HMS Tartar's Prize

Last updated

History
Naval Ensign of Great Britain (1707-1800).svg Great Britain
Name:Tartar's Prize
Launched: 1756 as French privateer from Le Havre
Completed: July 1757
Acquired: 23 March 1757
Commissioned: March 1757
In service: 1757–1760
Honours and
awards:
Battle of Lagos, 1759
Fate: Foundered off Sardinia, 2 March 1760
General characteristics
Class and type: 24-gun sixth-rate
Tons burthen: 424 6594 bm
Length:
  • 117 ft 3 in (35.7 m) (gundeck)
  • 99 ft 5.5 in (30.3 m) (keel)
Beam: 28 ft 4 in (8.6 m)
Depth of hold: 13 ft 3 in (4.0 m)
Complement: 160
Armament:
  • 20 × 6-pdrs (gundeck)
  • 4 × 9-pdrs (quarterdeck)

HMS Tartar's Prize was a 24-gun sixth-rate of the Royal Navy, which saw active service between 1756 and 1760, during the Seven Years' War.

Contents

Originally the French privateer La Marie Victoire, she was captured by HMS Tartar in 1757 and refitted as a privateer hunter. In this role she secured a single victory at sea with the capture of the French vessel La Marquise de Chateaunois. A flimsily built vessel, Tartar's Prize sprang a leak and foundered off the coast of Sardinia in 1760.

Construction

The French privateer La Marie Victoire was constructed at the port of Le Havre in 1756. As built, the vessel was 117 ft 3 in (35.7 m) long with a 99 ft 5.5 in (30.3 m) keel, a beam of 28 ft 4 in (8.6 m) and a hold depth of 13 ft 3 in (4.0 m). [1] Her armament as a privateer was 26 guns; when fitted out in 1757 as Tartar's Prize she carried 20 six-pounder cannons along her upper deck, and four nine-pounder guns on the quarterdeck. Her designated Royal Navy complement was 160 officers and ratings. [1]

Active service

Thomas Baillie, captain of Tartar's Prize during her three years in the Royal Navy. Captain Thomas Baillie of the Royal Navy by Nathaniel Hone the Elder 1779.jpg
Thomas Baillie, captain of Tartar's Prize during her three years in the Royal Navy.

La Marie Victoire was put to sea in 1756, in the early stages of the Seven Years' War, to hunt British merchant ships returning home through the English Channel. She had no recorded victories; on 27 March 1756 she encountered the 28-gun sixth-rate frigate HMS Tartar and was quickly overwhelmed. A British prize crew sailed her to Portsmouth where she was purchased by the Admiralty on 29 April for a sum of £4,258 (equivalent to £638,004in 2019). [1] This purchase price caused dissent among Tartar's crew as Portsmouth's merchants had made a counter-offer of more than £5,000, the acceptance of which would have increased the prize money. Perhaps with an eye to their future careers, Tartar's officers accepted the Admiralty's lower offer but requested indemnification against any legal action brought by the crew for loss of earnings. [2]

The newly purchased vessel was immediately commissioned for Royal Navy service as a sixth-rate under the name Tartar's Prize. Commander Thomas Baillie of Tartar was promoted to post-captain and transferred to take command. [3] A survey of the vessel quickly revealed difficulties with her armament. One of the six-pounder cannons had burst during the March engagement with Tartar, and an examination of the others revealed that most were very poorly made. They were also too large; the gun barrels were 8 feet 2 inches (2.5 m) long in a gundeck measuring only 9 feet 0 inches (2.7 m) on each side, leaving insufficient room for the crew to reload when the guns had recoiled after firing. [4] Baillie wrote to the Board of Ordnance protesting the uselessness of these oversized cannon, and was eventually rewarded with replacement six-pounders of a more standard length. He was less successful with a further problem aboard the vessel; the gun ports had no lids, leaving the gundeck constantly awash in heavy swell. Despite requests these were not installed, leaving the crew to rig canvas awnings over the open ports in order to reduce the flow of seawater into the hull. [4]

Provisioned and manned by July, the vessel was returned to the English Channel to assist in safe convoy for a fleet of West Indiamen, [5] and then in company with Tartar to hunt privateers. [6] She had her first and only victory within weeks of leaving port, capturing the French vessel La Marquise de Chateaunois on 17 July. [1] Despite this victory Tartar's Prize was experiencing considerable difficulty with her long, sleek design, which increased her speed but made her unwieldy and liable to roll in heavy weather. In August Baillie was forced to make port in Spanish Corunna so that he could restow the cargo and take on ballast to stabilise the ship. He returned Tartar's Prize to sea in September, where she promptly sprang a leak and started taking on 18 inches of water each hour. Forced back into port for repairs, Baillie wrote to Admiralty requesting stronger decking and timbers so that the hull would not keep opening up at the seams. [4]

