HMS Saldanha (1809)

Last updated

EURYALUS 1803 RMG J5673.jpg
1803 plan of the Apollo class
History
Naval Ensign of the United Kingdom.svgUnited Kingdom
NameSaldanha
Namesake Capitulation of Saldanha Bay
Ordered1 October 1806
Builder Temple shipbuilders, South Shields
Laid downMarch 1807
Launched8 December 1809
Completed6 July 1810
CommissionedApril 1810
FateWrecked 4 December 1811
General characteristics [1]
Class and type Apollo-class fifth-rate frigate
Tons burthen951 2994 (bm)
Length
  • 144 ft 8 in (44.1 m) (overall)
  • 121 ft 4+58 in (37.0 m) (keel)
Beam38 ft 4+34 in (11.7 m)
Depth of hold13 ft 2+12 in (4.0 m)
Propulsion Sails
Complement264
Armament

HMS Saldanha was a 36-gun fifth-rate Apollo-class frigate of the Royal Navy. She was commissioned in April 1810 and spent her entire career serving on the Irish Station, including capturing a fast-sailing French privateer on 11 October 1811. In the evening of 4 December that year Saldanha was serving off Lough Swilly when she was caught in a storm. Last seen sailing off Fanad Head, the ship was wrecked in a nearby bay with every person on board being killed and the only survivors being a parrot and a dog. The wreck was memorialised by Thomas Sheridan in his poem The Loss of the Saldanha.

Contents

Design

Saldanha was a 36-gun, 18-pounder Apollo-class frigate. [1] Designed by Surveyor of the Navy Sir William Rule, the Apollo class originally consisted of three ships constructed between 1798 and 1803. The class formed part of the Royal Navy's response to the French Revolutionary Wars and need for more warships to serve in it. [2] [3] The original Apollo design was then revived at the start of the Napoleonic Wars in 1803, with twenty-four ships ordered to it over the next nine years. [1] This order came about as the threat from the French fleet against Britain began to dissipate, especially after the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805. The Royal Navy stopped ordering specifically large and offensively capable warships, and instead focused on standardised classes of ships that were usually more moderate in size, but through larger numbers would be able to effectively combat the expected increase in global economic warfare. [4]

The Apollo class became the standard frigate design for this task, alongside the Vengeur-class ship of the line and Cruizer-class brig-sloop. [4] The Apollo class was chosen to fulfil the role of standardised frigate because of how well the lone surviving ship of the first batch, HMS Euryalus, had performed, providing "all-round excellence" according to naval historian Robert Gardiner. [5] Trials of ships of the class showed that they were all capable of reaching around 12 knots (22 km/h) and were very well balanced, although prone to pitching deeply in heavy seas. They also had a high storage capacity, allowing for upwards of six months' provisions. [6] The biggest drawback of the class was that after about six weeks of service, when stores had been used up and the ships were riding higher in the water, the ships became far less weatherly. [6]

Construction

In this second batch of Apollo-class frigates, half were ordered to be built at commercial shipyards and half at Royal Navy Dockyards. Saldanha, in the former group of ships, was ordered on 1 October 1806 to be built by shipwright Simon Temple at South Shields. She was the sixth frigate to be ordered to the renewed design. [1]

Saldanha was laid down in March 1807 and launched on 8 December 1809 with the following dimensions: 144 feet 8 inches (44.1 m) along the upper deck, 121 feet 4+58 inches (37.0 m) at the keel, with a beam of 38 feet 4+34 inches (11.7 m) and a depth in the hold of 13 feet 2+12 inches (4.0 m). The ship measured 9512994 tons burthen. [1] [7] She was named after the British victory at the capitulation of Saldanha Bay, being the second vessel to take the name. [8]

After her launching Saldanha was fitted out at Chatham Dockyard, sailing from there on 6 July 1810. [7] With a crew complement of 264, the frigate held twenty-six 18-pounder long guns on her upper deck. Complementing this armament were ten 32-pounder carronades and two 9-pounder long guns on the quarterdeck, with an additional two 9-pounder long guns and four 32-pounder carronades on the forecastle. [1]

