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French corvette Aurore (1767)

Aurore was a corvette or snow, designed by Nicolas Ozanne.[2] Built privately on the personal funds of François-César Le Tellier de Courtanvaux, she was commissioned by the French Navy[1] and used for scientific purposes.[3] She performed the first measurement of longitude using Marine chronometer.[3]

Aurore
Portrait of Aurore by Nicolas Ozanne (drawing) and Elisabeth Haussard (engraving)
History
France
Name
  • Aurore
  • Petite Aurore[2]
BuilderLe Havre[2]
Laid down1766 [2]
LaunchedApril 1767 [1] or May 1767 [2]
RenamedPetite Aurore, 1768 [2]
Stricken1775
General characteristics
Class and typecorvette
Displacement130 tons (French) [2]
Length21.6 metres[1] (66'6" French feet[2]) overall
Beam5.9 metres[1] (18'1" French feet[2])
Depth of hold2.3 metres[1] (8"2' French feet[2])
PropulsionSails
Complement30 to 40 men [2]
Armament6 × 2 or 3-pounder guns [2]

Background edit

During the 18th century, measure of longitude was performed by comparing the solar time of the ship with that of a know point, the difference in time being in relation with displacement on the globe. In practice, this was achieved by keeping the time of the latest point of departure by mean of hourglasses, and by tracking the moment the sun was seen at its zenith. However, hourglasses had a poor precision because they needed to be turned by hand at exact intervals, because sand tended aggregate due to humidity, and because its flow eroded the thin section of the bulb, accelerating the flow. Mechanical clocks were seen as the logical next step in technology, and in 1722, eight years after the British introduced Longitude rewards, the French Academy of Sciences started offering a prize every two year for the best chronometer for sea navigation.[4]

In 1766, clockmaker Pierre Le Roy submitted a marine chronometer for consideration for the 1767 prize. At the time, several other clockmakers in France were trying to develop similar instruments, notably Ferdinand Berthoud, Étienne Tavernier and Jean Romilly, but being unfinished or damaged at the time, their prototypes could not contest. Finding Le Roy's invention promising, the Academy started studying ways to test it in real conditions at sea. Courtanvaux, who sat at the Academy, then proposed to shoulder the cost of the tests himself by having a ship built specially for the occasion.[4]

The expedition was to depart Le Havre and cruise off the Northern coast of France, sailing to various harbours — Calais, Dunkirk, Rotterdam, Brielle and Amsterdam — before returning to Boulogne and Le Havre.[5] A second journey was to be undertaken in 1768 to the South up to A Coruña.[6] The frequent calls were to allow recalibrating the chronometer often, entailing that the ship had to be specially chartered for the purpose and be small and maneuverable enough to enter all the ports; this precluded use of a regular merchantman, which would in any case have been slow and whose accommodations would have been ill-suited to the purpose. Rather than re-amenaging a merchantman Courtanvaux decided to commission Nicolas Ozanne to design a corvette-sized yacht.[7] Ozanne designed her as a pleasure craft, and the scientists involved in the expedition had quarters of an unusually high quality for the time.[3]

Courtanvaux obtained official support for his endeavour, notably gaining recommendation letters from the Secretary of State for the Navy for his passage in the Netherlands, and obtaining the status of "royal frigate" — with special dispensation to fly the all-white royal ensign normally reserved for naval ships.[7]

Career edit

 
Map of the journey of Aurore in the Channel and in the North Sea.

On 19 April 1767, Mathieu Chopin was appointed captain of Aurore by a royal edict. In the morning of 14 May, Aurore put to sail for her first trials, watched by the numerous officials, the garrison and a large crowd. She was deemed a successful vessel, and in the next days her 24-man crew started training and getting accustomed to the ship, while the scientists started calibrating their instruments in a laboratory on the set up on the port.[6] Along with his chronometer, Le Roy brought a second prototype, which he did not initially enter in the competition, as its had not been fully tested yet.[6]

On 21 May, Aurore attempted the first leg of her journey, bound for Calais, but a gale forced her to return to Le Havre and wait several days for more clement weather. On 25 May, she departed again, reaching Calais the next morning through bad weather that left the passengers and the crew shaken. The weather taking another turn for the worse, Aurore remained in Calais for several days. On 6 June, in the early morning, she departed for Dunkirk, where she arrived in the late afternoon, threatened by yet another storm.[5] On 13, the passengers were able to go ashore in a boat, enabling measurements to be made on the ground. Aurore departed Dunkirk on 20, and arrived in Rotterdam during the night. Again, the watches were sent ashore for precise measurements, and Courtanvaux left to visit the Netherland. Meanwhile, Aurore left Rotterdam on 29 June and sailed on the Meuse river to Brielle.[8]

