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HMS Rifleman (1809)

Rifleman was a Cruizer-class brig-sloop launched in 1809 for the Royal Navy. She served in the North Sea, on the Halifax and Jamaica stations, and in the Mediterranean Sea. During her service she recaptured a Royal Navy vessel in Danish service, and two privateers. The Navy sold her in 1836 and she proceed to sail as a merchantman and whaler between 1837 and 1856.

Rifleman
History
United Kingdom
NameHMS Rifleman
Ordered5 November 1808
BuilderJohn King, Upnor
Laid downJanuary 1809
Launched12 August 1809
FateSold 1836
United Kingdom
Port of registryLondon
Acquired1836 by purchase
FateNo longer listed in Lloyd's Register after 1856
General characteristics [1]
Class and typeCruizer-class brig-sloop
Tons burthen383, or 3838694, or 402[2] (bm)
Length
  • 100 ft 10 in (30.7 m) (overall)
  • 77 ft 4 in (23.6 m) (keel)
Beam30 ft 8 in (9.3 m)
Draught
  • 6 ft 8 in (2.0 m) (unladen)
  • 11 ft 2 in (3.4 m) (laden)
Depth of hold12 ft 9 in (3.9 m)
PropulsionSails
Sail planBrig rigged
Complement121
Armament

Royal Navy edit

Commander Alexander Innes commissioned Rifleman in September 1809. Commander Joseph Pearce replaced Innes in November 1810.[1]

Rifleman left Portsmouth on 28 January 1811, bound for Oporto. On 9 March she left Falmouth as escort to a convoy 130 vessels bound for Lisbon and beyond.

On 11 May 1811 Rifleman encountered the Danish vessel The Alban, which was the former Royal Navy schooner HMS Alban that the Danes had captured on 12 September 1809. The Alban was under the command of Lieutenant Thøger Emil Rosenørn when Rifleman encountered her near the Shetland Islands.[3][a] Rifleman chased The Alban for twelve hours before she succeeded in capturing the Dane.[3] The Alban was armed with 12 guns and had a crew of 58 men.[b] She was three days out of Farsund, Norway, but had not captured anything.[5]

According to Danish sources, Rosenørn fought bravely and when he saw that defeat was inevitable, he hacked away rigging and created holes in the hull before he surrendered.[6] Even so, The Alban did not sink, and Rifleman sent her into Leith.[7] The Royal Navy took her back into service as Alban.

Next Rifleman captured Liebe (28 February 1812), Maria Dorothea (7 March), and Bodel Maria (24 March). Rifleman shared the prize money with Nightingale by agreement.[8]

On 9 March Rifleman was in company with Venus and shared in the proceeds of the capture the Danish sloop Anna Serina, J. Brodersoit, master.[9]

Then on 19 May Rifleman and Nightingale were again in company when they captured Palmtract (or Palmtree).[10]

On 14 September Joseph, Richardson, master, arrived at Leith. War with America having broken out the month before, Rifleman had intercepted and detained her as she was sailing from Archangel to America.[11] Rifleman captured the American droit Joseph Ricketson on 23 August.[c]

Next, Rifleman captured Two Sisters, Garrett, master, as she was sailing from Bergen. Two Sisters arrived at Leith on 7 December.[13] Two Sisters is almost surely Twende Sostre, which Riflemen captured on 1 December while in company with Snake.[10]

On 23 March 1813 Pearce sailed Rifleman for the Leeward Islands station. Together with Sceptre she escorted seven troopships to Halifax, where they arrived on 1 June. The troops came from the 13th and the 64th Regiments of Foot.

On 14 September 1814 Rifleman picked up six escaped slaves in an open boat on the Chesapeake. Two days later she received one more from Acteon. On 27 September Rifleman delivered them to Halifax.[14]

On 28 May 1814 Rifleman captured the American privateer Diomede off Sable Island. She mounted three 12-pounder and two 6-pounder guns and had a complement of 66 men. She was a schooner of 150 tons (bm), of Salem, and under the command of Captain J. Crowningshield. Rifleman sent Diomede into Halifax,[15] where she arrived on 30 May.[d]

Rifleman recaptured Goodintent, Fox, master, which an American privateer had captured as Goodintent was sailing from Newfoundland to Miramichi, New Brunswick. Goodintent arrived at Bermuda around 14 August.[22]

During her time on the New England blockade, "Rifleman had more punishments, with a higher number of lashes, than any other British ship in New England waters."[23] In June 1814 Rifleman was under the command of Commander Henry Edward Napier, who sailed her for North America and the West Indies.[1]

On 26 August 1814, a British squadron from Halifax moved to capture the Down East coastal town of Machias. The intention of the expedition was clearly to re-establish British title to Maine east of the Penobscot River, an area the British had renamed "New Ireland", and open the line of communications between Halifax and Quebec. The expedition was under the overall command of Sir John Sherbrooke and Rear Admiral Edward Griffith Colpoys controlled the naval elements.[24] En route, the squadron fell in with Rifleman and learned that the USS Adams, commanded by Captain Charles Morris, was undergoing repairs at Hampden, on the Penobscot River. The British commanders then decided to capture Adams.

