HMS Redbridge (1798)

Last updated

HMS Eling (1796).jpg
Plans for HMS Eling, National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London; [1]
History
Naval Ensign of Great Britain (1707-1800).svgGreat Britain
NameHMS Redbridge
BuilderHobbs & Hellyer, Redbridge
Laid down1796
Acquired1798 by purchase
FateCaptured 1803
Civil and Naval Ensign of France.svg France
NameRedbridge
LaunchedAugust 1803 by capture
Decommissioned1813
FateSold 1814
General characteristics [2] [3]
TypeExperimental design
Displacement150 tons (French)
Tons burthen148 (bm)
Length
  • 80 ft 0 in (24.4 m) (overall)
  • 56 ft 7+12 in (17.3 m) (keel)
Beam22 ft 2 in (6.8 m)
Depth of hold11 ft 6 in (3.5 m)
Sail planSchooner
Complement
  • British service: 50
  • French service: 107
Armament
  • British service: 12 × 18-pounder carronades + 2 × 12-pounder carronades
  • French service: 12 × 16-pounder guns (British 18-pounder?), or 14 × 22-pounder carronades (British 24-pounder?)

HMS Redbridge was one of four schooner-rigged gunboats built to an experimental design by Sir Samuel Bentham. Her launch date is unknown, but the Admiralty purchased her in April 1798. [2] She had a short, relatively uneventful career before the French captured her in 1803. The French Navy sold her in January 1814.

Contents

Design

Hobbs & Hellyer built six vessels to Bentham's design. Redbridge was the second of a two-vessel class of schooners, and she and her classmate Eling were the smallest of the six vessels, smaller even than the other two schooners, Milbrook and Netley. The design featured a large-breadth to length ratio with structural bulkheads, and sliding keels. The vessels were also virtually double-ended. [2]

French Revolutionary wars

Lieutenant George Hays took command of Redbridge on 10 April 1798. He remained in command of her until 11 December 1800. [4]

Hayes's replacement was Lieutenant George Lemprière, and she was stationed in the Channel. [2] The great gale of 8–9 November 1800 caught Redbridge and several other vessels in St Aubyn's Bay, Jersey. Redbridge, which managed to get to sea, was widely believed to have been lost. Still, she arrived in Spithead on Wednesday 12 November, though without her guns, which she had thrown overboard to lighten her. She went into harbour to effectuate repairs. [5] [6] Havik, Pelican, the hired armed cutter Lion, and a Guernsey privateer were driven ashore. [7] Havick was so badly damaged that she was abandoned as a wreck. [8] The other three vessels were refloated. The hired armed brig Telegraph too got out to sea and was saved though she lost her mast.

On 31 March 1801 Redbridge engaged a French brig in the Bay of Saint-Brieuc. [9]

On 24 April 1802 Lemprière sailed Redbridge to Dublin, carrying seamen. [10]

Capture

In May 1803, shortly after the onset of the Napoleonic Wars, Redbridge was in Malta. She sailed from Malta on 6 July carrying some supernumeraries for Admiral Nelson's fleet and escorting the transport Caroline, Dandison, master, which was carrying water. [11] Lemprière cruised off Toulon but could not find the fleet and decided to sail to Gibraltar. Early on 3 August he encountered Cameleon, which advised him the British fleet was further west. That evening Redbridge encountered the frigate Phoebe. Next morning Phoebe and Redbridge sighted four sail. Phoebe advised that they were probably French and the British ships set sail to escape. Phoebe was able to outpace their pursuers, but Redbridge was not and fell prey to them. [12]

The four sail were a squadron of French frigates, Cornélie, Rhin, Uranie, and Tamise, [13] and possibly some corvettes that had sortied in the night from Toulon. The French also captured the transport. [14] Redbridge's actual captor was Cornélie. [2] Admiral Nelson attempted to send into Toulon a boat under a flag of truce offering the French a prisoner exchange, but the French refused his letter proposing the exchange. [14]

French service and fate

The French commissioned Redbridge on 5 August 1803. They decommissioned her at Leghorn in 1813, and sold her in January 1814. [3]

