HMS Shelburne (1813)

Last updated

History
US flag 15 stars.svgUnited States
NameRacer
OwnerGeorge J. Brown, John G. Brown, George P. Stephenson & William Hollins
BuilderTalbot Co., Baltimore, Maryland [1]
Launched1811
Commissioned21 July 1812 (Comm. # 452)
Homeport Baltimore, Massachusetts
FateCaptured April 1813
Naval Ensign of the United Kingdom.svgUnited Kingdom
NameHMS Racer
AcquiredBy capture, 3 April 1813
Honours and
awards
Naval General Service Medal with clasp "April & May Boat Service 1813" (as Racer) [2]
FateUnknown
General characteristics [1]
Type Schooner
Tons burthen230 (bm) [1]
Length99 ft 7+14 in (30.359 m) [1]
Beam22 ft 4+34 in (6.826 m) [1]
Depth of hold10 ft 7+38 in (3.235 m) [1]
Sail planSchooner
Complement30 [1]
Armament
  • Racer:
  • 2 × 12-pounder guns
  • 4 × 9-pounder carronades [1]
  • Shelburne:
  • 2 × 6-pounder guns
  • 10 × 12-pounder carronades

HMS Shelburne was the American letter of marque schooner Racer, built in Baltimore in 1811 and captured by the British in 1813. She served on the American coast, capturing the American brig Frolic. She also captured some merchantmen and was sold in Britain in 1817.

Contents

Letter of Marque

Racer commissioned in August 1812, under Captain Daniel Chaytor and first lieutenant Thomas West. [1] She was a trader, and made one voyage to Bordeaux, leaving Baltimore in August 1812 and returning in January 1813 with a cargo of brandy, dry goods, and the like. She sailed for Bordeaux again in March, with a cargo of coffee, cotton, and sugar. [3]

Battle of Rappahannock River

On 13 April 1813, Sir John Borlase Warren's squadron, consisting of HMS San Domingo, Marlborough, Maidstone, Statira, Fantome, Mohawk and Highflyer pursued four schooners into the Rappahannock River in Virginia. The British sent 17 boats 15 miles upriver before capturing their prey. [4]

One of the schooners, Dolphin, had been on a privateering cruise; consequently she carried 98 men and 12 guns. [5] Under her captain, W.S. Stafford, she fought for some two hours before she struck. In the action the British reported they lost two killed and eleven wounded. American newspapers at first claimed that the British had lost 50 men, later reporting that British losses were two boats sunk with nineteen killed and forty wounded. [6] Stafford placed his losses at six killed and ten wounded. [7]

The British took at least three of the schooners into service. There was already an HMS Racer in service so Racer, of six guns and 36 men, became Shelburne. [8] Lynx became Mosquidobit. Dolphin retained her name and became a tender commanded by a Lieutenant George Hutchinson. [lower-alpha 1] Lastly, it is not clear what became of Arab, of seven guns and 45 men, which too had put up some resistance. [5] It was difficult for the British to free Arab and though they eventually succeeded, the vessel was apparently badly damaged and was not commissioned for British service. She was taken to Halifax where the Vice-Admiralty Court condemned her as a prize. [9] In July 1814, prize money remitted from Halifax for Racer, Lynx, Arab and a number of other vessels, was paid. [lower-alpha 2]

On 29 April 1813, boats from Dolphin, together with boats from Mohawk, Fantome, Highflyer and Racer, which had not yet been renamed, went up the Chesapeake Bay to Frenchtown to destroy five American ships and stores; they also purchased provisions for the squadron from the locals. This took until 3 May 1813 to complete. On the way back, a battery fired on the British from the shore; a landing party destroyed the battery. The Admiralty would later issue the clasp "April & May Boat Service 1813" for the Naval General Service Medal for the action.

British service

The Admiralty bought Racer for £1,940.11.5d (amended figure) and the British named her for the town of Shelburne, Nova Scotia, commissioning her under Lieutenant David Hope. [11] They also armed her with ten 12-pounder carronades and two 6-pounder guns. [11]

During 1813 Shelburne captured at least three merchant vessels.

On 4 March 1814 HMS Epervier and Shelburne sailed with a small convoy for Bermuda and the West Indies. Two days later they ran into a gale that scattered the vessels. Some, such as Monmouth were delayed in their arrival at Bermuda. [12]

After the two warships parted ways, Epervier encountered the USS Peacock. The subsequent engagement resulted in the capture of Epervier.