The first ships to go were Sylph, Dragon, Endymion, Bacchante, Peruvian, as well as some transports. Bulwark, Tenedos, Rifleman, and Pictou joined on the 31st. On the evening of 31 August, Sylph, Peruvian, and the transport Harmony, accompanied by a boat from Dragon, embarked marines, foot soldiers and a detachment from the Royal Artillery, to move up the Penobscot under the command of Captain Robert Barrie of Dragon.[25] Their objective was Adams, of twenty-six 18-pounder guns, which had taken refuge some 27 miles up stream at Hampden, Maine. Here Adams had landed her guns and fortified a position on the bank with fifteen 18-pounders commanding the river. Moving up the river took two days, but eventually, after the Battle of Hampden, the British were able to capture the American defenders at Bangor, though not until after the Americans had burnt Adams. The British also captured 11 other ships and destroyed six. The British lost only one man killed, a sailor from Dragon, and had several soldiers wounded.[26]

On 8 September, Bacchante, Rifleman, Tenedos, and Pictou captured the American schooner Fox at Machias, Maine. The British took the opportunity to confiscate a quantity of meat that they loaded on to Fox before they sent her to Saint John, New Brunswick.[27]

Commander George Bennet Allen replaced Napier on 22 August 1815. (Napier declined accepting a piece of plate with which Nova Scotian merchants had wished to acknowledge his care in the conduct of convoys between the port of Saint John, New Brunswick and Castine, Maine.)

Commander Houston Stewart replaced Allen a year later, in August 1816, at Jamaica.[1]

On 11 May 1817, Rifleman captured a brigantine off Aux Cayes, whose crew reported that she had been the famous Charleston privateer schooner Saucy Jack. The brigantine was armed with one 12-pounder gun and one 12-pounder carronade. She had a crew of 18 men "of all colours and nations", and was loaded with plunder. She had been a prize to the Carthaginian privateer Creole, which had fitted her out to cruise. However, part of the crew had mutinied and been landed. Rifleman took the 18 prisoners on board, brought them to Kingston, Jamaica, and handed them over to the police as pirates. A British prize crew, under a lieutenant, sailed the brigantine for Port Royal.[28]

In June Commander Robert Felix replaced Stewart. Three months later, in September, Commander Norwich Duff replaced Felix. He sailed Rifleman to Portsmouth where she was paid off on 11 August 1818.[1]

Between January and July 1820 she underwent repairs. She was not fitted for sea, however, until April to July 1823. In April, Commander James Montague recommissioned her for the Halifax station. Commander William Webb replaced him there in July 1824.[1]

In December 1826 Commander Frederick Thomas Michell was in command and sailed Rifleman to the Mediterranean. There he was attached to the commissariat of the French army in the Morea.[29] Rifleman did not participate in the battle of Navarino, though Admiral Sir Edward Codrington had her surveil the port for a period prior to the battle.

In June 1829 Rifleman accompanied Blonde to Constantinople. Blonde was carrying the British ambassador Sir Robert Gordon to the Ottoman Court.[30] Michell was promoted to post-captain 22 February 1830.

Codrington and Sir Pulteney Malcolm, the successive Commanders-in-Chief in the Mediterranean, and H.M. Ambassador at the Porte, recommended Michell to the Admiralty for promotion to post-captain for his services to them in the Mediterranean. Michell was promoted to post-captain 22 February 1830.[29]

Rifleman was paid off in 1830.[1] Thereafter she simply sat at Portsmouth.

Disposal: The "Principal Officers and Commissioners of His Majesty's Navy" offered "Rifleman, brig, 387 tons burthen", lying at Portsmouth, for sale on 21 January 1836.[31] Rifleman sold on 21 January 1836 for £1,010.[1]

Whaler and merchantman edit

The shipbuilders and owners Messrs. Green, Wigram and Green purchased Rifleman. They almost rebuilt her and fitted her out as a whaler. Rifleman made three whaling voyages between 1837 and 1856.[32]

1st whaling voyage (1837–1841): Captain Henry William Davis sailed Rifleman from Britain on 24 October 1837, bound for New Zealand. Her owners for this voyage were Green & Co.[32]