Service

Saldanha was first commissioned in April 1810 under Captain John Stuart, serving on the Irish Station. [1] On 3 February 1811 a boat from Saldanha was returning to the ship off Rathmullan with casks of water, when it was overturned by a wave. The midshipman commanding the boat and seven of its crew drowned, while the remaining four survived by clinging to the floating oars and casks. [9] While in Lough Swilly on 19 March Stuart died on board Saldanha. Later in the same month Captain William Pakenham replaced him in command of the frigate. [1] [10] Pakenham's tenure was briefly interrupted in the Spring, with Captain Reuben Mangin temporarily assuming command in his absence. [1] On 29 August Saldanha detained the American ship Favourite as she sailed from Dublin to New York, sending her in to Cork, because the vessel was carrying too many passengers. [11]

Saldanha was sent to sea alongside the 36-gun frigate HMS Fortunee on 25 September in an attempt to intercept a group of French frigates that were thought to be returning to Europe after being present at the British Invasion of Isle de France. [12] The two ships did not come across the frigates, but on 11 October captured the French 18-gun privateer Vice-Amiral Martin off Cape St. Vincent. [13] [14] The privateer had a crew of 140 men, and had been four days out of Bayonne when she was captured. [15] [16] Captain Henry Vansittart of Fortunee remarked that Vice-Amiral Martin had superior sailing abilities that in the past had helped her escape British cruisers, and though each of the British vessels had been doing 11 knots (20 km/h; 13 mph) at the time of the capture, the French ship would have still escaped if Saldanha and Fortunee had not outnumbered her. [15]

Loss

Still serving on the Irish Station, on 19 November Saldanha sailed from Cork to Lough Swilly, where she was to replace the 40-gun frigate HMS Endymion on patrol. [17] Having reached harbour in Lough Swilly, on 30 November Saldanha sailed with Endymion and the 18-gun sloop-of-war HMS Talbot with the intent to patrol towards the west. From 3 December into the evening of 4 December a storm came in from the north-west, including driving snow. Saldanha was last seen, by her lights, from Talbot at 9:30 p.m. passing Fanad Head; a light was then seen from ashore moving quickly past the Lough Swilly harbour at about 10 p.m.; Saldanha was not sighted again until her wreck was discovered 50 yards (46 m) off the shore in Ballyna Stoker Bay, within Lough Swilly, the following morning. [18] [19]

There were no human survivors from Saldanha; about 200 bodies, including that of Pakenham, washed up and were buried in a local cemetery. One man was alive when he came ashore, but was very weak, and with no doctor immediately available to help him, when he asked for a drink the locals gave him half a pint of whisky which almost immediately killed him. [20] [21] The ship's dog survived. It was thought that the frigate had been attempting to return to her anchorage in the gale, but had struck the submerged Swilly Rock off the harbour entrance, and then been pushed into Ballyna Stoker Bay by the storm. [22] [20] [23]

Initial reports suggested that Talbot too had been wrecked but these were mistaken; Saldanha had been broken in two as she wrecked and these halves were initially seen as separate vessels. [22] [24] Twenty-one members of Saldanha's crew escaped the disaster, having been left behind on board the hospital ship HMS Trent when the frigate sailed from Cork. [lower-alpha 1] [26]

On 28 August 1812 a servant working at a house in Burt, County Donegal, shot a green parrot, believing it to be a hawk. Upon inspection the parrot was found to have a gold ring around its neck, with the engraving "Captain Pakenham, of His Majesty's ship Saldanha". [26] Bystanders reported that at the time it was shot the parrot had been attempting to speak either French or Spanish; it was listed as the only other survivor of Saldanha, alongside the dog. [27]

Legacy

Saldanha Head, near Knockalla Fort where Saldanha's wreck was discovered, is named after the frigate. [28] The columns inside the Presbyterian meeting house at Ramelton were constructed using material recovered from the frigate, and in the 1980s an anchor was discovered at the wreck site and placed on the shore near that spot. [29] [30] Soon after the wreck, Thomas Sheridan wrote the poem The Loss of the Saldanha, one verse of which states:

O'er Swilly's rocks they soar,
Commission'd watch to keep;
Down, down with thundering roar
The exulting demons pour –
The Saldanha floats no more
On the deep! [31]

A special ceremony was held on 4 December 2011 to mark the 200th anniversary of the sinking in Lough Swilly of Saldanha. It was the first commemorative event recalling what is one of Ireland's worst ever marine disasters. Until then there had been no memorial to their deaths. [32]

Notes

  1. Two Royal Marine lieutenants, one midshipman, four able seamen, six ordinary seamen, one member of the carpenter's crew, one landsman, one Royal Marine corporal, and five Royal Marine privates. [25]

