HMS Ringdove (1806)

Last updated

COLUMBINE 1806 RMG J5090.png
Ringdove
History
Naval Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg United Kingdom
NameHMS Ringdove
Ordered27 January 1806
BuilderWarren, Brightlingsea
Laid downApril 1806
Launched16 October 1806
Honours and
awards
FateSold on 11 June 1829
General characteristics [3]
Class and type Cruizer-class brig-sloop
Tons burthen384 8594 (bm)
Length
  • 100 ft 1+12 in (30.5 m) (overall)
  • 77 ft 3+12 in (23.6 m) (keel)
Beam30 ft 6 in (9.3 m)
Depth of hold12 ft 9 in (3.9 m)
PropulsionSails
Sail plan Brig-sloop
Complement121
Armament

HMS Ringdove (or Ring Dove) was a Royal Navy 18-gun Cruizer-class brig-sloop that Matthew Warren built at Brightlingsea and launched in 1806. She took some prizes and participated in three actions or campaigns that qualified her crew for clasps to the Naval General Service Medal. The Admiralty sold her in 1829 to Samuel Cunard, who would go on to found the Cunard Line.

Contents

Napoleonic Wars

Ringdove was commissioned in 1806 under Commander George Andrews for the Baltic and the North Sea. [3] [lower-alpha 1]

On 7 January Ringdove was in the company of Ariadne when Ringdove captured the French letter of marque lugger Trente et Quarante. The lugger was three months old and 16 days out of Dunkirk without having taken any prizes. She was under the command of M. Fanqueux, carried 16 guns (6 and 9-pounders), of which 14 were mounted, and had a crew of 65. [4] [5]

Next day, two brigs, which turned out to be the Excise vessel Royal George and Sappho, were chasing a French lugger when Ariadne and Ringdove came on the scene. Royal George, J.T. Currie (or Curry), Commander, then captured the French lugger, which was the privateer Eglee (or Eglé), under the command of M. Olivier. She was armed with 16 guns, all 3 or 4-pounders, and had left Dunkirk on 31 December. She had made one capture, the brig Gabriel, of Yarmouth, which she had taken the night before and scuttled. Captain A. Farquhar of Ariadne saw Gabriel still floating and dispatched Ringdove to investigate. Andrews reported that the brig was sinking so fast that it was impossible to save her. However, Gabriel's Master and crew were aboard Eglé. Farquhar then sent Trente et Quarante and Eglé into Yarmouth. [6] [7]

Later in 1808 Ringdove came under the temporary command of Lieutenant George Peak and was deployed to the Shetland Islands. Within a few weeks, Peak had captured the Danish privateer Forden Shieold (or Torden Skiöld) off Bergen, Norway on 30 March. She was only four hours out of port. Initially Forden Shieold would not surrender but after a few shots from Ringdove had killed one man and wounded two others she struck. The bad weather prevented Peak from taking her crew of 62 men prisoners until the next day. [8] The privateer was pierced for 14 guns, but only carried ten 6-pounder guns. She had already captured five prizes in voyages over the previous four months. [8] Peak was commended for his capture and the crew received prize money for the hull, stores and head money at Leith the following October. [9]

On 14 December 1808 Ringdove sailed for the Leeward Islands. She was at the invasion of Martinique in February 1809. [10] In 1847 the Admiralty authorized the issuance to all remaining survivors of the campaign of the Naval General Service Medal with clasp "Martinique". At some point George Andrews returned to command.

In April 1809, a strong French squadron arrived at the Îles des Saintes, south of Guadeloupe. There they were blockaded until 14 April, when a British force under Major-General Frederick Maitland and Captain Philip Beaver in Acasta, invaded and captured the islands. [11] Ringdove was among the naval vessels that shared in the proceeds of the capture of the islands. [lower-alpha 2]

Then in June 1809 command passed to Commander Humphrey Fleming Senhouse. [13] He remained in command until December.

Command passed to Commander William Dowers. Ringdove took part in the Action of 17 December 1809 in which a British squadron, first under Captain Volant Vashon Ballard and then under Captain Samuel James Ballard, destroyed two to attack two French flûtes, Loire and Seine. During the operations, French batteries opened fire on the British force, one shot striking Ringdove, then off Pointe Lizard. Dowers landed a shore party that stormed the battery, capturing it in 15 minutes. He demolished the position and withdrew to his ship, rejoining Volant Ballard off Anse la Barque at Basse Terre Island. This actions led to the award in 1847 of the clasps "Anse La Barque 18 Decr. 1809" to all surviving claimants.