Rifleman was at New Zealand on 26 February 1838, but clean, i.e., without yet having taken any whales. She was at the Bay of Islands on 27 February with 40 barrels. She was still at New Zealand on 24 August, and with 1000 barrels by 19 January 1839. She was at Whytootaichi (Aitutaki, Cook Islands), on 7 June. She was again at New Zealand in January 1841, but had reached the Cape of Good Hope on 23 January. She returned to Britain on 6 April 1841 with 500 casks.[32]

2nd whaling voyage (1841–1845): Rifleman left Britain on 13 October 1841, still under Davis's command, and bound for the Pacific Ocean. On 19 March 1842 she was again at the Bay of Islands, having come there via Hobart. She was at Pleasant Island (Nauru) on 31 August, Otaheite (Tahiti) between 15 March to 9 April 1843, Payta on 22 August, Gorgona (possibly Gorgona Island, Colombia), in August, Payta again on 5 September, Huahine on 18 September, Talcahuana on 10 May 1844, and at the Marquesas Islands on 28 January 1845. Rifleman returned to Britain on 4 July 1845.[32]

On 3 September 1845 Rifleman was offered for sale. The advertisement announcing the sale reported that she had been sheathed in yellow metal prior to her second whaling voyage.[33]

Rifleman first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR), in the supplementary (late) pages volume for 1845.[34]

Year Master Owner Trade Source & notes
1845 Hammac Crighton[e] London–Sydney LR

Voyage to Australia (1846–1848): In January 1846 Rifleman, of 402 tons (bm), Hammack, master, sailed for Sydney, Australia for the "Australia Line of Packet Ships". She arrived in Sydney on 3 June. She then sailed to Singapore and Manila, before returning to Sydney. She sailed for England on 26 October 1847 and arrived back in England on 2 March 1848. As she was returning, on 29 February 1848 she ran aground at Shoebury Nock, beneath the Nore. The fishing smack Catherine Mary offered her assistance, which Rifleman's master accepted. Catherine Mary remained until two steamers came up that were able to tow Rifleman off. Rifleman's cargo of tea, hemp, and tallow was valued at £16,000; she was also carrying a number of passengers.[f] Catherine Mary submitted a claim for £125, which Rifleman's owners rejected. The matter went to court where the judge awarded the plaintiffs £200 on the grounds that small claims against valuable cargoes should be supported to encourage salvage efforts.[35]

Rifleman was an unusual name for a merchant ship, but unfortunately, not a unique one. After returning from Australia, Rifleman may have made a voyage to Rouen before once again sailing to Australia.

Year Master Owner Trade Source & notes
1850 Hammack Crichton London–Sydney LR; small repairs 1848

Voyage to Australia (1850–1851): Rifleman, Hammack, master, sailed for Sydney in February 1850. She arrived in July. On 26 August she sailed for Batavia, in ballast. She sailed from Singapore for London on 21 March 1851.

In 1852-1853 Rifleman apparently was not listed in LR. She did not reappear until 1854, by which time she had returned to whaling.

Year Master Owner Trade Source & notes
1854 J.Grosssmith Sweeting[g] London–South Seas LR; small repairs 1848 & 1852[36]

3rd whaling voyage (1852–1856): Rifleman, under the command of J. Grossman, left Britain for Timor on 28 December 1852. She was reported off Gaby Island on 10 September 1853 with 250 barrels. She returned to Britain on 1 September 1856.[32]

Fate edit

Rifleman was no longer listed in Lloyd's Register for 1857.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Rosenørn had been the captain of Salorman when the British captured her at Nyborg in 1808.
  2. ^ Danish records report her official complement as 38 men. They also show her armament as consisting of ten 18-pounder carronades and two 12-pounder carronades.[4]
  3. ^ A first-class share of His Majesty's grant of two-thirds of the proceeds was worth £332 14s 10d; a sixth-class share, that of an ordinary seaman, was worth £7 12s.[12]
  4. ^ Both the prize court and Lloyd's List agree in stating that Diomede had three guns, and around 33-35 men suggesting that she may have thrown some guns overboard and may have had a large part of her crew away on prizes. Diomede had left Salem a month earlier, on 27 April.[16] In the interim she had captured numerous vessels. She sent the ship Cod Hook, and her cargo of 700 hogsheads of salt, dry goods, crates, flour, bread, and iron, into Castine. Next she captured Upton, of Poole, a 270 ton (bm) ship sailing from Cork to Newfoundland with 104 persons aboard, many of whom were passengers.[17] Diomede captured Upton, which was armed with 16 guns,[18] after an action of 35 minutes during which Upton had one man killed and one wounded, and sent her into Wiscasset.[17] As a prize ship, Upton captured Hero, of four guns and 20 men and made a cartel of her,[18] presumably to dispose of Diomede's prisoners. On 23 May Diomede exchanged fire with HMS Prometheus, but made her escape.[19] Diomede also captured, Mary, Moore, master, which had been sailing from Cork to Quebec. (HMS Martin later recaptured Mary on 27 May.[20]) Diomede scuttled Harmony and Providence, which had been sailing from Maryport to Pugwash, Nova Scotia, and Miramichi. Diomede captured Traveller, Cronk, master, which had been sailing from Saint John, New Brunswick, to Quebec. Traveller was carrying 174 puncheons of rum, something that merited sending her into Thomastown.[17] Lastly, Diomede had chased on shore Recovery, Perry, master, from St Andrews.[16] On an earlier cruise Diomed captured the brig Friends, which was wrecked, the schooner William, which she sent into Savannah, and the schooner Hope, which she sent into Bristol.[21]
  5. ^ Benjamin Thomas Chrichton and later James Chrichton owned several whalers at the time.
  6. ^ By some reports she was also carrying 40 tuns of sperm oil.
  7. ^ George Waters Sweeting was a shipowner, including Adventure, a whaler that he owned with James Chrichton.

