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HMS Albemarle (1779)

HMS Albemarle was a 28-gun sixth rate frigate of the Royal Navy. She had been built as the French merchantman Ménagère, which the French Navy purchased in 1779. A British squadron captured her in September and she was commissioned into service with the Royal Navy. Amongst her commanders in her short career was Captain Horatio Nelson, who would later win several famous victories over the French. The Navy sold her in 1784. She subsequently became a merchant vessel again. In 1791 she transported convicts to Port Jackson as part of the third fleet. She then sailed to India where she picked up a cargo on behalf of the British East India Company. As she was returning to England a French privateer captured her.

History
France
NameMénagère
BuilderToulon shipyard
AcquiredPurchased in May 1779[1]
Captured24 September 1779, by the Royal Navy
Great Britain
NameHMS Albemarle
AcquiredCaptured on 24 September 1779
Commissioned22 November 1779
FateSold on 1 June 1784
Great Britain
NameAlbemarle
OwnerCalvert & Co.
OperatorEast India Company, 1791–1793
Acquired1784 or 1790-1 by purchase
CapturedMay 1793
FateSubsequent fate is currently unknown
General characteristics
Tons burthen520, or 530,[2] or 543 (bm)
Length125 ft (38.1 m)
Beam31 ft 7 in (9.6 m)
Depth of hold13 ft 7+12 in (4.15 m)
PropulsionSails
Sail planFull-rigged ship
Complement
  • At capture:160
  • British service: 200
Armament
  • As built: 28 × 8-pounder guns
  • At capture: 30 guns
  • After fitting in 1781:
  • Upper deck: 24 × 9-pounder guns
  • QD: 4 × 3-pounder guns

Career

Ménagère was launched in 1776 as a merchant vessel. The French Navy purchased her at Bordeaux in May 1779.[3]

The French government despatched her from Bordeaux for Cap-François, together with other transport vessels.[4] On 22 and 23 September, a Royal Navy squadron under William Hotham, captured seven members of the convoy off San Domingo.[3] The actual captor may have been HMS Albion, though supporting evidence is scarce.

Vessel Tons (bm) Guns Complement Cargo
President Le Berthun, or Président le Berthon[5] 550 30 160 Provisions
Menagere, or Ménegère[1] 600 30 160 Provisions
Hercule[6] 550 30 160 Provisions
Marechal de Brissac, or Maréchal de Mouchy[7] 400 22 150 Provisions
Juste 200 10 35 Provisions
Cherie 180 8 35 Provisions
Jeanne Henriette 160 2 30 Merchandise

The prize court at Barbados condemned Ménagère on 17 November.[8] At that point the Royal Navy acquired her, the only one out of the seven vessels that the squadron had captured that it wanted to keep.[a]

Captain John Thomas commissioned Ménagère on 22 November, and brought with him the officers and crew from his previous command, the sloop HMS Barbadoes.[3] An additional 44 men transferred from Hotham's flagship HMS Grafton; Albemarle was duly assigned to serve off the Leeward Islands.[10] Captain Thomas Taylor succeeded Thomas on 12 June 1780. Under Taylor, Albemarle was part of Sir George Rodney's fleet during the Battle of Martinique in April 1780, but did not herself take part in the battle.[11]

Albemarle remained in the Caribbean and was in Carlisle Bay, Barbados, when a hurricane that began on 11 October damaged her.[12] Taylor remained in command while repairs were carried out that allowed her to sail for Britain as a convoy escort. She was paid off in February 1781.[3][10]

Under Nelson

Albemarle was then fitted and coppered at Woolwich between 3 July and 12 October 1781. The work cost £7,302 4s 1d.[3] While Albemarle was undergoing this fitting, the 22-year-old Captain Horatio Nelson commissioned her on 15 August 1781 for the North Sea and the English Channel.[3]

Nelson was initially enthusiastic about his new command, comparing her to HMS Enterprize, which was also refitting, and declaring in a letter:

Yesterday I went down to Woolwich with Maurice, and hoisted my Pendant; and I am perfectly satisfied with her, as a twenty-eight gun Frigate. She is in dock, alongside the Enterprize, and in some I think, excels her. She has a bold entrance and a clean run.[13]

Nelson's companion and former commanding officer, Captain William Locker, was more experienced and privately doubted Albemarle's capabilities.[13] Nelson sailed as a convoy escort to Denmark with the Enterprize and Argo on 31 October 1781. While returning to Britain, the convoy ran into heavy weather, and was forced to seek shelter in Yarmouth Roads. On 26 January one of the merchants collided with the Albemarle, an accident that nearly caused the loss of both ships.[14] On her return Albemarle again underwent fitting between February and April 1782, this time at Portsmouth.

