HMS Anacreon (1799)

Last updated

History
Civil and Naval Ensign of France.svg France
NameAnacréon
BuilderNaval shipyard at Dunkerque (Dunkirk)
Laid down22 September 1797
Launched1798
Captured22 June 1799
Naval Ensign of Great Britain (1707-1800).svg Great Britain
NameHMS Anacreon
NamesakeGreek poet Anacreon
Acquired22 June 1799 (by capture)
FateSold late 1802
General characteristics [1]
Type Ship-sloop
Tons burthen1508994 (bm)
Length
  • Overall: 76 ft 5+12 in (23.3 m)
  • Keel: 60 ft 5+12 in (18.4 m)
Beam21 ft 8 in (6.6 m)
Depth of hold9 ft 0 in (2.7 m)
Propulsion Sails
Sail planBrig
Complement
  • Privateer:100-125
  • British service:60
Armament
  • Privateer: 16 guns
  • British service: 14 × 4-pounder guns

HMS Anacreon was a French privateer launched in 1798 that the Royal Navy captured in 1799 and took into service. She had a brief career in which she took some minor prizes and engaged two enemy vessels in an inconclusive action. She was sold in December 1802.

Contents

French career and capture

Anacréon was built in 1798 at Dunkirk by the brother of her first commander, Jean Blankeman, [2] [lower-alpha 1] reportedly to a design by Louis-Jean-Baptiste Bretocq. [1] [lower-alpha 2]

In August Anacréon was commissioned under ensigne de vaisseau Blanckman for the Irish campaign, the French support of Irish revolts against the British. She left Dunkirk on 4 September 1798 and on 16 September she delivered the Irish rebel Napper Tandy, General Rae, and some seventy compatriots to the island of Arranmore, northwest of Donegal. The rebels occupied the island of Rutland but discovered that the rebellion they were to join had failed. Anacréon then took her passengers to Bergen. [3] They had wanted to return to Dunkirk, but Blanckman preferred to engage in privateering in the North Sea.

On the way Anacreon captured two British vessels, Langton, which the British recaptured the next day, and Tom, which Anacreon brought with her to Bergen. [4] The two British merchant vessels had been in company when on 19 September they encountered Anacréon, which gave chase. Langton was armed only with a swivel gun, which she fired before surrendering. Tom was armed with eight 9-pounder guns and two 12-pounders and resisted until Anacréon grappled her and boarded. The next day they encountered a British sloop of war. Blanchman ordered the prize crew he had put on board Langton to set fire to her; the one British crew member still on board Langton, a ship's boy, had hid the tinder and so the prize crew did not set the fire. They returned to Anacréon, leaving Inspector to recapture Langton. [4] [5]

On 23 December, Anacréon, Captain Blankman, captured the brigantine Aurora, in the North Sea while she was sailing from Riga to Lisbon. The French took Aurora into North Bergen. James Sime, the late master of Aurora, reported in February 1799 that while he was in Bergen, the crew of Anacréon blackened her sails with coal dust to disguise her as a collier. He described her as a brig of 15 guns and with a crew of 100 men. He also reported that another privateer, the cutter-rigged Perseverance, of ten guns and 45 men, had left to cruise the North Sea the day after Anacréon left. [6]

In the first half of 1799 Blanckmann, in Anacréon, was highly successful as a privateer. He would hang on the flanks of convoys, pick of stragglers, and escape before the convoy's escorts could reach him. [7] In one three-day period he captured six large merchantmen. One month later he was again on the prowl.

On the morning of 26 June 1799, Champion sighted a brig taking possession of two merchant vessels. Champion immediately set out in pursuit; three days and two nights later she captured the privateer brig. She turned out to be the Anacréon, out of Dunkirk. She had a complement of 125 men under the command of Citizen Blankeman, though 74 of her complement were away in prizes that she had already taken on her then current cruise. [lower-alpha 3] Captain Graham Eden Hammond of Champion described her as "almost a new Vessel, sails remarkably fast, is Copper-bottomed, and seems fit for His Majesty's Service." [8] The Royal Navy took her into service as HMS Anacreon.

British career

Anacreon was commissioned under Lieutenant John Simpson in November 1799. [1]

It's reported on 9 November 1799 in the Hampshire Telegraph and Naval Chronicle that HMS frigate Nemesis, with the Anacreon sloop, and the Nile, Resolution, and Fanny hired armed luggers, have sailed on a cruise off the Coast of France. [9]

On 27 November 1799, the hired armed cutter Kent captured the French lugger privateer Quatre Freres (Four Brothers) five leagues off the North Foreland. Four Brothers was under the command of Citizen Charles Desobier and carried four 4-pounders, swivel guns, small arms, and a crew of 24. She was one day out of Calais and had yet to take any prizes. Kent sent her into Ramsgate. [10] Kent shared the capture with Anacreon. [11]

In January 1800 Lieutenant Grant Allen replaced Simpson as Anacreon patrolled the North Sea. [1] On 1 February Lieutenant Guyon was appointed to command Anacreon. [12]

Whilst under Guyon’s command, Anacreon engaged a French brig and a cutter-of-war off St Valery. [13] On 6 May she captured the schuyt Jonge Catharina, Jacob Kook, master. [14] Also that month she captured five fishing vessels, Françoise, Bonne Nouvelle, Mentor, St Pierre, and Jacques. [15] She was paid off in July, [1] but then returned to service.