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Winfield (2008), p. 301.
  2. ^ Lloyd's Register (1856), Seq. №%236.
  3. ^ a b Anderson (1910), p. 344.
  4. ^ Orlogsmusset (Naval Museum) [1] -accessed 23 April 2011
  5. ^ "No. 16486". The London Gazette. 18 May 1811. p. 921.
  6. ^ "316 (Dansk biografisk Lexikon / XIV. Bind. Resen - Saxtrup)". Project Runeberg (in Danish). 20 November 2020. Retrieved 22 March 2021.
  7. ^ Lloyd's List, № 4564. Accessed 31 October 2016.
  8. ^ "No. 16678". The London Gazette. 5 December 1812. p. 2455.
  9. ^ "No. 16645". The London Gazette. 12 September 1812. p. 1869.
  10. ^ a b "No. 16754". The London Gazette. 17 July 1813. p. 1416.
  11. ^ Lloyd's List, № 4703. Accessed 31 October 2016.
  12. ^ "No. 16949". The London Gazette. 22 October 1814. p. 2106.
  13. ^ Lloyd's List, № 4727. Accessed 31 October 2016.
  14. ^ List of American Black Refugees, deserters from the enemy on board His Majesty's sloop Rifleman. Accessed 1 November 2016.
  15. ^ Vice-Admiralty Court (1911), p. 110.
  16. ^ a b Lloyd's List. Accessed 31 October 2016.
  17. ^ a b c Coggeshall (1856), pp. 234–5.
  18. ^ a b History (1815), Appendix.
  19. ^ Acadian Recorder, 4 June 1814.
  20. ^ "No. 16941". The London Gazette. 1 October 1814. p. 1964.
  21. ^ Russell (1815), p. 389.
  22. ^ Lloyd's List, № 4811. Accessed 31 October 2016.
  23. ^ Goldenberg (1984), p. 431.
  24. ^ Seymour (2003), pp. 10–17.
  25. ^ "No. 16944". The London Gazette. 9 October 1814. pp. 2029–2033.
  26. ^ The Anglo-American Magazine, (Toronto: Maclear), Vol. 5, pp.418-9.
  27. ^ Vice-Admiralty Court (1911), p. 260.
  28. ^ Lloyd's List, № 5196.
  29. ^ a b O'Byrne (1849), p. 758.
  30. ^ Eardley-Wilmot (1898), p. 45.
  31. ^ "No. 19344". The London Gazette. 5 January 1836. p. 26.
  32. ^ a b c d e British Southern Whale Fishery Voyages - Rifleman
  33. ^ Shipping and Mercantile Gazette – 2 September 1845, page 1.
  34. ^ LR (1845), Supple. pages "R".
  35. ^ "The Rifleman.-Salvage." 3 June 1848 ,The Times (London, England) Issue: 19880.
  36. ^ LR (1854), Seq.No.225.