Next, Albemarle sailed on 7 April 1782 as escort to a convoy to Quebec. The convoy arrived on 27 May 1782, after which Nelson continued to operate off the North American coast. He narrowly escaped capture when on 14 August a French squadron under Louis-Philippe de Vaudreuil chased him off Boston.[3]

Nelson did however capture a number of prizes during his cruise, including the French storeship Reine de France. Nelson then requested and received a transfer to the squadron under Admiral Samuel Hood, with whom he sailed to Jamaica.[3] Notable amongst Nelson's services in the West Indies in this period was his unsuccessful attack on the French garrison at Turk's Island on 7 and 8 March 1783.[3]

Sale

Nelson was HMS Albemarle's third and last commander. She was paid off on 3 July 1783 and subsequently sold at Portsmouth for the sum of £370 on 1 June 1784.[3]

Merchant vessel

Albemarle then disappears from readily accessible records for some years. In 1791 she reappears in the supplemental pages to Lloyd's Register. Albemarle, French-built, of 530 tons, appears with Js. Boulton, master, Calvert & Co., owner, and trade, London-Botany Bay.[15] Calvert & Co. then chartered her to the British East India Company (EIC), who in turn chartered her to the British government to transport convicts to Australia.

Under the command of George Bowen, master, she departed Portsmouth on 27 March 1791 as part of the third fleet.[16] By 9 April Albemarle had separated from the other vessels of the Portsmouth group. Some convicts then attempted to capture her, but the guards and the ship's company quickly suppressed the uprising. Captain Bowen hanged the two convicts that appeared to be the ringleaders. The remaining recaptured convicts revealed that two sailors had instigated the uprising and Bowen had the two restrained until he could land them at Madeira where a British warship collected them and took them back to England.[17]

On 13 October 1791 Albemarle arrived in Port Jackson, New South Wales. She had embarked 282 male convicts, 32 of whom died during the voyage; two of these were the men executed for the mutiny. An additional six female convicts, of uncertain origin, were found on board upon arrival.[18] Albemarle left Port Jackson on 3 December 1791, in company with Active, bound for India.[19]

The EIC had instructed the masters of Albemarle, Active, Admiral Barrington, and Queen to sail to India after disembarking their convicts. It had also provided them with money with which to purchase cargoes on behalf of the company for carriage back to England.

Fate

Albemarle left Bombay on 23 December 1792, again in company with Active.[20] The French privateer Duguay-Trouin captured Albemarle in May 1793 and took her into Morlaix, France. A contemporary report in Lloyd's List reports Albemarle as having come from Bombay, and her captor taking her into France.[21] The same issue has a separate report of a privateer having taken Active and having sent her into Brest.[22] A report from three weeks later has Albemarle being taken into Morlaix.[23]

Notes, citations, and references

Notes

  1. ^ The Ménagère that James Luttrell's HMS Mediator captured at the action of 12 December 1782, is sometimes confused with this ship.[3][9]

Citations

  1. ^ a b Demerliac (1996), p. 102, №705.
  2. ^ Lloyd's Register (1791), Seq.№513.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Winfield (2007), p. 233.
  4. ^ "No. 12050". The London Gazette. 18 January 1780. pp. 2–3.
  5. ^ Demerliac (1996), p. 102, №704.
  6. ^ Demerliac (1996), p. 102, №706.
  7. ^ Demerliac (1996), p. 102, №707.
  8. ^ Hackman (2001), p. 221.
  9. ^ Colledge & Warlow (2006), p. 9.
  10. ^ a b Goodwin (2002), p. 96.
  11. ^ Goodwin (2002), p. 98.
  12. ^ Goodwin (2002), p. 100.
  13. ^ a b Goodwin (2002), p. 101.
  14. ^ Goodwin (2002), p. 102.
  15. ^ Lloyd's Register (1791), Seq.№513.
  16. ^ Bateson (1959), pp. 115–6.
  17. ^ Bateson (1959), pp. 117–8.
  18. ^ Bateson (1959), p. 122.
  19. ^ "Arrival of Vessels at Port Jackson, and their Departure". Australian Town and Country Journal, Saturday 3 January 1891, p. 16. Retrieved 10 May 2012.
  20. ^ Lloyd's List, n° 2505.
  21. ^ Lloyd's List, n°2513.
  22. ^ Lloyd's List, n°2513.
  23. ^ Lloyd's List, n°2519.

