History | |
---|---|
France | |
Launched | 1789 |
Renamed | Empereur (1804) |
Captured | 30 April 1805 |
History | |
United Kingdom | |
Name | HMS Hart |
Namesake | Hart (deer) |
Acquired | April 1805 by capture |
Fate | Sold 1810 |
General characteristics [1] | |
Tons burthen | 15187⁄94, or 160 (bm) |
Length |
|
Beam | 21 ft 2 in (6.5 m) |
Depth of hold | 10 ft 9 in (3.3 m) |
Sail plan | Brig |
Complement | 82 (privateer) |
Armament |
|
HMS Hart was a French schooner launched in 1789 that in 1804 was renamed Empereur and that cruised as a privateer out of Guadeloupe. The British Royal Navy captured Empereur in 1805 and took her into service. She captured numerous small merchant vessels and participated in the capture of the Danish West Indies in December 1807. The Navy sold her in 1810.
On the evening of 3 April 1805 the 74-gun third-rate Eagle was cruising with a squadron when she broke away in chase of a schooner. Eagle caught up with the schooner at around midnight and captured her. The schooner was the French privateer Empereur, of 14 guns and 82 men. She was 42 days out of Guadeloupe but had captured nothing. Captain David Colby of Eagle described Empereur as "a very fine Vessel of her Description, coppered and sails well". [2] Eagle brought her into Carlisle Bay, Barbados; the Royal Navy took her into service as HMS Hart.
Commander John Ellis Watt commissioned Hart in March 1806. [1]
On 4 August Hart captured the schooner Hannah, Eldridge, master. [lower-alpha 1]
On 6 August Hart was in company with Jason, Maria, and Tobago when they captured Hercules. [4]
Commander William Coombe was to replace Watt in early 1807. As first lieutenant of HMS Galatea, Coombe had led the boats that on 21 January 1807 captured French corvette Lynx in a notable action. The surviving British officers received promotions. Coombe was promoted to commander but received an appointment as captain of Hart, not Lynx. Hart was a lesser vessel than Lynx and Coombe complained to the admiral of the station and then to the Admiralty. The Admiralty reversed the appointments, which led to Coombe fighting a duel with the relegated captain. [5] Coombe commissioned HMS Heureux, the former Lynx, in April 1807. [lower-alpha 2]
It is not clear when Coombe replaced Watt. Prize money notices are ambiguous.
On 21 September Hart, Commander William Coombe, captured the Danish brig Adventure, Colin, master. [6]
Galatea and Hart, Commander Coombe ("Deceased"), shared in the prize money for the capture on 1 October 1807 of the schooner John and Joseph, Hansen, master. [7]
On 4 October, Hart. Commander Watt, was in company with Jason, Maria, and Pert when they captured the schooner Rebecca. [8] [lower-alpha 3]
Cerberus, and Hart, William Coombe ("late Commander"),shared the prize money for the galiot Mary, Durham, master, captured on 10 October. [7]
Hart, Latona, Circe, Galatea, Cerberus, Cygnet, and Pert shared in His Majesty's grant for the Danish schooner Danske Patriot, Outerbridge, master, captured on 20 October. The prize money notice gave the name of Hart's commander as William Coombe. [lower-alpha 4]
On 15 December 1807 HMS Fawn arrived at Barbados with the news of war with Denmark. Admiral Cochrane immediately set sail for the Danish West Indies in his flagship, HMS Belleisle, together with a squadron including Prince George, Northumberland, Canada, Ramillies, Cerberus, Ethalion, and a number of other vessels, including Hart. The expedition included troops from the 70th and 90th Regiments of Foot under the overall army commander, General Henry Bowyer. [11]
St Thomas surrendered on 22 December and St Croix on 25 December. [11] A prize money notice in the London Gazette in 1816 gives a list of the vessels, and the army units that participated in the campaign. [lower-alpha 5]
Hart no longer appeared in prize money or other notices in the London Gazette for events after December 1807.
The Navy sold Hart in 1810. [1]
HMS Galatea was a fifth-rate 32-gun sailing frigate of the British Royal Navy that George Parsons built at Bursledon and launched in 1794. Before she was broken up in 1809 she captured numerous prizes and participated in a number of actions, first in the Channel and off Ireland (1794–1803), and then in the Caribbean (1802–1809), including one that earned her crew the Naval General Service Medal.
HMS Northumberland was a 74-gun third-rate ship of the line of the Royal Navy, built at the yards of Barnard, Deptford and launched on 2 February 1798. She carried Napoleon to his final exile on St Helena.
HMS Cerberus was a 32-gun fifth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy. She served in the French Revolutionary and the Napoleonic Wars in the Channel, the Mediterranean, the Adriatic, and even briefly in the Baltic against the Russians. She participated in one boat action that won for her crew a clasp to the Naval General Service Medal (NGSM). She also captured many privateers and merchant vessels. Her biggest battle was the Battle of Lissa, which won for her crew another clasp to the NGSM. She was sold in 1814.
HMS Tartar was a 32-gun fifth-rate Narcissus-class frigate of the Royal Navy, built at Frindsbury and launched in 1801. She captured privateers on the Jamaica station and fought in the Gunboat War and elsewhere in the Baltic Sea before being lost to grounding off Estonia in 1811.
HMS Circe was a Royal Navy 32-gun fifth-rate frigate, built by Master Shipwright Joseph Tucker at Plymouth Dockyard, and launched in 1804. She served in the Caribbean during the Napoleonic Wars, and participated in an action and a campaign for which in 1847 in the Admiralty authorised the issuance of the Naval General Service Medal with clasps. The action, off the Pearl Rock, near Saint-Pierre, Martinique, was a debacle that cost Circe dearly. However, she also had some success in capturing privateers and a French brig. She was sold in 1814.
Lynx was a 16-gun brig of the French Navy, name ship of her two-vessel class of brigs, and launched at Bayonne on 17 April 1804. The British captured her in 1807 and named her HMS Heureux. After service in the Caribbean that earned her crew two medals, including one for a boat action in which her captain was killed, she was laid up in 1810 and sold in 1814.
HMS Lynx was a 16-gun ship-rigged sloop of the Cormorant class in the Royal Navy, launched in 1794 at Gravesend. In 1795 she was the cause of an international incident when she fired on USRC Eagle. She was at the Battle of Copenhagen in 1801, and during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars took numerous prizes, mostly merchant vessels but also including some privateers. She was also at the second Battle of Copenhagen in 1807. She was sold in April 1813. She then became the whaler Recovery. She made 12 whaling voyages in the southern whale fishery, the last one ending in 1843, at which time her owner had her broken up.
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 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.
HMS Maria was the French privateer schooner Constance that the Royal Navy captured in 1805 and that foundered in 1807. During her brief career in the Leeward Islands she participated in the capture of five small prizes.
HMS Comus was a 22-gun Laurel-class sixth-rate post ship of the Royal Navy. She was launched in 1806. In 1807 she took part in one notable single-ship action and was at the capture of Copenhagen. In 1815 she spent six months with the West Africa Squadron suppressing the slave trade during which time she captured ten slavers and freed 500-1,000 slaves. She was wrecked in 1816 with no loss of life.
Rear-Admiral George Sayer CB was a Royal Navy officer who twice became Commander-in-Chief of the East Indies Station.
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HMS Pert was the French privateer Bonaparte, a ship built in the United States that HMS Cyane captured in November 1804. The Royal Navy took Bonaparte into service as HMS Pert. Pert was wrecked off the coast of what is now Venezuela in October 1807.
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