References edit

  • Anderson, Roger Charles (1910). Naval wars in the Baltic: during the sailing-ship epoch, 1522-1850. C. Gilbert-Wood.
  • Coggeshall, George (1856). History of the American Privateers, and Letters-Of-Marque. New York.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Eardley-Wilmot, Sir Sydney Marow (1898). Life of Vice-Admiral Edmund, lord Lyons: With an account of naval operations in the Black Sea and Sea of Azoff, 1854-56. S. Low, Marston and company.
  • Goldenberg, Joseph A. (1984). "The Royal Navy's Blockade in New England Waters, 1812-1815". The International History Review. 6 (3): 424–439. doi:10.1080/07075332.1984.9640351. JSTOR 40105395.
  • O'Byrne, William R. (1849). "Michell, Frederick Thomas" . A Naval Biographical Dictionary. London: John Murray. pp. 758–759.
  • Russell, John Jr. (1815). The history of the war, between the United States and Great-Britain, which commenced in June, 1812, and closed in February, 1815 ...: Comp. chiefly from public documents. With an appendix, containing the correspondence which passed ... in treating for peace. To which is added, the treaty of peace, and a list of vessels taken from Great-Britain during the war. B. & J. Russell.
  • Seymour, Tom (2003). Tom Seymour's Maine: A Maine Anthology. Universe. ISBN 978-0-595-29209-7.
  • Vice-Admiralty Court, Halifax (1911). American vessels captured by the British during the revolution and war of 1812. Salem, Mass.: Essex Institute.
  • Winfield, Rif (2008). British Warships in the Age of Sail 1793–1817: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates. Seaforth Publishing. ISBN 978-1-86176-246-7.

