HMS Lynx and HMS Monkey capturing three Danish luggers, 12 August 1809; oil on canvas, 19th century | |
History | |
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United Kingdom | |
Name | HMS Monkey |
Ordered | 7 January 1801 |
Builder | John Nicholson, Rochester |
Laid down | January 1801 |
Launched | 11 May 1801 |
Fate | Wrecked 25 December 1810 |
General characteristics [1] | |
Class and type | Bloodhound-class gun-brig |
Tons burthen | 18752⁄94 (bm) |
Length |
|
Beam | 23 ft 1+1⁄2 in (7.0 m) |
Depth of hold | 8 ft 6 in (2.6 m) |
Sail plan | Brig |
Complement | 50 |
Armament | 12 × 18-pounder carronades (2 as bow chasers) |
HMS Monkey was launched in 1801 at Rochester. She served in the Channel, North Sea, and the Baltic, and was wrecked in December 1810.
Monkey was commissioned for the Nore in May 1801 under Lieutenant Nicholas Corsellis. [1]
In March 1802 she was in the Channel under the command of Lieutenant Weir. [1]
Lieutenant James Tillard recommissioned her between February and September 1802 for the North Sea. [1] [lower-alpha 1]
On 29 March, 22 April, and 5 and 11 May 1802, Monkey and Conflict seized sundry smuggled spirits. [2]
On 25 November 1803 Monkey sent into Yarmouth two vessels that a privateer lugger had taken off Orforness. The two vessels that Monkey had recaptured were William, Roskruge, master, which had been sailing from London to Yarmouoth, and Orford, Hogarth, master, which had been sailing from London to Shields. [3]
In 1804 Monkey was under the command of Lieutenant William Tatham. [1]
In 1805–1806 Monkey was under the command of Lieutenant Richard William Simmonds. [1]
Early in the morning of 24 April 1805 HMS Leda sighted twenty-six French vessels rounding Cap Gris Nez. Honyman immediately ordered Fury, Harpy, Railleur, Bruiser, Gallant, Archer, Locust, Tickler, Watchful, Monkey, Firm, and Starling to intercept. After a fight of about two hours, Starling and Locust had captured seven armed schuyts in an action within pistol-shot of the shore batteries on Cap Gris Nez. [4] The schuyts were all of 25 to 28 tons burthen, and carried in all 117 soldiers and 43 seamen under the command of officers from the 51st. Infantry Regiment. The French convoy had been bound for Ambleteuse from Dunkirk. On the British side the only casualty was one man wounded on Archer.
Lloyd's List (LL) reported on 22 November 1805 that Monkey had sent into Portsmouth the American packet Lowell, which had been sailing from Boston to Rotterdam when Monkey had detained her. [5]
On 10 February 1806 a French privateer captured Cicero off Fairleigh as Cicero was sailing from Deptford to Chepstow. Monkey recaptured Cicero and sent her into the Downs. [6]
On 27 March HMS Musquito was with Ariadne and Monkey when they captured Vrow Cornelia, R.R. Cruzenga, Master. [7] [8] On 7 April Musquito, Monkey, Bold and Urgent captured Bradford. [9] On 14 April Musquito, Ariadne, Monkey, and Blazer captured the merchant vessel Elizabeth Anna. [10]
Lloyd's List reported that Monkey had detained and sent into the Downs a large ship from Hamburg. [11]
On 22 April Monkey detained and sent into the Downs a ship from the Mediterranean. [12] Next, Monkey detained and sent into the Downs a dogger carrying sugar, coffee, tobacco, and rum to Hamburg. [13]
Monkey detained and sent into Dover two more ships. One was New Harmony, of Altona, Smith, master, which was sailing from Hamburg to StThomas's. The second was Enigheden, Marck, master, which was sailing from Galipoli to Hamburg. [14] Lastly, Monkey detained the American ship Hamilton, which had been sailing from Amsterdam to Baltimore, and sent her into the Downs. [15]
In 1807 to 1810 Monkey was under the command of Lieutenant Thomas Fitzgerald. He sailed her to the Baltic in 1809. [1]
LL reported on 6 October 1807 that Monkey had detained and sent into the Downs Flora, which had been sailing from Baltimore to Amsterdam. [16]
On 31 October 1808 Monkey captured Fraw Maria Dorithea, and Anna Catharina. [17]
On 30 April 1809, Tartar captured Charlotte, with Superb, Stately, Vanguard, Allart, Constant, Monkey, and Urgent being in company or in sight. [18] [lower-alpha 2]