A different issue had arisen in the galley, which had been built to provision the small crew of a French privateer and could not cater for the Royal Navy's larger complement of 160 men. The ship's cook, Bartholomew Barry, complained that the galley's two fireplaces were in constant operation but they had no external vents, leading to a "smokiness which in truth is so great that no man living can stand it." [7] There were no stoves, and all cooking had to be done in kettles suspended from cables over the fires. Barry reported that these kettles regularly burned through their supports and fell onto the deck, scalding the crew. [4] There is no record of Admiralty's responses to these concerns. In October Baillie received orders assigning Tartar's Prize to the Navy's Mediterranean squadron, with which she was present at the Battle of Lagos in 1759. [1]

On 2 March 1760 one of the vessel's hull timbers entirely gave way and she foundered off the Sardinian coast. [1] [4] Baillie and his crew successfully abandoned ship, were rescued by a passing Dutch merchantman and returned to England. [8] The Admiralty apportioned no blame to any person for the loss of the vessel, but Captain Baillie was not assigned another seagoing command. Through personal connections he was awarded a shore-based position at London's Greenwich Hospital and later at the Board of Ordnance; never promoted beyond post-captain, he died in 1802. [9]

Related Research Articles

HMS <i>Liverpool</i> (1758) Coventry-class Royal Navy frigate

HMS Liverpool was a 28-gun Coventry-class sixth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy. Launched in 1758, she saw active service in the Seven Years' War and the American Revolutionary War. She was wrecked in Jamaica Bay, near New York, in 1778.

HMS <i>Tartar</i> (1756)

HMS Tartar was a 28-gun sixth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy.

HMS <i>Coventry</i> (1757) Coventry-class Royal Navy frigate

HMS Coventry was a 28-gun sixth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy, launched in 1757 and in active service as a privateer hunter during Seven Years' War, and as part of the British fleet in India during the Anglo-French War. After seventeen years' in British service she was captured by the French in 1783, off Ganjam in the Bay of Bengal. Thereafter she spent two years as part of the French Navy until January 1785 when she was removed from service at the port of Brest. She was broken up in 1786.

HMS <i>America</i> (1757)

HMS America was a 60-gun fourth rate ship of the line of the Royal Navy, built for service during the Seven Years' War against France and Spain. Commissioned in 1757, America was assigned to the British fleets blockading French ports in the Atlantic and Mediterranean and played an active role in the Battle of Lagos in 1759. After a refit in 1760, she was sailed to the East Indies for combat against Spanish forces in The Philippines. America was returned to England at the end of the war, and was broken up in 1771.

HMS <i>Neptune</i> (1683)

HMS Neptune was a 90-gun second-rate ship of the line of the Royal Navy. She was built under the 1677 "Thirty Great Ships" Programme and launched in 1683 at Deptford Dockyard.

HMS <i>Melampus</i> (1785)

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>Tartar</i> (1801)

HMS Tartar was a 32-gun fifth-rate Narcissus-class frigate of the Royal Navy, built at Frindsbury and launched in 1801. She captured privateers on the Jamaica station and fought in the Gunboat War and elsewhere in the Baltic before being lost to grounding off Estonia in 1811.

HMS Boreas was a 28-gun Coventry-class sixth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy. Built in 1757, she was one of five frigates of the class built of fir rather than oak. Boreas saw service during the Seven Years' War and took part in two actions at sea. She assisted in the capture of the 36-gun French frigate Diane in April 1758, and her most famous engagement was the capture of the French frigate Sirène in October 1760. She was sold out of the service in 1770.

HMS Valeur was a 28-gun sixth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy, initially launched in 1754 as the Valeur for the French Navy, and classified by them as a corvette. The British captured her in 1759. In Royal Navy service she captured several merchant vessels and privateers before she was sold in 1764.

HMS <i>Lizard</i> (1757) Coventry-class Royal Navy frigate

HMS Lizard was a 28-gun Coventry-class sixth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy, in service from 1757 to 1828. Named after the Lizard, a peninsula in southern Cornwall, she was a broad-beamed and sturdy vessel designed for lengthy periods at sea. Her crewing complement was 200 and, when fully equipped, she was armed with 24 nine-pounder cannons, supported by four three-pounders and twelve ​12-pounder swivel guns. Despite her sturdy build, she was plagued with maintenance problems and had to be repeatedly removed from service for repair.