rifleman, 1809, other, ships, with, same, name, rifleman, rifleman, cruizer, class, brig, sloop, launched, 1809, royal, navy, served, north, halifax, jamaica, stations, mediterranean, during, service, recaptured, royal, navy, vessel, danish, service, privateer. For other ships with the same name see HMS Rifleman Rifleman was a Cruizer class brig sloop launched in 1809 for the Royal Navy She served in the North Sea on the Halifax and Jamaica stations and in the Mediterranean Sea During her service she recaptured a Royal Navy vessel in Danish service and two privateers The Navy sold her in 1836 and she proceed to sail as a merchantman and whaler between 1837 and 1856 RiflemanHistoryUnited KingdomNameHMS RiflemanOrdered5 November 1808BuilderJohn King UpnorLaid downJanuary 1809Launched12 August 1809FateSold 1836United KingdomPort of registryLondonAcquired1836 by purchaseFateNo longer listed in Lloyd s Register after 1856General characteristics 1 Class and typeCruizer class brig sloopTons burthen383 or 38386 94 or 402 2 bm Length100 ft 10 in 30 7 m overall 77 ft 4 in 23 6 m keel Beam30 ft 8 in 9 3 m Draught6 ft 8 in 2 0 m unladen 11 ft 2 in 3 4 m laden Depth of hold12 ft 9 in 3 9 m PropulsionSailsSail planBrig riggedComplement121Armament16 x 32 pounder carronades 2 x 6 pounder chase guns Contents 1 Royal Navy 2 Whaler and merchantman 3 Fate 4 Notes 5 Citations 6 ReferencesRoyal Navy editCommander Alexander Innes commissioned Rifleman in September 1809 Commander Joseph Pearce replaced Innes in November 1810 1 Rifleman left Portsmouth on 28 January 1811 bound for Oporto On 9 March she left Falmouth as escort to a convoy 130 vessels bound for Lisbon and beyond On 11 May 1811 Rifleman encountered the Danish vessel The Alban which was the former Royal Navy schooner HMS Alban that the Danes had captured on 12 September 1809 The Alban was under the command of Lieutenant Thoger Emil Rosenorn when Rifleman encountered her near the Shetland Islands 3 a Rifleman chased The Alban for twelve hours before she succeeded in capturing the Dane 3 The Alban was armed with 12 guns and had a crew of 58 men b She was three days out of Farsund Norway but had not captured anything 5 According to Danish sources Rosenorn fought bravely and when he saw that defeat was inevitable he hacked away rigging and created holes in the hull before he surrendered 6 Even so The Alban did not sink and Rifleman sent her into Leith 7 The Royal Navy took her back into service as Alban Next Rifleman captured Liebe 28 February 1812 Maria Dorothea 7 March and Bodel Maria 24 March Rifleman shared the prize money with Nightingale by agreement 8 On 9 March Rifleman was in company with Venus and shared in the proceeds of the capture the Danish sloop Anna Serina J Brodersoit master 9 Then on 19 May Rifleman and Nightingale were again in company when they captured Palmtract or Palmtree 10 On 14 September Joseph Richardson master arrived at Leith War with America having broken out the month before Rifleman had intercepted and detained her as she was sailing from Archangel to America 11 Rifleman captured the American droit Joseph Ricketson on 23 August c Next Rifleman captured Two Sisters Garrett master as she was sailing from Bergen Two Sisters arrived at Leith on 7 December 13 Two Sisters is almost surely Twende Sostre which Riflemen captured on 1 December while in company with Snake 10 On 23 March 1813 Pearce sailed Rifleman for the Leeward Islands station Together with Sceptre she escorted seven troopships to Halifax where they arrived on 1 June The troops came from the 13th and the 64th Regiments of Foot On 14 September 1814 Rifleman picked up six escaped slaves in an open boat on the Chesapeake Two days later she received one more from Acteon On 27 September Rifleman delivered them to Halifax 14 On 28 May 1814 Rifleman captured the American privateer Diomede off Sable Island She mounted three 12 pounder and two 6 pounder guns and had a complement of 66 men She was a schooner of 150 tons bm of Salem and under the command of Captain J Crowningshield Rifleman sent Diomede into Halifax 15 where she arrived on 30 May d Rifleman recaptured Goodintent Fox master which an American privateer had captured as Goodintent was sailing from Newfoundland to Miramichi New Brunswick Goodintent arrived at Bermuda around 14 August 22 During her time on the New England blockade Rifleman had more punishments with a higher number of lashes than any other British ship in New England waters 23 In June 1814 Rifleman was under the command of Commander Henry Edward Napier who sailed her for North America and the West Indies 1 Main article Battle of Hampden On 26 August 1814 a British squadron from Halifax moved to capture the Down East coastal town of Machias The intention of the expedition was clearly to re establish British title to Maine east of the Penobscot River an area the British had renamed New Ireland and open the line of communications between Halifax and Quebec The expedition was under the overall command of Sir John Sherbrooke and Rear Admiral Edward Griffith Colpoys controlled the naval elements 24 En route the squadron fell in with Rifleman and learned that the USS Adams commanded by Captain Charles Morris was undergoing repairs at Hampden on the Penobscot River The British commanders then decided to capture Adams The first ships to go were Sylph Dragon Endymion Bacchante Peruvian as well as some transports Bulwark Tenedos Rifleman and Pictou joined on the 31st On the evening of 31 August Sylph Peruvian and the transport Harmony accompanied by a boat from Dragon embarked marines foot soldiers and a detachment from the Royal Artillery to move up the Penobscot under the command of Captain Robert Barrie of Dragon 25 Their objective was Adams of twenty six 18 pounder guns which had taken refuge some 27 miles up stream at Hampden Maine Here Adams had landed her guns and fortified a position on the bank with fifteen 18 pounders commanding the river Moving up the river took two days but eventually after the Battle of Hampden the British were able to capture the American defenders at Bangor though not until after the