried 34 guns comprising twenty-six 18-pounders on the upper deck and eight 8-pounders on the quarterdeck and forecastle. The latter two - Cybèle and Concorde - carried an increased armament of 44 guns comprising twenty-eight 18-pounders on the upper deck and twelve 8-pounders plus four 36-pounder obuses on the quarterdeck and forecastle. Thétis was retro-fitted by 1794 to carry the same increased armament as the last two; she was rebuilt at Rochefort from October 1802 to September 1803.
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