HMS Vengeance (1758)

For other ships with the same name, see HMS Vengeance.
History
France
Name: Vengeance
Builder: Saint-Malo
Launched: 1757
Captured: By the Royal Navy on 8 January 1758
Great Britain
Name: HMS Vengeance
Acquired: 8 January 1758
Fate: Scuttled as a breakwater in October 1766
General characteristics
Class and type: 28-gun sixth rate
Tons burthen: 533 8/94 bm
Length:
  • 116 ft 11 in (35.6 m) (overall)
  • 95 ft 8 in (29.2 m) (keel)
Beam: 32 ft 4 in (9.9 m)
Depth of hold: 11 ft 3.5 in (3.44 m)
Sail plan: Full-rigged ship
Complement: 200
Armament:
  • Upper deck: 24 x 9pdrs
  • Quarter deck: 4 x 4pdrs

HMS Vengeance was a 28-gun sixth rate of the Royal Navy. She had previously been a French privateer under the same name until her capture in 1758 during the Seven Years' War.

French career and capture

Vengeance was built in 1757 at Saint-Malo.[1] HMS Hussar, under the command of Captain John Elliot, captured her off The Lizard on 8 January 1758 and brought her into Plymouth. An Admiralty order was issued, authorising her purchase into the navy on 11 March 1758, and she was duly acquired on 21 June that year for the sum of £2,151.3.0d.[1] She was officially named the following day, and was fitted at Plymouth between August and September 1758 for the sum of £1,619.18.6d.[1]

British career

Vengeance was first commissioned on 27 October 1758 under the command of Captain Gamaliel Nightingale, for service in the Irish Sea.[1] She came under the command of Lieutenant Joseph Hunt, in an acting capacity, in January 1759, and was used in the impressment service that year. She joined Commodore Robert Duff's squadron in October 1759, and was part of Admiral Sir Edward Hawke's fleet at the Battle of Quiberon Bay on 20 November 1759.[1] The following year she scored a success against privateers, capturing the letter-of-marque Comte de Nancy on 6 April 1760.[1]

Vengeance departed for Quebec on 22 June 1760, but was back in Britain by September.[1][2] Her success against privateers continued into 1761; she captured the Minerve on 27 January. On 33 March Vengeance captured the letter-of-marque Entreprenant, pierced for 44 guns, but armed en flûte with twenty-six 6 and 12-pounder guns.[3][2] Entreprenant had a crew of 203 men and was carrying a cargo from Bordeaux to San Domingo. The engagement involved three exchanges of fire lasting in total some three hours. Vengeance had six men killed and 27 wounded, most dangerously; two died later. The French suffered 15 men killed and 24 wounded before they struck.[3] On 23 March Vengeance captured the privateer Tigre.[1] This was a small vessel out of Saint Malo, armed with four carriage guns and four swivel guns. She had a crew of 45 men under the command of Joseph Merven. She had left Abbrevak on the 21st and had not captured anything before falling prey to Vengeance off The Lizard.[3]

Vengeance captured the 12-gun privateer Auguste, of La Rochelle, on 5 April, and was paid off in June 1761. She was surveyed on 8 August 1763, and again on 26 August 1766.[1] This time an admiralty order was issued on 4 September for her to be fitted as a breakwater, and she was scuttled at Plymouth in October.[1]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Winfield. British Warships of the Age of Sail 1714–1792. p. 224.
  2. 1 2 HMS Vengeance Through the Ages
  3. 1 2 3 The London Gazette: no. 10090. p. 2. 24 March 1761.

References

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