At Brielle, Le Roy stated that after testing, the second prototype seemed more reliable than the first, and he offered it to La Chapelle's consideration. Aurore was trapped by unfavourable winds that had prevented navigation for a week, and in the night of 6 July, she attempted to seize a passing opportunity to depart; however, a man went overboard, to be saved in the nick of time by a fellow sailor, then Aurore collided with a Dutch merchantman, and eventually the wind pushed her to the shore. She then aborted her attempt, and returned to port. She finally left on 8 July, arriving in Amsterdam on 11 after sustaining such bad weather that her guns would touch the water and that Le Roy measured a 25° list. At Amsterdam, she was rejoined by Courtanvaux, and the scientific staff went ashore again to test their instruments and take precise measurements.[8]

On 22 July, Aurore departed Amsterdam, bound for Den Helder, while Courtanvaux pursued his touristic endeavours ashore. They met again at Texel on 25, where Aurore was again trapped by bad weather until 3 August. In the night of 4 August, she observed an aurora, and in the afternoon of 6 August, she arrived at Boulogne. In the evening, the scientists attempted to disembark on boats, but a sudden gale forced Aurore to return out at sea. She eventually entered Boulogne harbour the next day. Then, the scientists went ashore for another round of measurements and calibration. On 28 August, Aurore finally reached Le Havre.[9]

In 1769, the French Royal Navy acquired Aurore.[3]

Fate edit

Aurore was struck in Brest in 1775.[2]

Legacy edit

After the journey, Courtanvaux wrote the story of the expedition. The narration was edited by Pingré and Messier, illustrated by Ozanne (with notably a representation of the launch of the frigate and a map of the journey), and published in 1768.[6]

Le Roy's chronometer was found to have accumulated an error of 4 minutes and 52 seconds in the 52 days of the outbound journey, and 51 on the return leg. The second chronometer had an error of only 15 seconds and a half. It was tested again on a naval frigate, Enjouée, and in 1769 Le Roy was awarded the prize.[9] Further testing of Le Roy's watches took place in 1771 and 1772 with the voyage of Borda and Pingré on Flore, where they tested his chronometers A and S, as well as Berthoud's n°8. Le Roy again won the 1773 double prize.[10][11] The chronometer went on to be part of the collections of the Conservatoire national des arts et métiers, where it is on display.[12][13]

A large scale model of Aurore is on display at Sainte-Geneviève Library. The model was made by former sailors of the expedition, and is built as a large 1/12th scale, yielding very minute details.[3] A few pieces, such as boats and artillery pieces, have disappeared over time.[3]

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Roche, p.350
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Demerliac, n°566, p.74
  3. ^ a b c d e f "MONOGRAPHIE DE L'AURORE - Corvette -1766". Ancre. Retrieved 5 December 2019.
  4. ^ a b Delacroix, p. 6
  5. ^ a b Delacroix, p. 10
  6. ^ a b c d Delacroix, p. 9
  7. ^ a b Delacroix, p. 7
  8. ^ a b Delacroix, p. 11
  9. ^ a b Delacroix, p. 12
  10. ^ Martin-Allanic (1964), p. 1385, Note 11.
  11. ^ Marguet (1931), p. 178.
  12. ^ CHRONOMETRE DE MARINE PAR PIERRE LE ROY, CnAM
  13. ^ Decencière, Patrice (June 2011). "Les collections maritimes du Musée des arts et métiers". Neptunia (262): 37.

References edit

  • Le Tellier de Courtanvaux, François-César (1768). Journal du voyage de M. le Marquis de Courtanvaux sur la frégate l'Aurore, pour essayer par ordre de l'Académie, plusieurs instrumens relatifs à la Longitude (in French). Imprimerie royale.
  • Delacroix, Gérard (June 2000). Corvette l'Aurore, conçue par Nicolas Ozanne, réalisée par le constructeur Bonvoisin. Collection Archéologie navale française (in French). Éditions Ancre. ISBN 2-903179-23-9.
  • Demerliac, Alain (2004). La Marine de Louis XV: Nomenclature des Navires Français de 1715 à 1774 (in French). Éditions Ancre. ISBN 2-906381-19-5.
  • Marguet, Frédéric (1931). "LES HORLOGES MARINES III. – Les voyages d'épreuves.". Histoire générale de la navigation du XVe au XXe siècle (PDF). Paris: Société d'éditions géographiques, maritimes et coloniales. OCLC 424071897.
  • Martin-Allanic, Jean-Étienne (1964). Bougainville Navigateur et les Découvertes de son Temps (in French). Paris: Presses Universitaires de France. OCLC 729759706.
  • Roche, Jean-Michel (2005). Dictionnaire des bâtiments de la flotte de guerre française de Colbert à nos jours. Vol. 1. Group Retozel-Maury Millau. p. 350. ISBN 978-2-9525917-0-6. OCLC 165892922. (1671-1870)