On 12 August Commander John Willoughby Marshall and Lynx, in the company of the gun-brig Monkey, under the command of Lieutenant Thomas Fitzgerald, discovered three Danish luggers off the Danish coast. [20] The water was too shallow for Lynx, so Marshall sent Monkey and boats from Lynx in to cut them out. The largest of the luggers, which had four guns and four howitzers, opened fire on Monkey before all three luggers ran ashore once Monkey and the launch's 18-pounder carronade returned fire. The British refloated the luggers and brought them out the next day, having taken no casualties. In their haste to quit the vessels, the Danes failed to fire the fuse on a cask of gunpowder they had left by the fireplace on the largest lugger. [21] Marshall thought the Danes' behaviour in leaving the explosive device disgraceful. [20] The largest lugger was Captain Japen (or Captain Jassen). She had had a crew of 45 men, who had fled, and during the engagement she had thrown two of her howitzers overboard. The second lugger, name unknown, had four guns and a crew of 20. The third lugger was Speculation, of three guns and 19 men. Her crew too had thrown two guns overboard. [20]
In 1810 Monkey was part of the force blockading Lorient.
On 28 March 1810 Monkey and Minerva were in company when they captured Epervier. [22]
On 29 April Monkey was in company with Armide and the hired armed cutter Adrian at the capture of Aimable Betzie. [23] Daring also shared in the proceeds of the capture of Aimable Betsie. [24]
On 4 May boats from Armide, with the assistance of boats from the 8-gun Cherokee-class brig-sloop Cadmus, and the gun-brigs Monkey and Daring, attacked a French convoy of armed and coasting vessels off the Île de Ré. Despite strong fire from shore batteries and the convoy's escorts, the British accounted for 17 ships, burning 13 of them and forcing four ashore. Armide lost three men killed and three wounded. [25]
On 20 June Monkey captured the Chasse-marée Pelagic. [26]
On 23 September the French ketch Jeune Julie, with her cargo of salt, arrived at Plymouth. She was a prize to Monkey. [27]
Next, on 13 December 1810 Monkey was in company with Venerable and several other vessels at the capture of Goede Trouw. [28]
Monkey was wrecked on Belle Isle on 25 December 1810. She was part of the force blockading Lorient. After enduring gales for several days Fitzgerald steered her towards Belle Isle in Quiberon Bay to take shelter. As she approached Belle Isle the wind increased. At 4am, as she prepared to anchor, the wind blew out or split her sails. She dropped her anchors, but one cable broke immediately and the other could not hold her. Within an hour she was aground on the rocks, which pierced her hull. As she filled with water her crew took to her rigging. The crew then jumped in the water to swim to the nearby shore. Lieutenant Fitzgerald and one seaman died in the attempt. [29]
The French took the survivors prisoner. On 25 May 1814 the surviving officers and crew underwent a court-martial in Portsmouth aboard HMS Gladiator for the loss of Monkey. The crew reported that Fitzgerald had jumped into the sea when waves smashed him between the hull and the rocks, breaking his legs. The receding waves swept him away. [30]
HMS Leda, launched in 1800, was the lead ship of a successful class of forty-seven British Royal Navy 38-gun sailing frigates. Leda's design was based on the French Hébé, which the British had captured in 1782. Leda was wrecked at the mouth of Milford Haven in 1808, Captain Honeyman was exonerated of all blame, as it was a pilot error.
HMS Hydra launched in 1797 was a fifth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy. From 1813 to 1817 she served as a troopship. She was sold in 1820.
HMS Daring was a 12-gun gun-brig of the Archer class of the British Royal Navy. She was launched in 1804 and served in the Channel and North Sea, capturing a number of merchant vessels. In 1813 she was serving on the West Africa Station when her crew had to scuttle her to prevent her capture.