References

External links

  • Albemarle

albemarle, 1779, other, ships, with, same, name, albemarle, albemarle, sixth, rate, frigate, royal, navy, been, built, french, merchantman, ménagère, which, french, navy, purchased, 1779, british, squadron, captured, september, commissioned, into, service, wit. For other ships with the same name see HMS Albemarle HMS Albemarle was a 28 gun sixth rate frigate of the Royal Navy She had been built as the French merchantman Menagere which the French Navy purchased in 1779 A British squadron captured her in September and she was commissioned into service with the Royal Navy Amongst her commanders in her short career was Captain Horatio Nelson who would later win several famous victories over the French The Navy sold her in 1784 She subsequently became a merchant vessel again In 1791 she transported convicts to Port Jackson as part of the third fleet She then sailed to India where she picked up a cargo on behalf of the British East India Company As she was returning to England a French privateer captured her HistoryFranceNameMenagereBuilderToulon shipyardAcquiredPurchased in May 1779 1 Captured24 September 1779 by the Royal NavyGreat BritainNameHMS AlbemarleAcquiredCaptured on 24 September 1779Commissioned22 November 1779FateSold on 1 June 1784Great BritainNameAlbemarleOwnerCalvert amp Co OperatorEast India Company 1791 1793Acquired1784 or 1790 1 by purchaseCapturedMay 1793FateSubsequent fate is currently unknownGeneral characteristicsTons burthen520 or 530 2 or 543 bm Length125 ft 38 1 m Beam31 ft 7 in 9 6 m Depth of hold13 ft 7 1 2 in 4 15 m PropulsionSailsSail planFull rigged shipComplementAt capture 160 British service 200ArmamentAs built 28 8 pounder guns At capture 30 guns After fitting in 1781 Upper deck 24 9 pounder guns QD 4 3 pounder guns Contents 1 Career 1 1 Under Nelson 2 Sale 3 Merchant vessel 4 Fate 5 Notes citations and references 5 1 Notes 5 2 Citations 5 3 References 6 External linksCareer EditMenagere was launched in 1776 as a merchant vessel The French Navy purchased her at Bordeaux in May 1779 3 The French government despatched her from Bordeaux for Cap Francois together with other transport vessels 4 On 22 and 23 September a Royal Navy squadron under William Hotham captured seven members of the convoy off San Domingo 3 The actual captor may have been HMS Albion though supporting evidence is scarce Vessel Tons bm Guns Complement CargoPresident Le Berthun or President le Berthon 5 550 30 160 ProvisionsMenagere or Menegere 1 600 30 160 ProvisionsHercule 6 550 30 160 ProvisionsMarechal de Brissac or Marechal de Mouchy 7 400 22 150 ProvisionsJuste 200 10 35 ProvisionsCherie 180 8 35 ProvisionsJeanne Henriette 160 2 30 MerchandiseThe prize court at Barbados condemned Menagere on 17 November 8 At that point the Royal Navy acquired her the only one out of the seven vessels that the squadron had captured that it wanted to keep a Captain John Thomas commissioned Menagere on 22 November and brought with him the officers and crew from his previous command the sloop HMS Barbadoes 3 An additional 44 men transferred from Hotham s flagship HMS Grafton Albemarle was duly assigned to serve off the Leeward Islands 10 Captain Thomas Taylor succeeded Thomas on 12 June 1780 Under Taylor Albemarle was part of Sir George Rodney s fleet during the Battle of Martinique in April 1780 but did not herself take part in the battle 11 Albemarle remained in the Caribbean and was in Carlisle Bay Barbados when a hurricane that began on 11 October damaged her 12 Taylor remained in command while repairs were carried out that allowed her to sail for Britain as a convoy escort She was paid off in February 1781 3 10 Under Nelson Edit Albemarle was then fitted and coppered at Woolwich between 3 July and 12 October 1781 The work cost 7 302 4s 1d 3 While Albemarle was undergoing this fitting the 22 year old Captain Horatio Nelson commissioned her on 15 August 1781 for the North Sea and the English Channel 3 Nelson was initially enthusiastic about his new command comparing her to HMS Enterprize which was also refitting and declaring in a letter Yesterday I went down to Woolwich with Maurice and hoisted my Pendant and I am perfectly satisfied with her as a twenty eight gun Frigate She is in dock alongside the Enterprize and in some I think excels her She has a bold entrance and a clean run 13 Nelson s companion and former commanding officer Captain William Locker was more experienced and privately doubted Albemarle s capabilities 13 Nelson sailed as a convoy escort to Denmark with the Enterprize and Argo on 31 October 1781 While returning to Britain the convoy ran into heavy weather and was forced to seek shelter in Yarmouth Roads On 26 January one of the merchants collided with the Albemarle an accident that nearly caused the loss of both ships 14 On her return Albemarle again underwent fitting between February and April 1782 this time at