On 2 February 1801, still under Guyon’s command, she recaptured Catherine. [16] In June a skirmish took pace on the beach at Dungeness between a party of smugglers and the men in Anacreon's boats. The smugglers lost two men killed and two wounded, and 700 tubs of spirits that Anacreon seized and carried into Dover. [17]

On 26 November 1801, the Swedish East Indiaman Sophia Magdalena ran onshore near Kingsdown on the South Foreland. Eugenie and Anacreon came as close as they could and rendered assistance. [18]

Fate

Anacreon was lying at Sheerness when she was put up for sale on 1 December 1802. [19]

By 1804 she may have returned to Dunkirk for fitting out again. [20] There do not appear to be any reports of subsequent privateering voyages though, at least not under her original name.

Notes

  1. Blankeman's name is variously reported as "Blanckman", "Blankman", "Blanchman", "Blankeman", "Blackeman", among others.
  2. Winfield gives the year of building as 1731, [1] but this is clearly incorrect. Not only is it inconsistent with the description that her captor gave and with the designer living and working in the late 18th and early 19th Centuries, but Roche gives the year as 1798. [3]
  3. Blankeman would go on to further successful privateering cruises in Bellone and Chasseur. Then during the Napoleonic Wars he captained the Contre-Amiral Magon, which Cruizer would capture.

Citations

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Winfield (2008), p. 337.
  2. United service magazine. July 1845, p.404.
  3. 1 2 Roche (2005), p. 41.
  4. 1 2 Castlereagh (1848), pp.399-405.
  5. "No. 15080". The London Gazette . 13 November 1798. p. 1089.
  6. Naval Chronicle, Vol. 1, p.261.
  7. Marcus (1971), pp.107-108.
  8. "No. 15153". The London Gazette . 29 June 1799. p. 656.
  9. "Resolution Lugger sailed with HMS Nemesis". Hampshire Telegraph and Naval Chronicle. 11 November 1799. p. 3.
  10. "No. 15274". The London Gazette . 8 July 1800. p. 784.
  11. "No. 15271". The London Gazette . 28 June 1800. p. 751.
  12. Naval Chronicle, Vol 3, p.231.
  13. O'Byrne (1849), p.320.
  14. "No. 15591". The London Gazette . 7 June 1803. p. 687.
  15. "No. 15288". The London Gazette . 26 August 1800. p. 984.
  16. "No. 15395". The London Gazette . 8 August 1801. p. 980.
  17. "SHIP NEWS". 22 June 1801, Aberdeen Journal Aberdeen, Scotland) Issue: 2789.
  18. Grocott (1997), pp. 120–121.
  19. "No. 15532". The London Gazette . 13 November 1802. p. 1196.
  20. Naval Chronicle, Vol. 12, pp.457-8.

Related Research Articles

HMS <i>Indefatigable</i> (1784) Frigate of the Royal Navy

HMS Indefatigable was one of the Ardent-class 64-gun third-rate ships-of-the-line designed by Sir Thomas Slade in 1761 for the Royal Navy. She was built as a ship-of-the-line, but most of her active service took place after her conversion to a 44-gun razee frigate. She had a long career under several distinguished commanders, serving throughout the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars. She took some 27 prizes, alone or in company, and the Admiralty authorised the issue of four clasps to the Naval General Service Medal in 1847 to any surviving members of her crews from the respective actions. She was broken up in 1816.

HMS <i>Révolutionnaire</i> (1794) Frigate of the Royal Navy

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 <i>Spitfire</i> (1782) Brig of the Royal Navy

HMS Spitfire was a Tisiphone-class fireship of the Royal Navy. She served during the years of peace following the end of the American War of Independence, and by the outbreak of the French Revolutionary Wars, had been reclassified as a 14-gun sloop-of-war. Spitfire went on to serve under a number of notable commanders during a successful career that saw her capture a considerable number of French privateers and small naval vessels. She spent most of her career in Home waters, though during the later part of her life she sailed further afield, to the British stations in North America and West Africa. She survived the Napoleonic Wars and was eventually sold in 1825 after a period spent laid up.

HMS <i>St Fiorenzo</i> (1794) Frigate of the Royal Navy

Minerve was a 40-gun frigate of the French Navy, lead ship of her class. She operated in the Mediterranean during the French Revolutionary Wars. Her crew scuttled her at Saint-Florent to avoid capture when the British invaded Corsica in 1794, but the British managed to raise her and recommissioned her in the Royal Navy as the 38-gun fifth rate HMS St Fiorenzo.