Subsequently, Ringdove was also at the Invasion of Guadeloupe, and the invasion of Sint Maarten and Sint Eustatius. [14] [lower-alpha 3] This campaign led to the award in 1847 of the clasps "Anse La Barque 18 Decr. 1809" and "Guadaloupe" to the Naval General Service Medal. Ringdove remained in the Leeward Islands through 1812. [3]

July 1812 proved a month of successful prize-taking for Ringdove. On 7 July she captured the brig Enterprise, of 193 tons (bm), from St. Ube's, bound to New York. The Enterprise was carrying a cargo of salt. [16] The next day she captured the Russel, bound to Marblehead and laden with fish. [17] On 9 July Ringdove captured the Hunter, which was sailing to Sable Island with a cargo of fish. [16] Nine days later Ringdove captured the ship Magnet, of 172 tons (bm), from Belfast, bound to New York, with passengers, and a small quantity of linen. The Royal Navy took Magnet into service as a prison ship at Halifax, Nova Scotia. Ringdove was in company with the hired ketch Gleaner. [lower-alpha 4]

On 19 July Ringdove captured the schooner Rover, of 98 tons (bm), sailing from Liverpool for Amelia Island. Rover was carrying coals, earthenware, and hardware. [16] Once again Gleaner was in sight. [lower-alpha 5] On the same day Ringdove captured the ship Four Sisters, of 204 tons (bm), from Lisbon, bound to New York, and laden with 1000 dollars. [16] [20] The next day Ringdove captured the brig Hesper, of 264 tons (bm). Hesper was sailing in ballast from Liverpool to Norfolk. [16] The run of good fortune continued into August when on 1 August Ringdove captured three vessels. First came the Eight Sisters, bound to Boston, and sailing in ballast. Second was the Hannibal, bound to St. Bartholomew with a cargo of flour. Lastly, Ringdove captured the Orpha, which was sailing to Puerto Rico, also with a cargo of flour. [16] At some point Ringdove also captured the San Pedro and the Marstrand. [21]

On 2 June 1813 she sailed for the North America station. [3] On 30 June she was one of the vessels that were present at the capture of the letter of marque Ulysses, Sam Hill, Master. [22] Ulysses, of Massachusetts, carried eight guns and a crew of 30. [23] Then, on 28 July, Ringdove retook the brig Stamper, which had been sailing Liverpool to Halifax. [24] Ringdove returned to the Jamaica station in 1814.

Post-war

Ringdove remained in the West Indies until the end of 1815 when she returned to Portsmouth and was paid off there. [3] There she underwent a major repair from January to July 1818. In August 1821 her forecastle and head were housed over. She was then fitted for sea between December 1822 and February 1823. [3] Commander George Frederick Rich recommissioned her in November 1822 for the West Indies. [lower-alpha 6] Commander Edwin Ludlow Rich succeeded him in July 1823. [lower-alpha 7]

In August 1826 she was under Commander Edward Thornbrough at Halifax, Nova Scotia. [3] In April 1827 command transferred to Commander Charles English. [3]

Fate

The Admiralty sold Ringdove to Samuel Cunard & Co. at Halifax for £505 on 11 June 1829. [3] Cunard was a Nova Scotian who built up a fleet of 40 sailing vessels before founding the Cunard Line in 1840.

Notes

  1. In 1804 Andrews had commanded the armed defense ship Indefatigable
  2. The prize agent for a number of the vessels involved, Henry Abbott, went bankrupt. In May 1835 there was a final payment of a dividend from his estate. A first-class share was worth 10s 2+34d; a sixth-class share, that of an ordinary seaman, was worth 1d. Seventh-class (landsmen) and eighth-class (boys) shares were fractions of a penny, too small to pay. [12]
  3. A first-class share of the prize money for Guadaloupe was worth £113 3s 1+14d; a sixth-class share, that of an ordinary seaman, was worth £1 9s 1+14d. [15]
  4. In September 1815 there was a pay out of a grant for the capture. A first-class share was worth £346 15s 2+12 d; a sixth-class share, that of an ordinary seaman, was worth £5 7s 7d. [18]
  5. A first-class share of the prize money was worth £90 3s 2d; a sixth-class share was worth £1 7s 9+14d. [19]
  6. For more on Commander George Frederick Rich see: O'Byrne, William R. (1849). "Rich, George Frederick"  . A Naval Biographical Dictionary . London: John Murray.
  7. For more on Commander Edwin Ludlow Rich see: O'Byrne, William R. (1849). "Rich, Edwin Ludlow"  . A Naval Biographical Dictionary . London: John Murray.

