History | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Name | Price |
Owner |
|
Builder | Dorchester County, Maryland |
Launched | 1812 |
Captured | September 1813 |
General characteristics [1] | |
Tons burthen | 278 (bm) |
Length | 102 ft 6 in (31.2 m) |
Beam | 25 ft 0 in (7.6 m) |
Sail plan | Schooner |
Complement | 40 |
Armament | 5 × 6-pounder guns |
Ned was a schooner launched in Maryland in 1812. She sailed as a letter of marque and took one prize in a single-ship action. The Royal Navy captured her in July 1813.
Captain Joseph Dawson commissioned Ned as a letter of marque on 10 October 1812. [1] He then sailed for France. Ned was returning to the United States when she encountered Malvina, of 10 guns, T. Smith, master at 44°54′N15°0′W / 44.900°N 15.000°W as Malvina was returning to London from the Mediterranean. After an action of 50 minutes Malvina struck. Captain Smith, of Malvina was killed; Ned had seven men wounded. Ned arrived back at Baltimore on 26 April 1813. [2] Malvina reached Ocracoke, [1] or Wilmington, North Carolina. [3] Captain William Hackett commissioned Ned on 29 July 1813 at New York. [1] He then sailed for France.
HMS Royalist captured Ned on 6/7 September 1813 off Arcasson after having chased her for four days. Captain James John Gordon Bremer described his prize as "a very fine copper-bottomed schooner, of two hundred and eighty tons, pierced for sixteen, and mounting six guns, and having forty-five men on board." [4] On 21 September Lloyd's List reported that Ned, Hatchet, master, sailing from New York to Bordeaux, and prize to Royalist, had come into Plymouth. [5] A second report stated that Ned had arrived at Plymouth on 19 September. She had originally left New York on 1 August to avoid an expected American Government embargo on US ports. [6]