HMS Atalante was a 16-gun brig-sloop of the Royal Navy. She was formerly the French Atalante, captured in 1797. She served with the British during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, and was wrecked in 1807.

The British Royal Navy employed two vessels described as His Majesty's hired armed cutter Kent, the first during the French Revolutionary Wars and the second during the Napoleonic Wars.

HMS Nemesis was a 28-gun Enterprise-class sixth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy. The French captured her in 1795 at Smyrna, but in 1796 a squadron led by Barfleur brought her out of the neutral port of Tunis. Throughout her career she served under a number of commanders who would go on to have distinguished careers. She was converted to a troopship in 1812 and was sold in 1814.

HMS <i>Cruizer</i> (1797) Sloop of the Royal Navy

HMS Cruizer was a Royal Navy Cruizer-class brig-sloop built by Stephen Teague of Ipswich and launched in 1797. She was the first ship of the class, but there was a gap of 5 years between her launch and the ordering of the next batch in October 1803; by 1815 a total of 105 other vessels had been ordered to her design. She had an eventful wartime career, mostly in the North Sea, English Channel and the Baltic, and captured some 15 privateers and warships, and many merchant vessels. She also participated in several actions. She was laid up in 1813 and the Commissioners of the Navy sold her for breaking in 1819.

During the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, British vessels captured at least 12 French warships and privateers named Espoir, which means “Hope” in French. In only one case was there mention of an exchange of fire or casualties. In general, the privateers tried to escape, and failing that surrendered.

Hired armed cutter <i>Telemachus</i>

His Majesty's hired armed cutter Telemachus served the Royal Navy from 17 June 1795 until 15 January 1801. She was of 128595 tons (bm), and carried fourteen 4-pounder guns. During her five and a half years of service to the Royal Navy she captured eight French privateers as well as many merchant vessels.

HMS Moucheron was a French privateer, built in 1799, that the British captured in 1801. The British government purchased her in 1802 for the Royal Navy. She foundered in 1807 in the Mediterranean without leaving a trace.

HMS Netley was launched in 1798 with an experimental design. During the French Revolutionary Wars she spent some years on the Oporto station, where she captured many small privateers. The French captured her in 1806, early in the Napoleonic Wars. They lengthened her and she became the 17-gun privateer Duquesne. In 1807 the British recaptured her and the Royal Navy returned her to service as the 12-gun gun-brig HMS Unique. She was expended in an unsuccessful fire ship attack at Guadeloupe in 1809.

Perçante was a 20-gun ship-corvette of the French Navy, built at Bayonne and launched in 1795. The British captured her in 1796 and took her into the Royal Navy under the name HMS Jamaica. They rated her as a sixth-rate 26-gun frigate. She served during both the French Revolutionary Wars and part of the Napoleonic Wars, during which she captured some privateers and participated in a boat attack. The Admiralty had her laid up in 1810 and sold her in 1814.

HMS Dolphin was 10-gun cutter that served the Royal Navy from 1793 to 1802, first as a hired armed cutter, and then after the Navy purchased her, as HMS Dolphin. During her almost decade of service Dolphin patrolled the English Channel protecting British trade by capturing French privateers and recapturing their prizes.

HMS <i>Hound</i> (1796) Brig-sloop of the Royal Navy

HMS Hound was a brig-sloop of the Royal Navy. She had a short history. After her launch in 1796 she captured two privateers and destroyed a third before she was lost in 1800.

HMS <i>Seagull</i> (1795) Sloop of the Royal Navy

HMS Seagull, was a Royal Navy Diligence-class brig-sloop, launched in 1795. During the French Revolutionary Wars she shared in the capture of a number of small French and Dutch privateers. Then early in the Napoleonic Wars she participated in a notable single-ship action before she disappeared without a trace in 1805.

HMS Milbrook was one of six vessels built to an experimental design by Sir Samuel Bentham. After the Royal Navy took her into service in her decade-long career she took part in one notable single-ship action and captured several privateers and other vessels, all off the coast of Spain and Portugal. She was wrecked off the coast of Portugal in 1808.

His Majesty's hired armed schooner Lady Charlotte served the British Royal Navy on contract between 28 October 1799 and 28 October 1801. She had a burthen of 120 8594 tons (bm), and was armed with twelve 12-pounder carronades. As a hired armed vessel she captured several privateers and recaptured a number of British merchant vessels. After her service with the Royal Navy, she apparently sailed as a letter of marque until the French captured her in 1806.

Jalouse was an 18-gun Belliqueuse-class brig-corvette of the French Navy, built to a design by Pierre-Alexandre-Laurent Forfait, and launched in 1794 at Honfleur. The Royal Navy captured her in May 1797 and took her into service under her existing name. In British service she served primarily on the North Sea station where she captured three small French privateers, and many Dutch merchant vessels. She also participated with other British warships in two or three major cutting-out expeditions. She was broken up in 1807.

Numerous French privateers have borne the name Vengeur ("Avenger"):

References