HMS <i>Brilliant</i> (1757) Venus-class Royal Navy frigate

HMS Brilliant was a 36-gun Venus-class fifth-rate frigate of the British Royal Navy that saw active service during the Seven Years' War with France. She performed well against the French Navy in the 1760 Battle of Bishops Court and the 1761 Battle of Cape Finisterre, but was less capable when deployed for bombardment duty off enemy ports. She also captured eight French privateers and sank two more during her six years at sea. The Royal Navy decommissioned Brilliant in 1763. The Navy sold her in 1776 and she became an East Indiaman for the British East India Company (EIC). Brilliant was wrecked in August 1782 on the Comoro Islands while transporting troops to India.

HMS <i>Actaeon</i> (1757) Coventry-class Royal Navy frigate

HMS Actaeon was a 28-gun Coventry-class sixth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy. Her crewing complement was 200 and, when fully equipped, she was armed with 24 nine-pounder cannons, supported by four three-pounders and twelve ​12-pounder swivel guns.

HMS <i>Active</i> (1758) Coventry-class Royal Navy frigate

HMS Active was a 28-gun Coventry-class sixth-rate sailing frigate of the Royal Navy, launched in 1758. She was one of the captors of the Spanish ship Hermione. After Hermione surrendered, her captors found that she carried a large cargo of gold and silver that would lead to the greatest single amount of prize money awarded to the crew of a British warship.

HMS <i>Levant</i> (1758) Coventry-class Royal Navy frigate

HMS Levant was a 28-gun sixth-rate frigate of the Coventry class, which saw Royal Navy service against France in the Seven Years' War, and against France, Spain and the American colonies during the American Revolutionary War. Principally a hunter of privateers, she was also designed to be a match for small French frigates, but with a broader hull and sturdier build at the expense of some speed and manoeuvrability. Launched in 1758, Levant was assigned to the Royal Navy's Jamaica station from 1759 and proved her worth by defeating nine French vessels during her first three years at sea. She was also part of the British expedition against Martinique in 1762 but played no role in the landings or subsequent defeat of French forces at Fort Royal.

HMS <i>Aquilon</i> (1758) Coventry-class Royal Navy frigate

HMS Aquilon was a 28-gun Coventry-class sixth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy. Launched in 1758, she saw active service against the French during the Seven Years' War, capturing seven enemy vessels in the first eight months of 1761. She was declared surplus to Navy requirements and sold into private hands in 1776.

HMS <i>Griffin</i> (1758) Coventry-class Royal Navy frigate

HMS Griffin was a 28-gun Coventry-class sixth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy.

HMS Infernal was an 8-gun bomb vessel of the Royal Navy, constructed in 1757 and in service until 1763. Designed by Thomas Slade, she was the prototype for six subsequent Infernal class bomb vessels which saw service in the Mediterranean and the West Indies during the Seven Years' War with France. In 1760 she was refitted as a sloop and returned to active service in the Caribbean.

HMS Lys was a 24-gun sloop-of-war of the Royal Navy which saw active service between 1745 and 1748, during the War of the Austrian Succession. Originally the French privateer Le Lis, she was captured by the Royal Navy in 1745 and refitted as a privateer hunter. In this role she secured a single victory at sea with the capture of a 10-gun French vessel in 1747. She was declared surplus to Navy requirements in 1748 and sold into private hands in 1749.

HMS <i>Stork</i> (1756)

HMS Stork was a 10-gun Alderney-class sloop of the Royal Navy which saw active service during the Seven Years' War. Launched in 1757, she was assigned to the Navy's Jamaica Station until August 1758 when she was captured by the French. She remained in French hands until being disarmed in 1759 and removed from service in 1760.

HMS <i>Happy</i> (1754)

HMS Happy was an 8-gun sloop of war of the Royal Navy, launched in 1754 and in active service during the Seven Years' War.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Winfield 2007, p. 265
  2. McLeod 2010, p.116
  3. Winfield 2007, p. 227, 265
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 McLeod 2010, pp.118–119
  5. "Friday's Post" . The Newcastle Courant. Newcastle, United Kingdom: John White. 14 July 1757. p. 2. Retrieved 4 December 2016.
  6. "London" . Leeds Intelligencer. Leeds, United Kingdom: Griffith Wright. 10 May 1757. p. 3. Retrieved 4 December 2016.
  7. Correspondence, Captain Thomas Baillie to Admiralty Board, 1757. Cited in McLeod 2010, p. 118
  8. "(untitled)". Lloyd's List (2534). 25 April 1760.
  9. "Baillie, Thomas"  . Dictionary of National Biography . London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.

Bibliography