french, corvette, aurore, 1767, other, ships, with, same, name, french, ship, aurore, aurore, corvette, snow, designed, nicolas, ozanne, built, privately, personal, funds, françois, césar, tellier, courtanvaux, commissioned, french, navy, used, scientific, pur. For other ships with the same name see French ship Aurore Aurore was a corvette or snow designed by Nicolas Ozanne 2 Built privately on the personal funds of Francois Cesar Le Tellier de Courtanvaux she was commissioned by the French Navy 1 and used for scientific purposes 3 She performed the first measurement of longitude using Marine chronometer 3 Aurore Portrait of Aurore by Nicolas Ozanne drawing and Elisabeth Haussard engraving HistoryFranceNameAurore Petite Aurore 2 BuilderLe Havre 2 Laid down1766 2 LaunchedApril 1767 1 or May 1767 2 RenamedPetite Aurore 1768 2 Stricken1775General characteristicsClass and typecorvetteDisplacement130 tons French 2 Length21 6 metres 1 66 6 French feet 2 overallBeam5 9 metres 1 18 1 French feet 2 Depth of hold2 3 metres 1 8 2 French feet 2 PropulsionSailsComplement30 to 40 men 2 Armament6 2 or 3 pounder guns 2 Contents 1 Background 2 Career 3 Fate 4 Legacy 5 Citations 6 ReferencesBackground editSee also History of longitude During the 18th century measure of longitude was performed by comparing the solar time of the ship with that of a know point the difference in time being in relation with displacement on the globe In practice this was achieved by keeping the time of the latest point of departure by mean of hourglasses and by tracking the moment the sun was seen at its zenith However hourglasses had a poor precision because they needed to be turned by hand at exact intervals because sand tended aggregate due to humidity and because its flow eroded the thin section of the bulb accelerating the flow Mechanical clocks were seen as the logical next step in technology and in 1722 eight years after the British introduced Longitude rewards the French Academy of Sciences started offering a prize every two year for the best chronometer for sea navigation 4 In 1766 clockmaker Pierre Le Roy submitted a marine chronometer for consideration for the 1767 prize At the time several other clockmakers in France were trying to develop similar instruments notably Ferdinand Berthoud Etienne Tavernier and Jean Romilly but being unfinished or damaged at the time their prototypes could not contest Finding Le Roy s invention promising the Academy started studying ways to test it in real conditions at sea Courtanvaux who sat at the Academy then proposed to shoulder the cost of the tests himself by having a ship built specially for the occasion 4 Le Roy s chonometre nbsp Le Roy s chonometre on display at CnAM nbsp Mechanism of Le Roy s chonometre The expedition was to depart Le Havre and cruise off the Northern coast of France sailing to various harbours Calais Dunkirk Rotterdam Brielle and Amsterdam before returning to Boulogne and Le Havre 5 A second journey was to be undertaken in 1768 to the South up to A Coruna 6 The frequent calls were to allow recalibrating the chronometer often entailing that the ship had to be specially chartered for the purpose and be small and maneuverable enough to enter all the ports this precluded use of a regular merchantman which would in any case have been slow and whose accommodations would have been ill suited to the purpose Rather than re amenaging a merchantman Courtanvaux decided to commission Nicolas Ozanne to design a corvette sized yacht 7 Ozanne designed her as a pleasure craft and the scientists involved in the expedition had quarters of an unusually high quality for the time 3 Courtanvaux obtained official support for his endeavour notably gaining recommendation letters from the Secretary of State for the Navy for his passage in the Netherlands and obtaining the status of royal frigate with special dispensation to fly the all white royal ensign normally reserved for naval ships 7 Career edit nbsp Map of the journey of Aurore in the Channel and in the North Sea On 19 April 1767 Mathieu Chopin was appointed captain of Aurore by a royal edict In the morning of 14 May Aurore put to sail for her first trials watched by the numerous officials the garrison and a large crowd She was deemed a successful vessel and in the next days her 24 man crew started training and getting accustomed to the ship while the scientists started calibrating their instruments in a laboratory on the set up on the port 6 Along with his chronometer Le Roy brought a second prototype which he did not initially enter in the competition as its had not been fully tested yet 6 On 21 May Aurore attempted the first leg of her journey bound for Calais but a gale forced her to return to Le Havre and wait several days for more clement weather On 25 May she departed again reaching Calais the next morning through bad weather that left the passengers and the crew shaken The weather taking another turn for the worse Aurore remained in Calais for several days On 6 June in the early morning she departed for Dunkirk where she arrived