Citations

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Winfield (2008), p. 159.
  2. Winfield (2008), p. 149.
  3. Winfield (2008), p. 138.
  4. 1 2 Gardiner (1999), p. 6.
  5. Gardiner (2000), p. 22.
  6. 1 2 Gardiner (2000), p. 142.
  7. 1 2 Gardiner (2000), p. 23.
  8. Manning & Walker (1959), p. 391.
  9. "Marine Intelligence". Aberdeen Journal. Aberdeen. 6 February 1811. p. 3.
  10. "Died". The Morning Chronicle. London. 1 April 1811. p. 3.
  11. "Foreign Intelligence". Aurora General Advertiser. Philadelphia. 10 October 1811. p. 2.
  12. "The Morning Post". London. 25 September 1811. p. 3.
  13. Winfield (2008), p. 160.
  14. "Sunday and Tuesday's Posts". The Cheltenham Chronicle. Cheltenham. 24 October 1811. p. 2.
  15. 1 2 "No. 16534". The London Gazette . 22 October 1811. p. 2053.
  16. "The Marine List". Lloyd's List. No. 4608. 22 October 1811. hdl:2027/hvd.32044105232920.
  17. Grocott (1997), p. 326.
  18. Grocott (1997), pp. 326–327.
  19. Clarke & McArthur (2010), p. 43.
  20. 1 2 Grocott (1997), pp. 327–328.
  21. "The Talbot Sloop of War". The Caledonian Mercury. Edinburgh. 19 December 1811. p. 4.
  22. 1 2 Hepper (1994), p. 138.
  23. Clarke & McArthur (2010), p. 88.
  24. "Loss of the Saldanha". The Lancaster Gazette. Lancaster. 21 December 1811. p. 4.
  25. "London News Continued". The Caledonian Mercury. Edinburgh. 23 December 1811. p. 4.
  26. 1 2 Grocott (1997), p. 327.
  27. Grocott (1997), p. 328.
  28. Whilde & Simms (1991), p. 148.
  29. County Donegal (2014), p. 26.
  30. Breen & Forsythe (2004), p. 124.
  31. Jesse (1886), p. 240.
  32. "Saldanha's Swilly Sinking Commemoration This Weekend". Derry Journal. Retrieved 4 December 2011.

Related Research Articles

HMS <i>Apollo</i> (1794) 38-gun Artois-class fifth rate frigate of the Royal Navy

HMS Apollo, the third ship of the Royal Navy to be named for the Greek god Apollo, was a 38-gun Artois-class fifth rate frigate of the Royal Navy. She served during the French Revolutionary Wars, but her career ended after just four years in service when she was wrecked on the Haak sands off the Dutch coast.

HMS Lively was a 38-gun fifth rate frigate of the Royal Navy, launched on 23 July 1804 at Woolwich Dockyard, and commissioned later that month. She was the prototype of the Lively class of 18-pounder frigates, designed by the Surveyor of the Navy, Sir William Rule. It was probably the most successful British frigate design of the Napoleonic Wars, to which fifteen more sister ships would be ordered between 1803 and 1812.

<i>Cruizer</i>-class brig-sloop Class of brig-sloops of the British Royal Navy

The Cruizer class was an 18-gun class of brig-sloops of the Royal Navy. Brig-sloops were the same as ship-sloops except for their rigging. A ship-sloop was rigged with three masts whereas a brig-sloop was rigged as a brig with only a fore mast and a main mast.

<i>Lively</i>-class frigate

The Lively class were a successful class of sixteen British Royal Navy 38-gun sailing frigates.

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

HMS Castor was a 32-gun Amazon-class fifth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy. She served during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. The French briefly captured her during the Atlantic Campaign of May 1794 but she spent just 20 days in French hands as a British ship retook her before her prize crew could reach a French port. Castor eventually saw service in many of the theatres of the wars, spending time in the waters off the British Isles, in the Mediterranean and Atlantic, as well as the Caribbean.

HMS Resource was a 28-gun Enterprise-class sixth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy. She was launched in 1778 and sold for breaking up in 1816.

HMS <i>Cato</i> (1782) Royal Navy fourth rate

HMS Cato was a 50-gun Grampus-class fourth rate ship of the Royal Navy. One of a class of ships constructed for service in the American Revolutionary War, Cato was commissioned in 1782. She became the flagship of Sir Hyde Parker, and sailed with him to the East Indies Station later in the year. After stopping at Rio De Janeiro on 12 December, the ship sailed for the Cape of Good Hope and was never seen again. Theories on her disappearance include her being shipwrecked in locations such as the Malabar Coast and the Maldives, and the crew being murdered by natives. Sir John Knox Laughton argues that it is more likely that Cato caught fire and blew up at sea.