Citations

  1. "No. 20939". The London Gazette . 26 January 1849. p. 242.
  2. 1 2 "No. 20939". The London Gazette . 26 January 1849. p. 243.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Winfield (2008), pp. 296–7.
  4. Robinson & Robinson (1808), p. 19.
  5. "No. 16108". The London Gazette . 12 January 1808. p. 71.
  6. "No. 16108". The London Gazette . 12 January 1808. p. 72.
  7. "No. 16286". The London Gazette . 12 August 1809. p. 1287.
  8. 1 2 "No. 16134". The London Gazette . 5 April 1808. pp. 488–489.
  9. "No. 16189". The London Gazette . 4 October 1808. p. 1380.
  10. "No. 16240". The London Gazette . 25 March 1809. p. 403.
  11. "No. 16262". The London Gazette . 30 May 1809. pp. 779–782.
  12. "No. 19255". The London Gazette . 3 April 1835. p. 643.
  13. "NMM, vessel ID 374624" (PDF). Warship Histories, vol iii. National Maritime Museum. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 August 2011. Retrieved 30 July 2011.
  14. "No. 16356". The London Gazette . 31 March 1810. pp. 487–488.
  15. "No. 16938". The London Gazette . 24 September 1814. pp. 1923–1924.
  16. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "No. 16715". The London Gazette . 27 March 1813. p. 630.
  17. "No. 16760". The London Gazette . 3 August 1813. pp. 1533–1534.
  18. "No. 17054". The London Gazette . 22 August 1815. p. 1723.
  19. "No. 17068". The London Gazette . 7 October 1815. pp. 2047–2048.
  20. "No. 17138". The London Gazette . 21 May 1816. p. 965.
  21. "No. 17161". The London Gazette . 10 August 1816. p. 1550.
  22. "No. 17502". The London Gazette . 7 August 1819. p. 1400.
  23. Emmons (1853), p. 196.
  24. "No. 16837". The London Gazette . 1 January 1814. p. 20.

Related Research Articles

HMS <i>Melampus</i> (1785) Frigate of the Royal Navy

HMS Melampus was a Royal Navy fifth-rate frigate that served during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. She captured numerous prizes before the British sold her to the Royal Netherlands Navy in 1815. With the Dutch, she participated in a major action at Algiers and, then, in a number of colonial punitive expeditions in the Dutch East Indies.

HMS <i>Racehorse</i> (1806) British naval brig-sloop (1806–1822)

HMS Racehorse was a Royal Navy 18-gun Cruizer-class brig-sloop built by Hamilton & Breeds and launched in 1806 at Hastings. She served in the English Channel, where she captured a small privateer, and in the East Indies, where she participated in the capture of Isle de France and the operations around it. She was wrecked in 1822.

HMS Amaranthe was an 18-gun Royal Navy Cruizer-class brig-sloop built by John Dudman at Deptford Wharf and launched in 1804. She served in the Caribbean, taking part in an action and two campaigns that gained those members of her crew that survived until 1847 the NGSM. She was sold in 1815.

HMS <i>Sappho</i> (1806) Brig-sloop of the Royal Navy

HMS Sappho was a Cruizer class brig-sloop built by Jabez Bailey at Ipswich and launched in 1806. She defeated the Danish brig Admiral Yawl in a single-ship action during the Gunboat War, and then had a notably successful two months of prize-taking in the first year of the War of 1812. She was wrecked in 1825 off the Canadian coast and then broken up in 1830.

HMS <i>Belette</i> (1806) Brig-sloop of the Royal Navy

HMS Belette was an 18-gun Cruizer-class brig-sloop, built by King at Dover and launched on 21 March 1806. During the Napoleonic Wars she served with some success in the Baltic and the Caribbean. Belette was lost in the Kattegat in 1812 when she hit a rock off Læsø.

HMS <i>Piercer</i> (1804) Brig-sloop of the Royal Navy

HMS Piercer was a Royal Navy Archer-class gun-brig launched in 1804. She served against the French, Danes and Dutch in the Napoleonic Wars and was assigned to the Downs station. She participated in a number of operations in the Bay of Biscay, the English Channel, and the North Sea. In 1814 the British government transferred Piercer to the Kingdom of Hanover for use as a guard ship. Hanover decommissioned her in 1850.

