Plan of the Comet | |
History | |
---|---|
United Kingdom | |
Name | HMS Comet |
Namesake | The comet C/1807 R1 |
Ordered | 1 October 1805 |
Builder | William Taylor, Bideford, United Kingdom |
Laid down | February 1806 |
Launched | 25 April 1807 |
Commissioned | January 1808 |
Honours and awards | Naval General Service Medal with clasp "Comet 11 Augt. 1808" [1] |
Fate | Sold 12 October 1815 |
United Kingdom | |
Name | Alexander |
Launched | 1807 |
Acquired | 1815 by purchase |
Fate | Wrecked 9 August 1828 |
General characteristics [2] | |
Type | Thais-class fireship |
Tons burthen | 427, 446, [3] 447, [4] or 449 (bm) |
Length |
|
Beam | 29 ft 5+1⁄2 in (9.0 m) |
Draught | 18 ft (5.5 m) |
Depth of hold | 9 ft 0 in (2.7 m) |
Sail plan | Full-rigged ship |
Complement | 121 |
Armament |
|
HMS Comet was launched in 1807 as a Thais-class fireship of the Royal Navy. In 1808 the class were re-rated as sloops, and in 1811 they were re-rated as 20-gun sixth rates. Comet participated in one action that resulted in her crew being awarded the Naval General Service Medal, and some other actions and captures. The Navy sold her in 1815. In 1816 she became an East Indiaman, sailing under a license from the British East India Company (EIC). She sailed between the United Kingdom and Ceylon. It was on one of these journeys that she was wrecked on Cole House Point on the River Thames on 9 August 1828.
Commander Cuthbert Featherstone Daly commissioned Comet in January 1808 for the Channel. [5]
In June 1808 HMS Cossack and Comet went to St Andero to assist Spanish loyalists and bring off any British subjects. On 21 June boats from Cossack and Comet landed seamen and Royal Marines who spiked the guns of Fort St Salvador de Ano and Fort Sedra, near the town of St Andero, to prevent them falling into French hands. [6] They also blew up two magazines, during which Captain Daly of Comet and Lieutenant Read of the Marines were injured when one of the magazines blew up. [7]
Comet shared with HMS Seine, Cossack, and Unicorn in the capture on 29 June of Pierre Caesar (or Pierre Cézar). [8] The Royal Navy took Pierre Caesar into service as HMS Tigress. [lower-alpha 1]
On 9 August the French corvette Sylphe, under the command of capitaine de frégate M. Louis Marie Clément, [10] (a Member of the Legion of Honour), sailed with Diligente and Espiègle, to carry supplies from Lorient to Guadeloupe. On 11 August they encountered Comet. The French, under orders to avoid combat, attempted to escape. Diligente out-sailed her two consorts. Comet caught up with the two laggards, with Espiègle ahead. Comet then engaged Sylphe, [11] capturing her near the Île d'Yeu. [10]
In the 20-minute engagement, the French suffered seven men killed and five wounded, most severely; the British had no casualties. [12] This action earned Daly his promotion to Post-captain, dated 18 August. [6] In 1847 the Admiralty awarded the Naval General Service Medal to the three surviving claimants from the action. The British took Sylphe into Royal Navy service as HMS Seagull. [lower-alpha 2]
Captain Richard Henry Muddle replaced Daly in August 1808. He sailed to Newfoundland on 17 April 1809, and again in 1810-1811. [5] [5] She overwintered there in and then in spring 1811 patrolled the Grand Banks. In July she escorted a convoy back to England in July. In 1811 Commander William Shepheard replaced Muddle. [5]
Captain Shepheard returned to England and was promoted to post captain on 1 February 1812.