Postscripts

At the time of Redbridge's capture, Lemprière had aboard an unauthorised copy of the British naval signal book. At the time, officers below the rank of commander were forbidden by regulations to have such copies, but many did so. Unfortunately, Lemprière did not have the presence of mind to destroy the book before the French captured him. The French used the signals to try to lure into Toulon a British boat outside the harbour, but the captain, sensing something amiss, did not take the bait. When Nelson found out that the flags had been compromised he changed them and informed the Admiralty. On 4 November the Admiralty ordered all commanders-in-chief to change the numeral flags in accordance with a new pattern. The Admiralty also ordered that the commanders impound all other unauthorised copies. [15]

Lemprière later drowned when a boat he was in capsized in Toulon harbour. [12] His crew endured 11 years of captivity. The French released them after Napoleon abdicated at Fointainbleau on 14 April 1814. The crew underwent court martial on 14 June 1814. [16]

Citations

  1. National Maritime Museum.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Winfield (2008), pp. 384–6.
  3. 1 2 Winfield & Roberts (2015), p. 256.
  4. O'Byrne (1849), p. 487.
  5. Naval Chronicle, Vol. 4, p.436.
  6. Grocott (1997), p. 102.
  7. Lloyd's List 14 November 1800, №4102.
  8. Hepper (1994), p. 96.
  9. National Archives reference: FO 95/612/91, Folios 142 bis-143. Date: 1 April 1801.
  10. Naval Chronicle, Vol. 11, Appendix: State of the Royal Navy in May 1803.
  11. Lloyd's List, no.4391, - accessed 10 October 2014.
  12. 1 2 Hepper (1994), p. 102.
  13. The Fireside Book: A Miscellany (1837), V.1, p.397.
  14. 1 2 Nelson (1845), p. 153.
  15. Perrin (1922), p. 179.
  16. Grocott (1997), p. 153.

Related Research Articles

HMS <i>Tonnant</i> 80-gun ship of the line

HMS Tonnant was an 80-gun ship of the line of the Royal Navy. She had previously been Tonnant of the French Navy and the lead ship of the Tonnant class. The British captured her in August 1793 during the Siege of Toulon but the French recaptured her when the siege was broken in December. Rear-Admiral Horatio Nelson captured her at Aboukir Bay off the coast of Egypt at the Battle of the Nile on 1 August 1798. She was taken into British service as HMS Tonnant. She went on to fight at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805, during the Napoleonic Wars.

HMS Pickle was a topsail schooner of the Royal Navy. She was originally a civilian vessel named Sting, of six guns, that Lord Hugh Seymour purchased to use as a tender on the Jamaica station. Pickle was at the Battle of Trafalgar, and though she was too small to take part in the fighting, Pickle was the first ship to bring the news of Nelson's victory to Great Britain. She also participated in a notable single-ship action when she captured the French privateer Favorite in 1807. Pickle was wrecked in 1808, but without loss of life.

HMS <i>Phoebe</i> (1795) Frigate of the Royal Navy

HMS Phoebe was a 36-gun fifth rate of the Royal Navy. She had a career of almost twenty years and fought in the French Revolutionary Wars, the Napoleonic Wars and the War of 1812. Overall, her crews were awarded six clasps to the Naval General Service Medals, with two taking place in the French Revolutionary Wars, three during the Napoleonic Wars and the sixth in the War of 1812. Three of the clasps carried the name Phoebe. During her career, Phoebe sailed to the Mediterranean and Baltic seas, the Indian Ocean, South East Asia, North and South America.

HMS <i>Euryalus</i> (1803) Frigate of the Royal Navy

HMS Euryalus was a Royal Navy 36-gun Apollo-class frigate that saw service in the Battle of Trafalgar and the War of 1812. During her career she was commanded by three prominent naval personalities of the Napoleonic and post-Napoleonic period: Henry Blackwood, George Dundas and Charles Napier. After the end of the Napoleonic Wars she continued on active service for a number of years, before spending more than two decades as a prison hulk. She ended her career in Gibraltar where, in 1860, she was sold for breaking up.

Vénus was a corvette of the French Navy that the British captured in 1800. Renamed HMS Scout, she served briefly in the Channel before being wrecked in 1801, a few days after taking a major prize.

