Plans of the Albacore | |
History | |
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Great Britain | |
Name | HMS Albacore |
Namesake | Albacore |
Ordered | 18 February 1793 |
Builder | John Randall & Co., Rotherhithe |
Laid down | April 1793 |
Launched | 19 November 1793 |
Commissioned | November 1793 |
Fate | Sold 1802 |
General characteristics [1] | |
Class and type | Pylades-class ship–sloop |
Tons burthen | 36578⁄94 (bm) |
Length |
|
Beam | 28 ft 2 in (8.6 m) |
Depth of hold | 13 ft 6 in (4.1 m) |
Complement | 125 (121 later) |
Armament |
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HMS Albacore (or Albicore) was launched in 1793 at Rotherhithe. She captured several privateers and a French Navy corvette before she was sold in 1802.
Commander George Parker commissioned Albacore in November 1793, for cruising. In June 1795 she was under the command of Richard Fellowes in the Downs squadron. Later, Commander Philip Wodehouse replaced Fellowes, being promoted commander into Albacore. He was promoted to post captain on 23 December. In January 1796 Commander George Eyre took command.
On 7 January 1796 Albacore sailed for Jamaica. [1] Eyre was promoted to post captain on 6 February into HMS Prompte. Commander Robert Winthrop replaced Eyre in command of Albacore.
She and HMS Invincible, Captain William Cayley, were escorting a convoy to the West Indies when on 1 April at 37°11′N16°16′W / 37.183°N 16.267°W they encountered the French privateer Alexander and her prize Signior Montcalm. Alexander, of Nantes, was armed with 10 guns and had a crew of 66 men under the command of Captain Petre Edite. [lower-alpha 1] She had been out 10 days and had captured Signior Montcalm as Signior Montcalm was sailing from Lisbon to Brazil. Captain Cayley sent Albicore and Signior Montcalm to Madeira, with orders to rejoin the convoy as soon as possible. [3]
On 3 May Albacore captured the French corvette Athénienne off Barbados at 14°42′N47°39′W / 14.700°N 47.650°W after a 14-hour long chase. Athénienne was armed with 14 guns and had a crew of 83 men under the command of lieutenant de vaisseau Gervais. She had thrown 10 of her guns overboard during the chase. The Royal Navy took her into service as HMS Athenienne. [4] Next, Albacore was at the capture of St. Lucia on 24 May. She shared in the prize money paid in June 1800. [5]
Winthrop sailed to join Albacore as a passenger on HMS Alfred under captain Thomas Drury. Drury thanked Winthorpe for his able assistance on 13 July at the capture of the French frigate Renommée. [6]
On 17 January 1797 Albacore sailed for Jamaica again. In February she was under the command of Commander Samuel Forster. [1]
On 7 October she arrived at Jamaica with the 3-gun privateer Nantaise. [lower-alpha 2] [lower-alpha 3] Albicore had brought in one or two other small privateers. One was a copper-bottomed schooner of three guns and 56 men (possibly Nantaise), and the other was a row-boat armed with swivel guns and small arms. [9]
In November 1798 she was under the command of Commander Thomas White, on the Jamaica Station. He remained in command until June 1799. Sometime before 11 May, 1799 she seized American brigantine "Neptune" that was returning to the U.S. in ballast after being a flag of truce vessel transporting French passengers to St. Domingo. [10] Also in May 1799 Albacore's boats chased a Spanish settee into a bay east of Santiago de Cuba, and onshore. [11] However, their quarry repelled them and they returned to their ship. There, Lieutenant Robert Ramsey, the senior lieutenant, received Captain White's permission to take charge of the force and to renew the attack. He succeeded in landing, driving away the enemy with the loss of only two men, and in bringing out the settee. [12] The settee had a crew of 30 men armed with small arms. [11]
Lieutenant John Chilcott replaced White in Jamaica in October. [1] Albacore returned to Portsmouth on 10 September 1801. [13]
The "Principal Officers and Commissioners of His Majesty's Navy" offered the "Albacore Sloop, 336 Tons, Copper-fastened, lying at Sheerness" for sale on 20 January 1802. [14]
Jean Bart may refer to one of the following ships of the French Navy or privateers named in honour of Jean Bart, a French naval commander and privateer.
Révolutionnaire, was a 40-gun Seine-class frigate of the French Navy, launched in May 1794. The British captured her in October 1794 and she went on to serve with the Royal Navy until she was broken up in 1822. During this service Revolutionnaire took part in numerous actions, including three for which the Admiralty would in 1847 award clasps to the Naval General Service Medal, and captured several privateers and merchant vessels.