On 10 February 1812 Comet was reclassed as a sixth rate under the command of Captain George Blamey. He sailed Comet for Newfoundland on 25 May 1812. [5]
On 10 February 1813 Comet captured Hero, of 120 ton (bm) and nine men. Hero was bound to Lisbon, from Wilmington with a cargo of flour and rice. [15]
On 23 April 1813 Comet again sailed for Newfoundland. She was paid off at Sheerness in December 1814 and went into ordinary. [5]
Disposal: The "Principal Officers and Commissioners of His Majesty's Navy" offered "Comet, sloop, of 427 tons", "Lying at Sheerness" for sale on 31 August 1815. [16] The Navy sold Comet on 12 October 1815 for £1,400. She became the mercantile Alexander. [5]
Alexander underwent a through repair in 1816.
Alexander was first listed in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1816. [4] (There is no volume of LR for 1817 available on line; possibly no such volume was published.)
In 1813 the EIC had lost its monopoly on the trade between India and Britain. British ships were then free to sail to India, the Indian Ocean, and South-East Asia under a license from the EIC. [17] Alexander's wners applied for a licence on 26 January 1816, and received it on 30 January. [3]
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
1816 | J.Surflen | Joad | London–Isle de France (Mauritius) | LR; thorough repair 1816 |
1818 | J.Surflen | Joad | London–Isle de France | LR; [18] thorough repair 1816 |
On 15 April 1818, Alexander, Surflen, master, was returning to London when at 25°53′N37°30′W / 25.883°N 37.500°W she spoke Grand Sachem, Darney, master, which was returning from whaling at Desolation Island. [19]
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
1820 | J.Surflen | Joad & Co. | London–India | LR; [20] thorough repair 1816 |
On 14 November Alexander, Surflen, master, arrived at Mauritius, and on the next day sailed for Ceylon. On 3 January 1820 she arrived at Columbo, Ceylon. She left Ceylon for London on 25 January. In mid-August she arrived back at Liverpool. On 6 December she was at Gravesend, sailing for "Bombay, &c.". On 21 November 1821 Alexander, Surflen, master, arrived Portsmouth from Mauritius and Cape of Good Hope.
On 13 May 1822 Alexander, Surflen, master sailed from London via Portsmouth for Madeira, Mauritius, and Ceylon. She arrived in Mauritius on 17 August and left for Columbo on 3 September. She arrived back at Gravesend on 11 March 1823 from Ceylon. She had left Mauritius on 9 December 1822 and had been at Saint Helena between 9 December 1822 and 18 January 1823.
On his return, Captain Surflen left Alexander to become master of a larger ship, Lady Kennaway, which had been launched in Calcutta in 1816 and sold in London in April 1823. [21]
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
1823 | J.Surflen Richardson | Joad | London–Ceylon | LR; thorough repair 1816 & deck repairs 1823 |
1828 | Richardson | Joad & Co. | London–Ceylon | LR; [22] thorough repair 1816 & bends doubled |
On 6 April 1828 Alexander sailed from Colombo, Ceylon, calling at Mauritius on 2 May, and arriving in London on 6 August. [23] The following day, she was driven ashore and was wrecked at Cole House Point near Gravesend on the River Thames. [24] The cargo was lost. [25]
The Royal Navy has used the name Comet no fewer than 18 times:
Africaine was one of two 40-gun Preneuse-class frigates of the French Navy built to a design by Raymond-Antoine Haran. She carried twenty-eight 18-pounder and twelve 8-pounder guns. The British captured her in 1801, only to have the French recapture her in 1810. They abandoned her at sea as she had been demasted and badly damaged, with the result that the British recaptured her the next day. She was broken up in 1816.
HCS Bombay, later HMS Bombay and HMS Ceylon, was a teak-built fifth rate, 38-gun wooden warship built in the Bombay Dockyard for the Honourable East India Company (HEIC) and launched in 1793. The Royal Navy purchased her in 1805 and renamed her HMS Bombay. She served with the Royal Navy under that name until 1 July 1808, when she became HMS Ceylon. She was sold at Malta in 1857 and broken up in 1861.