Having left Epervier, Shelburne joined the frigate Orpheus. Together, on 20 Apr 1814, they captured the 18-gun sloop USS Frolic. Outnumbered and outgunned, Frolic beat away to southward, making for the coast of Cuba. During the six-hour chase, Frolic's men labored to lighten their ship. They cut away the starboard anchor and cast overboard the guns mounted on her port side. Eventually, Hope, seeing Frolic heel and realizing that she was unarmed on her port side, came up prepared to fire a broadside on Frolic's unarmed side.

Frolic surrendered to Shelburne as Orpheus approached; by this time the vessels were about 15 miles off Matanzas. The British took Frolic into service as Florida. [lower-alpha 3] She had been armed with two long 18-pounder guns and twenty 32-pounder carronades. The 18-pounder still on her turned out to be of British make and may have come from Macedonian.

The subsequent court martial acquitted Frolic's commander, Joseph Bainbridge, his officers and his crew, of the loss of his ship. [lower-alpha 4] Hope was promoted to commander in June, but remained with Shelburne.

In October Lieutenant William Hamilton assumed command temporarily, [11] while Hope served as an aide to Admiral Alexander Cochrane in Tonnant. Thereafter, Shelburne served in the blockade of New Orleans and assisted the Creek Indians who were British allies. In 1821, under the rules of prize-money, she shared in the distribution of head-money arising from the capture of American gun-boats and sundry bales of cotton at the Battle of Lake Borgne on 14 December 1814. [lower-alpha 5]

In February 1815 Shelburne and Anaconda, which was also a former American privateer, cruised off the Florida coast north of Havana.

Fate

On 22 June 1816 Shelburne arrived at Deptford. In October 1817 she was sold to Mr. Brown for £600. [11]

Notes

  1. Her service career and what became of her at the end of the war is an open question.
  2. For Racer, Lynx, Arab, and Flight, the share of a first class petty officer was £6 1s 10½d; for an able seaman it was £2 0s 7½d. [10]
  3. One quarter of Hope's share of the prize money, was worth £45 12s 4d; one quarter of a sixth-class share, that of an ordinary seaman, was worth £1 6s 1d. [13]
  4. Joseph Bainbridge was the brother of another noted US commander, Commodore William Bainbridge. Despite the acquittal, J. Bainbridge did not serve at sea again.
  5. A first-class share was worth £34 12sd; a sixth-class share, the share of an ordinary seaman, was worth 7s 10¾d. [14]

Citations

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Men of Marque website -accessed 16 March 2012
  2. "No. 20939". The London Gazette . 26 January 1849. p. 247.
  3. Garitee (1977), p.279.
  4. "No. 16732". The London Gazette . 22 May 1813. p. 995.
  5. 1 2 Chapelle (1967), p. 214.
  6. Scott (1834), p. 95.
  7. Maclay (2004), p. 467.
  8. Dudley (1992), p. 339.
  9. Vice-Admiralty Court (1911), p. 98.
  10. "No. 16921". The London Gazette . 30 July 1814. p. 1541.
  11. 1 2 3 4 Winfield (2008), p. 368.
  12. Lloyd's List 24 May 1814.
  13. "No. 17141". The London Gazette . 1 June 1816. p. 1050.
  14. "No. 17730". The London Gazette . 28 July 1821. p. 1561.

Related Research Articles

USS <i>Nautilus</i> (1799)

Nautilus was a schooner launched in 1799. The United States Navy purchased her in May 1803 and commissioned her USS Nautilus; she thus became the first ship to bear that name. She served in the First Barbary War. She was altered to a brigantine. The British captured Nautilus early in the War of 1812 and renamed her HMS Emulous. After her service with the Royal Navy, the Admiralty sold her in 1817.

HMS <i>Fantome</i> (1810)

HMS Fantome was an 18-gun brig-sloop of the Royal Navy. She was originally a French privateer brig named Fantôme, which the British captured in 1810 and commissioned into British service. Fantome saw extensive action in the War of 1812 until she was lost in a shipwreck at Prospect, Nova Scotia, near Halifax in 1814.

HMS <i>Cerberus</i> (1794) Frigate of the Royal Navy

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.