HMS Martin was a 16-gun sloop of the Royal Navy. She served at the Battle of Camperdown in 1797 and captured two privateers before she disappeared in 1800.
HMS Hobart was an 18-gun sloop of the Royal Navy. She was formerly the French privateer Revanche, which Captain Edward Pakenham and Resistance captured in the Sunda Strait, East Indies, on 21 October 1794. The Navy sold her in 1803.
HMS Musquito was a 4-gun schooner, previously the French privateer Vénus. The Royal Navy captured her in 1793, and purchased her in 1794. Because there was already a Venus in service, the navy changed her name to Musquito. During her brief service Musquito captured an armed vessel that appears to have out-gunned her.
HMS Resolution was a cutter that the Royal Navy purchased in 1779. She captured two French privateers in 1781 and a Dutch privateer in 1783 after a single ship action. Resolution captured one more small French privateer in June 1797; later that month Resolution went missing in the North Sea, presumed to have foundered.
Seven ships of the French Navy have borne the name Sans-Culotte in honour of the Sans-culottes:
The French brig Suffisante was launched in 1793 for the French Navy. In 1795 the Royal Navy captured her and took her into service under her existing name. HMS Suffisante captured seven privateers during her career, as well as recapturing some British merchantmen and capturing a number of prizes, some of them valuable. She was lost in December 1803 when she grounded in poor weather in Cork harbour.
HMS Barbuda was commissioned into the Royal Navy in 1780 after having briefly served as an American privateer. Barbuda was one of the two sloops that captured Demerara and Essequibo in 1781, but the French Navy captured her there in 1782 and took her into service as Barboude. The French Navy sold her to private owners in 1786, and she served briefly as a privateer in early 1793 before the French Navy purchased her again and named her Légère. She served them until mid-1796 when the Royal Navy captured her and took her into service as HMS Legere. She was wrecked off the coast of Colombia, without loss of life, in February 1801.
Bordelais, launched in 1799, was a privateer corvette from Bordeaux, France. She took part in three campaigns before HMS Révolutionnaire captured her. She then served the Royal Navy until broken up in 1804.
HMS Alexander was the French privateer schooner Alexandre that the British Royal Navy captured in 1796, purchased, and took into service as a ship's tender to HMS Prince of Wales, and later a troopship. She was the victor in two single-ship actions against opponents of equal or greater force. The Navy sold her in 1802.
Quatre frères was either an American or Bermudian-built vessel. She was commissioned in 1796 at Bordeaux as a French privateer. The Royal Navy captured her in April 1797 and took her into service as HMS Transfer. The Royal Navy sold her at Malta in 1802 to Ottoman Tripolitania. The U.S. Navy captured her in 1804 and took her into service as USS Scourge. The U.S. Navy sold her in 1812.
HMS Ferret was a brig-sloop of the Royal Navy, launched in 1784 but not completed until 1787. In 1801 the Navy sold her. She then became a whaler, making six whaling voyages to the Pacific between 1802 and 1815. She was broken up in 1817.
Numerous French privateers have borne the name Vengeur ("Avenger"):
HMS Matilda was the French corvette Jacobine, which was launched in March 1794 and which the British captured in the West Indies seven months later. Matilda served in the West Indies until 1799, capturing six small privateers. In 1799 she sailed to Woolwich where she became a hospital ship. Between 1805 and 1807 she was the flagship of Rear-Admiral Henry Stanhope. She was broken up in 1810.
HMS Bonetta was the French privateer Huit Amis, launched at Bordeaux in 1798 that the British Royal Navy captured in May. In her brief naval career she captured a number of small prizes, one of them a 2-gun privateer. Bonetta was wrecked in 1801.
HMS Athenienne was a brig, probably a French privateer that the French Navy requisitioned circa April 1796, but that the British captured off Barbados and commissioned later that year before selling her in 1802.
HMS Albacore was launched in 1804 in Bristol. She participated in two notable actions. The British Royal Navy sold her in 1815 and she became a merchantman, sailing out of Guernsey. She was lost on 12 October 1821 while sailing from Buenos Aires to Barbados.
Battalion was launched at Whitby in 1795. She traded with the Baltic and then in 1796 became a Liverpool-based West Indiaman. A French privateer captured her in 1797 in a single ship action as Battalion was outbound on her first voyage to Jamaica. The Royal Navy quickly recaptured her. She was last listed in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1797.