HMS Linnet was originally His Majesty's revenue cutter Speedwell, launched in 1797, that the Royal Navy purchased in 1806. Linnet captured a number of privateers before the French frigate Gloire captured her in 1813. The French sold or transferred her to the Americans, who operated her as the privateer Bunkers Hill. In March 1814 the British recaptured her, but did not return her to service.

French brig <i>Voltigeur</i> (1804)

The French brig Voltigeur was a Palinure-class brig launched in 1804. The British captured her in 1806 and renamed her HMS Pelican. She was sold in 1812.

HMS <i>Superieure</i> (1803)

HMS Superieure was the French privateer Supérieure, which was built in 1801 in Baltimore, Maryland, and which the British captured in 1803 in the West Indies, and took into the Royal Navy. She spent most of her career on the Jamaica and Leeward Islands stations, where she captured numerous privateers. She participated in several notable single-ship actions, including one in which she harassed a frigate, and two campaigns that would, in 1847, earn her surviving crew members the Naval General Service Medal (NGSM). She was laid-up in Britain in 1810 and sold in 1814.

HMS <i>Rosario</i> (1808) Brig-sloop of the Royal Navy

HMS Rosario was a Cherokee-class 10-gun brig of the Royal Navy, launched in 1808. She served during the Napoleonic Wars and participated in one engagement that earned her crew the Naval General Service Medal (NGSM). She was sold in 1832.

HMS Sylvia was an Adonis-class schooner of the Royal Navy during the Napoleonic War. She was built at Bermuda using Bermudan cedar and completed in 1806. She took part in one notable single-ship action in the East Indies in 1810. The Navy sold her in 1816 and she then became a merchantman. She was wrecked in 1823 on a voyage to West Africa.

HMS <i>Moselle</i> (1804) Brig-sloop of the Royal Navy

HMS Moselle was a Cruizer-class brig-sloop of the Royal Navy, launched in 1804. She served during the Napoleonic Wars in the Mediterranean, the Caribbean, and the North American station. She was sold in 1815.

HMS <i>Rover</i> (1808) Brig-sloop of the Royal Navy

HMS Rover was a Royal Navy Cruizer-class brig-sloop laid down in 1804 but not launched until 1808. She served in the North Sea, off the north coast of Spain, in the Channel, and on the North American station. She captured two letters-of-marque and numerous merchant vessels before being laid-up in 1815. She then sat unused until she was sold in 1828. She became a whaler that made four voyages to the British southern whale fishery between 1830 and 1848. She was last listed in 1848.

HMS Gleaner was the mercantile ketch Gleaner, launched in 1802. She served the Royal Navy as the "hired ketch Gleaner" from 12 July 1808 until the Navy purchased her in 1809. Initially she served as a light vessel and survey vessel. From early 1811 to August 1811 she served in the Mediterranean, where she captured an Ottoman vessel. She then became a yard lighter and a light vessel again. Then in 1812 she was on the North American station where she participated in the capture of several merchant vessels. Next she returned to the Mediterranean where she captured a privateer. Finally, she served off the north coast of Spain where she was wrecked on 2 March 1814.

HMS Acteon, was the brig Actéon, launched in France in 1804 as the second of the two-ship Lynx-class. The British Royal Navy captured her in 1805 but laid her up. The Navy finally commissioned her in 1809. She was at the British invasion of Île de France and later served in the Channel, the North Sea, the Baltic, and the Chesapeake. She was broken up in 1816.

Royal George was launched in 1803 as a brig for the Revenue Service. The Royal Navy purchased her in 1806 and renamed her HMS Bustard. She served on active duty between 1808 and 1815, distinguishing herself in operations in the Mediterranean. She then sailed to the West Indies. The Royal Navy sold her in 1815 and she became the whaler Royal George. She made three whaling voyages and was lost in 1825 on her fourth.

HMS <i>Royalist</i> (1807) Sloop of the Royal Navy

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 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 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 Lyra was a Cherokee-class brig launched at Deptford in 1808 for the Royal Navy. In 1809 she was one of the vessels that participated in the Battle of Basque Roads. Thereafter, she captured numerous small prizes. Between 1812 and 1814 she served off the Spanish coast. In 1816 Lyra sailed to China as escort to a diplomatic mission. The Navy sold her 1in 1818. She then became a whaler. Between 1819 and 1833 she made five voyages in the southern whale fishery. She was last listed in 1833.

References

This article includes data released under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported UK: England & Wales Licence, by the National Maritime Museum, as part of the Warship Histories project.