Americans had burnt Adams The British also captured 11 other ships and destroyed six The British lost only one man killed a sailor from Dragon and had several soldiers wounded 26 On 8 September Bacchante Rifleman Tenedos and Pictou captured the American schooner Fox at Machias Maine The British took the opportunity to confiscate a quantity of meat that they loaded on to Fox before they sent her to Saint John New Brunswick 27 Commander George Bennet Allen replaced Napier on 22 August 1815 Napier declined accepting a piece of plate with which Nova Scotian merchants had wished to acknowledge his care in the conduct of convoys between the port of Saint John New Brunswick and Castine Maine Commander Houston Stewart replaced Allen a year later in August 1816 at Jamaica 1 On 11 May 1817 Rifleman captured a brigantine off Aux Cayes whose crew reported that she had been the famous Charleston privateer schooner Saucy Jack The brigantine was armed with one 12 pounder gun and one 12 pounder carronade She had a crew of 18 men of all colours and nations and was loaded with plunder She had been a prize to the Carthaginian privateer Creole which had fitted her out to cruise However part of the crew had mutinied and been landed Rifleman took the 18 prisoners on board brought them to Kingston Jamaica and handed them over to the police as pirates A British prize crew under a lieutenant sailed the brigantine for Port Royal 28 In June Commander Robert Felix replaced Stewart Three months later in September Commander Norwich Duff replaced Felix He sailed Rifleman to Portsmouth where she was paid off on 11 August 1818 1 Between January and July 1820 she underwent repairs She was not fitted for sea however until April to July 1823 In April Commander James Montague recommissioned her for the Halifax station Commander William Webb replaced him there in July 1824 1 In December 1826 Commander Frederick Thomas Michell was in command and sailed Rifleman to the Mediterranean There he was attached to the commissariat of the French army in the Morea 29 Rifleman did not participate in the battle of Navarino though Admiral Sir Edward Codrington had her surveil the port for a period prior to the battle In June 1829 Rifleman accompanied Blonde to Constantinople Blonde was carrying the British ambassador Sir Robert Gordon to the Ottoman Court 30 Michell was promoted to post captain 22 February 1830 Codrington and Sir Pulteney Malcolm the successive Commanders in Chief in the Mediterranean and H M Ambassador at the Porte recommended Michell to the Admiralty for promotion to post captain for his services to them in the Mediterranean Michell was promoted to post captain 22 February 1830 29 Rifleman was paid off in 1830 1 Thereafter she simply sat at Portsmouth Disposal The Principal Officers and Commissioners of His Majesty s Navy offered Rifleman brig 387 tons burthen lying at Portsmouth for sale on 21 January 1836 31 Rifleman sold on 21 January 1836 for 1 010 1 Whaler and merchantman editThe shipbuilders and owners Messrs Green Wigram and Green purchased Rifleman They almost rebuilt her and fitted her out as a whaler Rifleman made three whaling voyages between 1837 and 1856 32 1st whaling voyage 1837 1841 Captain Henry William Davis sailed Rifleman from Britain on 24 October 1837 bound for New Zealand Her owners for this voyage were Green amp Co 32 Rifleman was at New Zealand on 26 February 1838 but clean i e without yet having taken any whales She was at the Bay of Islands on 27 February with 40 barrels She was still at New Zealand on 24 August and with 1000 barrels by 19 January 1839 She was at Whytootaichi Aitutaki Cook Islands on 7 June She was again at New Zealand in January 1841 but had reached the Cape of Good Hope on 23 January She returned to Britain on 6 April 1841 with 500 casks 32 2nd whaling voyage 1841 1845 Rifleman left Britain on 13 October 1841 still under Davis s command and bound for the Pacific Ocean On 19 March 1842 she was again at the Bay of Islands having come there via Hobart She was at Pleasant Island Nauru on 31 August Otaheite Tahiti between 15 March to 9 April 1843 Payta on 22 August Gorgona possibly Gorgona Island Colombia in August Payta again on 5 September Huahine on 18 September Talcahuana on 10 May 1844 and at the Marquesas Islands on 28 January 1845 Rifleman returned to Britain on 4 July 1845 32 On 3 September 1845 Rifleman was offered for sale The advertisement announcing the sale reported that she had been sheathed in yellow metal prior to her second whaling voyage 33 Rifleman first appeared in Lloyd s Register LR in the supplementary late pages volume for 1845 34 Year Master Owner Trade Source amp notes1845 Hammac Crighton e London Sydney LRVoyage to Australia 1846 1848 In January 1846 Rifleman of 402 tons bm Hammack master sailed for Sydney Australia for the Australia Line of Packet Ships She arrived in Sydney on 3 June She then sailed to Singapore and Manila before returning to Sydney She sailed for England on 26 October 1847 and arrived back in England on 2 March 1848 As she was returning on 29 February 1848 she ran aground at Shoebury Nock beneath the Nore The fishing smack Catherine Mary offered her assistance which Rifleman s master accepted Catherine Mary remained until two steamers came up that were able to tow Rifleman off Rifleman s cargo of tea hemp and tallow was valued at 16 000 she was also carrying a number of passengers f Catherine Mary submitted a claim for 125 which Rifleman s owners rejected The matter went to court where the judge awarded the plaintiffs 200 on the grounds that small claims against valuable cargoes should be supported to encourage salvage efforts 35 Rifleman was an unusual name for a merchant ship but unfortunately not a unique one After returning from Australia Rifleman may have made a voyage to Rouen before once again sailing to Australia Year Master Owner Trade Source amp notes1850 Hammack Crichton London Sydney LR small repairs 1848Voyage to Australia 1850 1851 Rifleman Hammack master sailed for Sydney in February 1850 She arrived in July On 26 August she sailed for Batavia in ballast She sailed from Singapore