Uranie was a 44-gun frigate of the French Navy, lead ship of her two-vessel class.

French frigate <i>Chiffonne</i> (1799)

Chiffonne was a 38-gun Heureuse-class frigate of the French Navy. She was built at Nantes and launched in 1799. The British Royal Navy captured her in 1801. In 1809 she participated in a campaign against pirates in the Persian Gulf. She was sold for breaking up in 1814.

HMS Capelin was a Royal Navy Ballahoo-class schooner carrying four 12-pounder carronades and a crew of 20. The prime contractor for the vessel was Goodrich & Co., in Bermuda, and she was launched in 1804. Like many of her class and the related Cuckoo-class schooners, she succumbed to the perils of the sea relatively early in her career.

HMS Chub was a British Royal Navy Ballahoo-class schooner of four 12-pounder carronades and a crew of 20. The prime contractor for the vessel was Goodrich & Co., in Bermuda, and she was launched in 1807. She and her crew were lost when she was wrecked in August 1812.

HMS Crane was a Royal Navy Cuckoo-class schooner of four 12-pounder carronades and a crew of 20. She was built by Custance & Stone at Great Yarmouth and launched in 1806. Like many of her class and the related Ballahoo-class schooners, she succumbed to the perils of the sea relatively early in her career.

HMS Whiting was a Royal Navy Ballahoo-class schooner of four 12-pounder carronades and a crew of 20. The prime contractor for the vessel was Goodrich & Co., in Bermuda, and she was launched in 1805. She was a participant at the Battle of Basque Roads. A French privateer captured her at the beginning of the War of 1812, shortly after the Americans had captured and released her in the first naval incident of the war.

HMS Alphea was built of Bermudan pencil cedar as a cutter and launched in 1804. Later she was converted to a schooner. She captured a number of small prizes before September 1813 when she blew up in a single-ship action with the loss of her entire crew.

His Majesty's hired armed cutter Admiral Mitchell served under two contracts for the British Royal Navy, one at the end of the French Revolutionary Wars and the second at the beginning of the Napoleonic Wars. She participated in several notable small engagements and actions. In 1806 the Admiralty purchased her and took her into service as the Sir Andrew Mitchell in 1807.

Créole was a 40-gun frigate of the French Navy, a one-off design by Jacques-Augustin Lamothe. The French Navy loaned her to a privateer in 1797. Later, she served in the Brest squadron, took part in Ganteaume's expeditions of 1801 to Egypt, and was involved in the French acquisition of Santo Domingo and briefly detained Toussaint Louverture before he was brought to France. The 74-gun ships HMS Vanguard and HMS Cumberland captured her in Santo Domingo on 30 June 1803. The Royal Navy took her into service but she foundered soon afterwards during an attempt to sail to Britain; her crew were rescued.

HMS Deux Amis was the French privateer schooner Deux Amis, launched in 1796. The British captured her in December 1796 and the Royal Navy took her into service under her existing name. She made one capture before wrecking in May 1799.

HMS <i>Eling</i> (1798)

HMS Eling was one of six vessels built to an experimental design by Sir Samuel Bentham. It is not known when she was launched, though it may have been in 1796. After the Admiralty purchased her in 1798 for the Royal Navy she took part in several campaigns and captured a privateer and other vessels. She was broken up in 1814 after several years in ordinary.

HMS Rapid was an Archer-class gun-brig of 12 guns, launched in 1804. She took part in April 1808 in one action that in 1847 the Admiralty recognized with a clasp to the Naval General Service Medal. In May 1808 cannon fire from a shore battery sank her.

His Majesty's Hired armed cutter Sandwich served the Royal Navy from 23 May 1798 until the French frigate Créole captured her on 14 June 1799. She then served in the French Navy until the Royal Navy recaptured her on 15 October 1803. The Navy purchased her in 1804 and she served for some months in 1805 as HMS Sandwich before she was sold in Jamaica. During this period she captured three small French privateers in two days.

HMS Plumper was launched in 1807. She captured three small American privateers early in the War of 1812 but was wrecked in December 1812.

HMS Redbridge was the mercantile schooner Union that the Royal Navy purchased in 1804. She wrecked at Nassau, Bahamas in November 1806.

References