The Maidstone-class frigate was a 32-gun 5th-rate frigate class of two ships designed by Sir John Henslow and based on his Alcmene class, ordered on 4 February 1795. The class was a close copy of the Alcmene class, but were instead constructed of pitch pine. This lighter material caused the class to be armed with 12-pound guns instead of the 18-pound guns that had been expected. Neither ship of the class had a long career, with HMS Shannon sold at Sheerness Dockyard in May 1802 and HMS Maidstone put in ordinary at Chatham Dockyard in 1804 and broken up in 1810.

<i>Thames</i>-class frigate Frigate class of the Royal Navy

The Thames-class frigate was a 32-gun fifth-rate frigate class of eight ships of the Royal Navy based on the Richmond-class frigate designed by William Bately. The ships were ordered to the older design, which was of a smaller type of ship compared to more modern designs, so that they could be built quickly and cheaply in time to assist in defending against Napoleon's expected invasion of Britain. The class received several design changes to the Richmond class, being built of fir instead of oak, with these changes making the class generally slower and less weatherly than their predecessors, especially when in heavy weather conditions. The first two ships of the class, Pallas and Circe, were ordered on 16 March 1804 with two more ordered on 1 May and the final four on 12 July. The final ship of the class, Medea, was cancelled on 22 October before construction could begin but the other seven ships of the class were commissioned between 1804 and 1806.

HMS <i>Resistance</i> (1782) Fifth-rate of the Royal Navy

HMS Resistance was a 44-gun fifth-rate Roebuck-class ship of the Royal Navy launched in 1782. Based on the design of HMS Roebuck, the class was built for use off the coast of North America during the American Revolutionary War. Commissioned by Captain James King, Resistance served on the West Indies Station for the rest of the war. She captured the 24-gun corvette La Coquette on 2 March 1783 and then went on in the same day to participate in the unsuccessful Battle of Grand Turk alongside Horatio Nelson. Resistance then went for a refit in Jamaica, during which time King fell ill and was replaced by Captain Edward O'Bryen. O'Bryen commanded Resistance until March 1784 when she was paid off. In 1791 she was recommissioned as a troop ship, but was converted back into a warship in 1793 at the start of the French Revolutionary War, under Captain Edward Pakenham.

HMS <i>Jason</i> (1800) Royal Navy fifth-rate frigate

HMS Jason was a 36-gun fifth-rate Penelope-class frigate, launched in 1800. She served the entirety of her career in the English Channel, mostly in the frigate squadron of Commodore Charles Cunningham. Serving off the coast of France, especially around Le Havre and Cherbourg, she captured several French privateers and recaptured a British merchant ship in a cutting out expedition. Having only been in commission for around fifteen months, Jason was wrecked off the coast of St Malo on 21 July 1801. Her crew were saved and later exchanged, and in August her wreck was burned to prevent the French from rescuing it.

HMS <i>Hussar</i> (1799) Royal Navy fifth-rate frigate

HMS Hussar was a 38-gun fifth-rate Amazon-class frigate of the Royal Navy. Launched at the end of 1799, the entirety of the frigate's career was spent serving in the English Channel and off the coast of Spain. Hussar primarily served as a convoy escort and cruiser, in which occupation the frigate took several prizes, including the French privateer Le General Bessieres. Towards the end of 1803 Hussar was sent to serve in Sir Edward Pellew's Ferrol squadron. On 8 February 1804 Hussar was returning to England with dispatches when the ship was wrecked off the coast of Île de Sein. The crew attempted to sail for home in a fleet of commandeered boats, but the majority were forced to go into Brest to avoid sinking in bad weather, where they were made prisoners of war.

<i>Perseverance</i>-class frigate Frigate class of the Royal Navy

The Perseverance-class frigate was a 36-gun, later 42-gun, 18-pounder fifth-rate frigate class of twelve ships of the Royal Navy, constructed in two batches. Designed by Surveyor of the Navy Sir Edward Hunt the first iteration, consisting of four ships, was constructed as a rival to the similar Flora-class frigate. Strongly built ships, the Perseverance class provided favourable gunnery characteristics and was highly manoeuvrable, but bought these traits with a loss of speed. The name ship of the class, Perseverance, was ordered in 1779 and participated in the American Revolutionary War, but her three sister ships were constructed too late to take part. The class continued in service after the war, but soon became outdated.