USS <i>Viper</i> (1806)

USS Viper – commissioned as USS Ferret – was a brig serving the United States Navy during the early days of the republic. Viper was assigned to enforce the Embargo Act of 1807 along the U.S. East Coast. During the War of 1812, while cruising in the Caribbean, she was captured by the more heavily armed British warships. She then served the Royal Navy as HMS Mohawk until the Navy sold her in 1814. While in British service she served in several actions that earned her crew the Naval General Service Medal,

HMS <i>Furieuse</i> (1809) Frigate of the Royal Navy

Furieuse was a 38-gun frigate of the French Navy. The Royal Navy captured her in 1809 and took her into service as the fifth rate HMS Furieuse. She spent most of her British career in the Mediterranean Sea, though towards the end of the War of 1812 she served briefly on the North American station. She was laid up in 1815 and sold for breaking up in 1816.

HMS <i>Spartan</i> (1806) UK frigate (1806–1822)

HMS Spartan was a Royal Navy 38-gun fifth-rate frigate, launched at Rochester in 1806. During the Napoleonic Wars she was active in the Adriatic and in the Ionian Islands. She then moved to the American coast during the War of 1812, where she captured a number of small vessels, including a US Revenue Cutter and a privateer, the Dart. She then returned to the Mediterranean, where she remained for a few years. She went on to serve off the American coast again, and in the Caribbean, before being broken up in 1822.

USS Frolic was a sloop-of-war that served in the United States Navy in 1814. The British captured her later that year and she served in the Royal Navy in the Channel and the North Sea until she was broken up in 1819.

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.

HMS Highflyer was originally an American privateer schooner built in 1811. As a privateer she took several British vessels as prizes. The Royal Navy captured her in 1813. She then participated in several raids on the Chesapeake and coastal Virginia before the Americans recaptured her later in 1813.

HMS <i>St Lawrence</i> (1813)

HMS St Lawrence was a 14-gun schooner of the Royal Navy. She had been built in 1808 in St. Michaels, Talbot County, Maryland for Thomas Tennant and sold to Philadelphians in 1810. During the War of 1812 she was the US privateer Atlas. The UK captured her in 1813 and renamed her St Lawrence. The US privateer Chasseur recaptured her in 1815, and then HMS Acasta re-recaptured her.

HMS <i>Epervier</i> (1812) Brig-sloop of the Royal Navy

HMS Epervier was an 18-gun Cruizer-class brig-sloop of the Royal Navy, built by Ross at Rochester, England, and launched on 2 December 1812. USS Peacock captured her in 1814 and took her into service. USS Epervier disappeared in 1815 while carrying dispatches reporting the signing of a treaty with the Dey of Algiers.

HMS <i>Mosquidobit</i> (1813)

HMS Mosquidobit was the Chesapeake-built six-gun schooner Lynx that the British Royal Navy captured and took into service in 1813. She was sold into commercial service in 1820 and nothing is known of her subsequent fate.

HMS Bream 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. Bream operated primarily in North American waters and had an uneventful career until the War of 1812. She then captured two small American privateers and assisted in the recovery of a third, much larger one. She also captured a number of small prizes before she was sold or broken up in 1816.

HMS <i>Dolphin</i> (1813)

HMS Dolphin was the 12-gun American privateer schooner Dolphin that Admiral John Borlase Warren's squadron captured on 13 April 1813 and that the Royal Navy took into service. As HMS Dolphin she participated in boat actions on 29 April and 5 May 1813 for which the Admiralty issued a clasp for the Naval General Service Medal. Her ultimate fate is currently undocumented.

HMS Elizabeth was a French privateer schooner that the Royal Navy captured in 1805 and took into service under her existing name. She participated in an engagement and a campaign that earned her crews clasps to the Naval General Service Medal. She was lost with all hands in 1814 when she capsized in the West Indies.

HMS Racer was the American schooner Independence, launched in 1811 in New York, that the British Royal Navy captured in 1812 and took into service. She was wrecked in the Florida Straits on 10 October 1814.

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 Cockchafer was a United States schooner, formerly named Spencer, that the Royal Navy (RN) captured and employed as a ship's tender. She captured two American armed brigs, one in a single-ship action. The Navy sold her in 1815.

HMS Nymphe was a 38-gun fifth rate frigate of the Royal Navy, launched on 13 April 1812 at Woolwich Dockyard, and commissioned later that month. She was a 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.

HMS Martin was launched in Bermuda in 1809. Commander John Evans then commissioned her at Halifax Nova Scotia. During the War of 1812, Martin spent much of her time on the Halifax station. She captured or shared in the capture of numerous small merchant vessels. She also captured a small United States privateer, and was involved in an action with United States gunboats. After the war she conducted patrols against smugglers. She was on one of those patrols when she was wrecked in 1817.

References