in the late afternoon threatened by yet another storm 5 On 13 the passengers were able to go ashore in a boat enabling measurements to be made on the ground Aurore departed Dunkirk on 20 and arrived in Rotterdam during the night Again the watches were sent ashore for precise measurements and Courtanvaux left to visit the Netherland Meanwhile Aurore left Rotterdam on 29 June and sailed on the Meuse river to Brielle 8 At Brielle Le Roy stated that after testing the second prototype seemed more reliable than the first and he offered it to La Chapelle s consideration Aurore was trapped by unfavourable winds that had prevented navigation for a week and in the night of 6 July she attempted to seize a passing opportunity to depart however a man went overboard to be saved in the nick of time by a fellow sailor then Aurore collided with a Dutch merchantman and eventually the wind pushed her to the shore She then aborted her attempt and returned to port She finally left on 8 July arriving in Amsterdam on 11 after sustaining such bad weather that her guns would touch the water and that Le Roy measured a 25 list At Amsterdam she was rejoined by Courtanvaux and the scientific staff went ashore again to test their instruments and take precise measurements 8 On 22 July Aurore departed Amsterdam bound for Den Helder while Courtanvaux pursued his touristic endeavours ashore They met again at Texel on 25 where Aurore was again trapped by bad weather until 3 August In the night of 4 August she observed an aurora and in the afternoon of 6 August she arrived at Boulogne In the evening the scientists attempted to disembark on boats but a sudden gale forced Aurore to return out at sea She eventually entered Boulogne harbour the next day Then the scientists went ashore for another round of measurements and calibration On 28 August Aurore finally reached Le Havre 9 In 1769 the French Royal Navy acquired Aurore 3 Fate editAurore was struck in Brest in 1775 2 Legacy editAfter the journey Courtanvaux wrote the story of the expedition The narration was edited by Pingre and Messier illustrated by Ozanne with notably a representation of the launch of the frigate and a map of the journey and published in 1768 6 Le Roy s chronometer was found to have accumulated an error of 4 minutes and 52 seconds in the 52 days of the outbound journey and 51 on the return leg The second chronometer had an error of only 15 seconds and a half It was tested again on a naval frigate Enjouee and in 1769 Le Roy was awarded the prize 9 Further testing of Le Roy s watches took place in 1771 and 1772 with the voyage of Borda and Pingre on Flore where they tested his chronometers A and S as well as Berthoud s n 8 Le Roy again won the 1773 double prize 10 11 The chronometer went on to be part of the collections of the Conservatoire national des arts et metiers where it is on display 12 13 A large scale model of Aurore is on display at Sainte Genevieve Library The model was made by former sailors of the expedition and is built as a large 1 12th scale yielding very minute details 3 A few pieces such as boats and artillery pieces have disappeared over time 3 1 12th scale model on display at Sainte Genevieve Library nbsp Portrait of the model nbsp Citations edit a b c d e Roche p 350 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Demerliac n 566 p 74 a b c d e f MONOGRAPHIE DE L AURORE Corvette 1766 Ancre Retrieved 5 December 2019 a b Delacroix p 6 a b Delacroix p 10 a b c d Delacroix p 9 a b Delacroix p 7 a b Delacroix p 11 a b Delacroix p 12 Martin Allanic 1964 p 1385 Note 11 Marguet 1931 p 178 CHRONOMETRE DE MARINE PAR PIERRE LE ROY CnAM Decenciere Patrice June 2011 Les collections maritimes du Musee des arts et metiers Neptunia 262 37 References editLe Tellier de Courtanvaux Francois Cesar 1768 Journal du voyage de M le Marquis de Courtanvaux sur la fregate l Aurore pour essayer par ordre de l Academie plusieurs instrumens relatifs a la Longitude in French Imprimerie royale Delacroix Gerard June 2000 Corvette l Aurore concue par Nicolas Ozanne realisee par le constructeur Bonvoisin Collection Archeologie navale francaise in French Editions Ancre ISBN 2 903179 23 9 Demerliac Alain 2004 La Marine de Louis XV Nomenclature des Navires Francais de 1715 a 1774 in French Editions Ancre ISBN 2 906381 19 5 Marguet Frederic 1931 LES HORLOGES MARINES III Les voyages d epreuves Histoire generale de la navigation du XVe au XXe siecle PDF Paris Societe d editions geographiques maritimes et coloniales OCLC 424071897 Martin Allanic Jean Etienne 1964 Bougainville Navigateur et les Decouvertes de son Temps in French Paris Presses Universitaires de France OCLC 729759706 Roche Jean Michel 2005 Dictionnaire des batiments de la flotte de guerre francaise de Colbert a nos jours Vol 1 Group Retozel Maury Millau p 350 ISBN 978 2 9525917 0 6 OCLC 165892922 1671 1870 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title French corvette Aurore 1767 amp oldid 1169183340, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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