Armide was a 40-gun frigate of the French Navy, lead ship of her class, and launched in 1804 at Rochefort. She served briefly in the French Navy before the Royal Navy captured her in 1806. She went on to serve in the Royal Navy until 1815 when she was broken up.
HMS Musquito. was a Royal Navy Cruizer-class brig-sloop built by John Preston at Great Yarmouth and launched in 1804. She was commissioned in October 1804 under Commander Samuel Jackson. She served in the North Sea and the Baltic, and Jackson supervised the first successful rocket attack in Europe at Boulogne in 1806. After the war she served off Africa and captured some slavers. She was broken up in 1822, having been laid up since 1818.
HMS Basilisk was a Bloodhound-class gun-brig built by Randall in Rotherhithe and launched in 1801. She served briefly at the end of the French Revolutionary Wars, with most of her service occurring during the Napoleonic Wars protecting convoys from privateers, conducting close-inshore surveillance and taking enemy coastal shipping. She was sold for breaking in 1815.
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 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.
The French brig Observateur, which was launched in 1800 for the French Navy, was a Vigilant-class 16-gun brig, one of six built to a design by Pierre-Alexandre-Laurent Forfait. The Royal Navy captured her in 1806 and took her into service as HMS Observateur. She participated in two actions, one for the French Navy and one for the Royal Navy, and one campaign before she was laid up in 1810. The Navy did not succeed in selling her until 1814.
HMS Jackal was a Bloodhound-class brig of the Royal Navy, launched in 1801. She captured a number of small prizes in the Channel, including one armed sloop, before she was lost in 1807.
HMS Earnest was launched at Leith in 1805 as one of 48 later Archer-class gun brigs for the British Royal Navy. During her naval career Earnest captured five small privateers and numerous merchant vessels. In 1816 the Admiralty sold her and she became the merchantman Earnest. She continued to sail and was last listed in 1850.
HMS Phosphorus was the Dutch naval brig Haasje that the Royal Navy captured in 1803 and took into service in 1804 as a fireship. She took part in a notable single-ship action in 1806. The Navy sold her in 1810. She then became a merchantman trading with the Mediterranean. She was lost c.1813.
HMS Thunder was an 8-gun bomb vessel of the Royal Navy, previously the mercantile Dasher. Dasher, launched at Bideford in 1800, had made two voyages as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people before the Royal Navy purchased her in 1803 and renamed her HMS Thunder. Thunder served in the Mediterranean and the Baltic; among other actions, she participated in a battle and one single-ship action, each of which resulted in her crew later qualifying for clasps to the Naval General Service Medal (1847). The Navy sold her in 1814.
HMS Royalist was launched in 1807. She captured many privateers and letters of marque, most French, but also some from Denmark and the United States. Her crew twice were awarded the Naval General Service Medal. She was instrumental in the capture of a French frigate. The Royal Navy sold her in 1819. She then became a whaler, making three complete voyages. She was condemned after a mishap while on her fourth.
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.
HMS Growler was a Archer-class gun-brig built for the British Royal Navy and launched in 1804. She captured several French privateers and one Danish privateer, and took part in two actions that earned her crew the Naval General Service Medal (NGSM). She was sold in 1815.
HMS Dexterous was a later Archer-class gunbrig launched at Buckler's Hard in 1805. Between 1805 and 1807, Dexterous was operating out of Gibraltar, where she captured two small armed vessels, one naval and one a privateer. Thereafter Dexterous operated in the Channel, where she recaptured several British merchant vessels that French privateers had captured. The Navy sold Dexterous in 1816.
HMS Conflict was launched in 1805. She captured a number of vessels, including privateers, and participated in several major actions. She disappeared in November 1810 with the loss of all her crew.
HMS Richmond was a Confounder-class gunbrig, launched at Itchenor in February 1806. She captured several small privateers and merchantmen off the Iberian peninsula before the Royal Navy sold her in 1814. After the Navy sold her, she became the mercantile Ben Jonson.
The Royal Navy purchased the mercantile brig Jane in 1804 and renamed her HMS Watchful. Jane had been launched in 1795 at Norfolk. In 1805 she participated in several actions against French and Dutch vessels on their way to Boulogne. Watchful also participated in the siege of Cadiz in 1810–1811. The Navy sold her in 1814.