HMS <i>Resistance</i> (1801) Royal Navy fifth-rate frigate

HMS Resistance was a 36-gun fifth-rate Aigle-class frigate of the Royal Navy, one of a pair designed by Sir John Henslow. Resistance was commissioned in May 1801 by Captain Henry Digby, and after brief service in the English Channel the frigate left for Quebec in charge of a convoy. While on voyage Resistance captured the French privateer Elizabeth, which was the last ship captured during the French Revolutionary War. Having returned to England at the end of the year, the frigate resumed service in the English Channel, with Captain Philip Wodehouse replacing Digby. On 31 May 1803 Resistance was sailing to the Mediterranean Sea when she was wrecked off Cape St. Vincent; the crew survived.

<i>Narcissus</i>-class frigate Frigate class of the Royal Navy

The Narcissus-class frigate was a 32-gun, 18-pounder fifth-rate frigate class of five ships of the Royal Navy. Designed by Surveyor of the Navy Sir John Henslow, the class was created to make use of shipyards that could not construct larger frigates. They were similar in design to the preceding 32-gun frigate class, the Amphion class, but were slightly shorter. Two ships were initially constructed, with a later batch of three being ordered in response to an Admiralty request for the resumption of production of proven frigate designs. The final two ships of the class were cancelled when the shipyard they were being constructed at went bankrupt. Unlike her sister ships, the name ship of the class Narcissus was armed with experimental short 24 pounders rather than 18 pounders.

<i>Aigle</i>-class frigate Frigate class of the Royal Navy

Aigle-class frigates were 36-gun sailing frigates of the fifth rate designed by Surveyor of the Navy, Sir John Henslow for the Royal Navy. Only two were built: HMS Aigle and HMS Resistance. Aigle was ordered first on 15 September 1798 but a 16-month delay during her construction meant that Resistance was completed and launched first on 29 April 1801.

HMS <i>Manilla</i> (1809) Royal Navy fifth-rate frigate

HMS Manilla was a 36-gun fifth-rate Apollo-class frigate of the Royal Navy. Commissioned by Captain George Seymour in September 1809, Manilla's first service was in a squadron operating in the Tagus. She conveyed Lieutenant-General Sir John Sherbrooke to Halifax, Nova Scotia, in late 1811, returning to England with Lieutenant-General Gordon Drummond.

HMS <i>Blanche</i> (1800) Royal Navy fifth-rate frigate

HMS Blanche was a 36-gun fifth-rate Apollo-class frigate of the Royal Navy. She was commissioned in 1800 by Captain Graham Hamond, under whom on 2 April 1801 Blanche fought as part of the frigate reserve at the Battle of Copenhagen. She spent the remainder of the French Revolutionary Wars serving in the English Channel. When the Napoleonic Wars began in 1803 Blanche was sent to serve in the West Indies under the command of Captain Zachary Mudge. There the frigate participated in the Blockade of Saint-Domingue and an unsuccessful invasion of Curacao, capturing upwards of twenty-four vessels.

HMS <i>Stag</i> (1812) Royal Navy fifth-rate frigate

HMS Stag was a 36-gun fifth-rate Apollo-class frigate of the Royal Navy. Commanded by Captain Phipps Hornby for almost her entire career, Stag began her service in the English Channel, capturing two ships in 1813. Mid-way through the year the frigate was sent to join the Cape of Good Hope Station, where she stayed until November 1814. At the Cape Stag formed part of the search for the wreck of the merchant ship William Pitt in Algoa Bay, and then spent time surveying the Bird Islands, of which one was subsequently named after the ship. After returning from the Cape, Stag was laid up at Plymouth Dockyard. She was moved to Sheerness Dockyard in 1821, where after an aborted refit the frigate was broken up.

HMS <i>Pallas</i> (1816) Royal Navy fifth-rate frigate

HMS Pallas was a 36-gun fifth-rate Apollo-class frigate of the Royal Navy. Placed in ordinary when completed in 1816, Pallas was commissioned for the first time in 1828. Under Captain Adolphus FitzClarence the frigate spent time blockading the Azores before making trips to India and then Nova Scotia, conveying important passengers. The ship sailed to the Mediterranean in 1830 under the command of Captain Manley Hall Dixon, and returned early the following year with the survivors of the wreck of the Countess of Harcourt. Later in the year Pallas joined the West Indies Station, where she served until 1834 when she was paid off. In 1836 the frigate was converted into a coal hulk, in which role she served at Plymouth Dockyard until being sold in 1862.

References