Sylphe was an Abeille-class 16-gun brig-corvette of the French Navy. The class was built to a design by François Pestel. The British captured her in 1807 and took her into the Royal Navy as HMS Seagull, but apparently never used her in any capacity. She was sold in 1814.
Diligente was a 20-gun corvette of the French Navy, lead ship of her class. Built at Brest on private plans by Pierre Ozanne, she was particularly fast. The French Navy adopted the design and copied the plans as late as 1848. Originally armed with 6-pounder guns, she was later rearmed with heavier carronades. She continued in service, off and on, until she was struck in 1854.
HMS Talbot was a British Royal Navy 18-gun sloop-of-war built by James Heath & Sons, of East Teignmouth, and launched in 1807. Perhaps her greatest accomplishment was the reversal of the liberation of Iceland that the colorful, erratic, former Royal Navy seaman and privateer Jørgen Jørgensen had carried out. Talbot was sold in 1815 for mercantile service. Renamed George, she interspersed several voyages to Ceylon and India with three voyages as a whaler in the British southern whale fishery. She was last listed in 1831.
HMS Electra was a 16-gun brig-sloop. She was built by the Enterprise Ethéart, Saint-Malo, as the French Curieux-class brig Espiègle and launched in 1804. She was armed in 1807 at Saint Servan. The British frigate Sybille captured her on 16 August 1808. There was already an Espiegle in the Royal Navy so the Navy took the vessel they had just captured into service as HMS Electra, her predecessor Electra having been wrecked in March. Electra captured one American privateer before she was sold in 1816.
Jean-François Lemaresquier was a French naval officer.
HMS Porpoise was the former mercantile quarter-decked sloop Lord Melville, which the Royal Navy purchased in 1804 to use as a store-ship.
Ronco was a French Illyrien or Friedland-class brig built at Venice and launched in April 1808. HMS Unite captured her less than two months later. The Royal Navy took her into service as HMS Tuscan. She served in the Mediterranean and participated in one action that earned her crew a Naval General Service Medal. She was first offered for sale in 1816 and sold in 1818. At that time mercantile interests purchased her and she became a whaler, making six voyages before being condemned as no longer seaworthy in March 1840 and sold in April during her seventh voyage.
Ceylon was an East Indiaman launched in 1803. She performed four voyages for the British East India Company (EIC). On her fourth voyage the French captured her in the action of 3 July 1810; she then took part in the Battle of Grand Port. The British recaptured her at the invasion of Île de France. She completed her fourth voyage and her owners then sold her. She became a transport until her owners sold her in 1815 to new foreign owners.
Serpent was a French navy brig of the Palinure class, launched in 1807 at Paimbeouf (Nantes) as Rivolli, but renamed. HMS Acasta captured her in 1808 in the Caribbean and the British Royal Navy took her into service there as HMS Pert but renamed her Asp. The navy disposed of her in 1814. She then made five voyages as a whaler, and wrecked in December 1828 on her sixth voyage.
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Anna was launched at Bombay in 1790. She was often called Bombay Anna to distinguish her from BengalAnna. Bombay Anna made two voyages for the British East India Company (EIC). She was lost at sea in 1816.
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HMS North Star was a ship launched in 1810 and spent much of her naval career on the Jamaica Station. The Navy sold her in 1817 and she became the merchantman Columbo. Columbo sailed between Britain and India under a license from the British East India Company (EIC) until she was damaged in 1822 while returning from Ceylon. She was condemned at Point de Galle and sold there for breaking up.
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HMS Britomart was a Cherokee-class brig-sloop launched in 1808. She participated in the capture of several small privateers and merchant vessels. She was also at the bombardment of Algiers (1816). The Navy sold Britomart in 1819. She then entered mercantile service. She sailed to South America, Van Dieman's Land (VDL), and the Indian Ocean. She spent much of her time sailing between England and VDL, and between VDL and the Australian mainland. She foundered in 1839 on her way between Port Phillip and Hobart.
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