for London on 21 March 1851 In 1852 1853 Rifleman apparently was not listed in LR She did not reappear until 1854 by which time she had returned to whaling Year Master Owner Trade Source amp notes1854 J Grosssmith Sweeting g London South Seas LR small repairs 1848 amp 1852 36 3rd whaling voyage 1852 1856 Rifleman under the command of J Grossman left Britain for Timor on 28 December 1852 She was reported off Gaby Island on 10 September 1853 with 250 barrels She returned to Britain on 1 September 1856 32 Fate editRifleman was no longer listed in Lloyd s Register for 1857 Notes edit Rosenorn had been the captain of Salorman when the British captured her at Nyborg in 1808 Danish records report her official complement as 38 men They also show her armament as consisting of ten 18 pounder carronades and two 12 pounder carronades 4 A first class share of His Majesty s grant of two thirds of the proceeds was worth 332 14s 10d a sixth class share that of an ordinary seaman was worth 7 12s 12 Both the prize court and Lloyd s List agree in stating that Diomede had three guns and around 33 35 men suggesting that she may have thrown some guns overboard and may have had a large part of her crew away on prizes Diomede had left Salem a month earlier on 27 April 16 In the interim she had captured numerous vessels She sent the ship Cod Hook and her cargo of 700 hogsheads of salt dry goods crates flour bread and iron into Castine Next she captured Upton of Poole a 270 ton bm ship sailing from Cork to Newfoundland with 104 persons aboard many of whom were passengers 17 Diomede captured Upton which was armed with 16 guns 18 after an action of 35 minutes during which Upton had one man killed and one wounded and sent her into Wiscasset 17 As a prize ship Upton captured Hero of four guns and 20 men and made a cartel of her 18 presumably to dispose of Diomede s prisoners On 23 May Diomede exchanged fire with HMS Prometheus but made her escape 19 Diomede also captured Mary Moore master which had been sailing from Cork to Quebec HMS Martin later recaptured Mary on 27 May 20 Diomede scuttled Harmony and Providence which had been sailing from Maryport to Pugwash Nova Scotia and Miramichi Diomede captured Traveller Cronk master which had been sailing from Saint John New Brunswick to Quebec Traveller was carrying 174 puncheons of rum something that merited sending her into Thomastown 17 Lastly Diomede had chased on shore Recovery Perry master from St Andrews 16 On an earlier cruise Diomed captured the brig Friends which was wrecked the schooner William which she sent into Savannah and the schooner Hope which she sent into Bristol 21 Benjamin Thomas Chrichton and later James Chrichton owned several whalers at the time By some reports she was also carrying 40 tuns of sperm oil George Waters Sweeting was a shipowner including Adventure a whaler that he owned with James Chrichton Citations edit a b c d e f g h Winfield 2008 p 301 Lloyd s Register 1856 Seq 236 a b Anderson 1910 p 344 Orlogsmusset Naval Museum 1 accessed 23 April 2011 No 16486 The London Gazette 18 May 1811 p 921 316 Dansk biografisk Lexikon XIV Bind Resen Saxtrup Project Runeberg in Danish 20 November 2020 Retrieved 22 March 2021 Lloyd s List 4564 Accessed 31 October 2016 No 16678 The London Gazette 5 December 1812 p 2455 No 16645 The London Gazette 12 September 1812 p 1869 a b No 16754 The London Gazette 17 July 1813 p 1416 Lloyd s List 4703 Accessed 31 October 2016 No 16949 The London Gazette 22 October 1814 p 2106 Lloyd s List 4727 Accessed 31 October 2016 List of American Black Refugees deserters from the enemy on board His Majesty s sloop Rifleman Accessed 1 November 2016 Vice Admiralty Court 1911 p 110 a b Lloyd s List Accessed 31 October 2016 a b c Coggeshall 1856 pp 234 5 a b History 1815 Appendix Acadian Recorder 4 June 1814 No 16941 The London Gazette 1 October 1814 p 1964 Russell 1815 p 389 Lloyd s List 4811 Accessed 31 October 2016 Goldenberg 1984 p 431 Seymour 2003 pp 10 17 No 16944 The London Gazette 9 October 1814 pp 2029 2033 The Anglo American Magazine Toronto Maclear Vol 5 pp 418 9 Vice Admiralty Court 1911 p 260 Lloyd s List 5196 a b O Byrne 1849 p 758 Eardley Wilmot 1898 p 45 No 19344 The London Gazette 5 January 1836 p 26 a b c d e British Southern Whale Fishery Voyages Rifleman Shipping and Mercantile Gazette 2 September 1845 page 1 LR 1845 Supple pages R The Rifleman Salvage 3 June 1848 The Times London England Issue 19880 LR 1854 Seq No 225 References editAnderson Roger Charles 1910 Naval wars in the Baltic during the sailing ship epoch 1522 1850 C Gilbert Wood Coggeshall George 1856 History of the American Privateers and Letters Of Marque New York a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Eardley Wilmot Sir Sydney Marow 1898 Life of Vice Admiral Edmund lord Lyons With an account of naval operations in the Black Sea and Sea of Azoff 1854 56 S Low Marston and company Goldenberg Joseph A 1984 The Royal Navy s Blockade in New England Waters 1812 1815 The International History Review 6 3 424 439 doi 10 1080 07075332 1984 9640351 JSTOR 40105395 O Byrne William R 1849 Michell Frederick Thomas A Naval Biographical Dictionary London John Murray pp 758 759 Russell John Jr 1815 The history of the war between the United States and Great Britain which commenced in June 1812 and closed in February 1815 Comp chiefly from public documents With an appendix containing the correspondence which passed in treating for peace To which is added the treaty of peace and a list of vessels taken from Great Britain during the war B amp J Russell Seymour Tom 2003 Tom Seymour s Maine A Maine Anthology Universe ISBN 978 0 595 29209 7 Vice Admiralty Court Halifax 1911 American vessels captured by the British during the revolution and war of 1812 Salem Mass Essex Institute Winfield Rif 2008 British Warships in the Age of Sail 1793 1817 Design Construction Careers and Fates Seaforth Publishing ISBN 978 1 86176 246 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title HMS Rifleman 1809 amp oldid 1198260901, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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