Portsmouth Next Albemarle sailed on 7 April 1782 as escort to a convoy to Quebec The convoy arrived on 27 May 1782 after which Nelson continued to operate off the North American coast He narrowly escaped capture when on 14 August a French squadron under Louis Philippe de Vaudreuil chased him off Boston 3 Nelson did however capture a number of prizes during his cruise including the French storeship Reine de France Nelson then requested and received a transfer to the squadron under Admiral Samuel Hood with whom he sailed to Jamaica 3 Notable amongst Nelson s services in the West Indies in this period was his unsuccessful attack on the French garrison at Turk s Island on 7 and 8 March 1783 3 Sale EditNelson was HMS Albemarle s third and last commander She was paid off on 3 July 1783 and subsequently sold at Portsmouth for the sum of 370 on 1 June 1784 3 Merchant vessel EditAlbemarle then disappears from readily accessible records for some years In 1791 she reappears in the supplemental pages to Lloyd s Register Albemarle French built of 530 tons appears with Js Boulton master Calvert amp Co owner and trade London Botany Bay 15 Calvert amp Co then chartered her to the British East India Company EIC who in turn chartered her to the British government to transport convicts to Australia Under the command of George Bowen master she departed Portsmouth on 27 March 1791 as part of the third fleet 16 By 9 April Albemarle had separated from the other vessels of the Portsmouth group Some convicts then attempted to capture her but the guards and the ship s company quickly suppressed the uprising Captain Bowen hanged the two convicts that appeared to be the ringleaders The remaining recaptured convicts revealed that two sailors had instigated the uprising and Bowen had the two restrained until he could land them at Madeira where a British warship collected them and took them back to England 17 On 13 October 1791 Albemarle arrived in Port Jackson New South Wales She had embarked 282 male convicts 32 of whom died during the voyage two of these were the men executed for the mutiny An additional six female convicts of uncertain origin were found on board upon arrival 18 Albemarle left Port Jackson on 3 December 1791 in company with Active bound for India 19 The EIC had instructed the masters of Albemarle Active Admiral Barrington and Queen to sail to India after disembarking their convicts It had also provided them with money with which to purchase cargoes on behalf of the company for carriage back to England Fate EditAlbemarle left Bombay on 23 December 1792 again in company with Active 20 The French privateer Duguay Trouin captured Albemarle in May 1793 and took her into Morlaix France A contemporary report in Lloyd s List reports Albemarle as having come from Bombay and her captor taking her into France 21 The same issue has a separate report of a privateer having taken Active and having sent her into Brest 22 A report from three weeks later has Albemarle being taken into Morlaix 23 Notes citations and references EditNotes Edit The Menagere that James Luttrell s HMS Mediator captured at the action of 12 December 1782 is sometimes confused with this ship 3 9 Citations Edit a b Demerliac 1996 p 102 705 Lloyd s Register 1791 Seq 513 a b c d e f g h i j k Winfield 2007 p 233 No 12050 The London Gazette 18 January 1780 pp 2 3 Demerliac 1996 p 102 704 Demerliac 1996 p 102 706 Demerliac 1996 p 102 707 Hackman 2001 p 221 Colledge amp Warlow 2006 p 9 a b Goodwin 2002 p 96 Goodwin 2002 p 98 Goodwin 2002 p 100 a b Goodwin 2002 p 101 Goodwin 2002 p 102 Lloyd s Register 1791 Seq 513 Bateson 1959 pp 115 6 Bateson 1959 pp 117 8 Bateson 1959 p 122 Arrival of Vessels at Port Jackson and their Departure Australian Town and Country Journal Saturday 3 January 1891 p 16 Retrieved 10 May 2012 Lloyd s List n 2505 Lloyd s List n 2513 Lloyd s List n 2513 Lloyd s List n 2519 References Edit Bateson Charles 1959 The Convict Ships Brown Son amp Ferguson OCLC 3778075 Colledge J J Warlow Ben 2006 1969 Ships of the Royal Navy The Complete Record of all Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy Rev ed London Chatham Publishing ISBN 978 1 86176 281 8 Demerliac Alain 1996 La Marine de Louis XVI Nomenclature des Navires Francais de 1774 a 1792 in French Editions Ancre ISBN 9782906381230 OCLC 468324725 Goodwin Peter 2002 Nelson s Ships A History Of The Vessels In Which He Served 1771 1805 London Conway Maritime Press ISBN 0 8117 1007 6 Hackman Rowan 2001 Ships of the East India Company Gravesend Kent World Ship Society ISBN 0 905617 96 7 Winfield Rif 2007 British Warships in the Age of Sail 1714 1792 Design Construction Careers and Fates Seaforth ISBN 978 1844157006 External links EditAlbemarle Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title HMS Albemarle 1779 amp oldid 1071474702, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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