HMS Bellerophon (1786)

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Napoleon Bonaparte on board the Bellerophon in Plymouth Sound by Sir Charles Lock Eastlake, painted 1815.
Career Royal Navy Ensign
Name: HMS Bellerophon
Laid down: 1783
Launched: 6 October 1786
Commissioned: 19 July 1790
Renamed: Captivity, 1824
Reclassified: Prison ship, 1824
Fate: Broken up, 1836
General Characteristics
Nickname: Billy Ruffian
Honours and awards: Participated in:

    The first HMS Bellerophon of the Royal Navy was a 74-gun third rate ship of the line launched on 6 October 1786 at Frindsbury on the River Medway, near Chatham. She was built at the shipyard of Edward Greaves to the specifications of the Arrogant class, designed by Sir Thomas Slade in 1758. (Cordingly, 7-8) History has it that the First Lord of the Admiralty at the time, John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich, had a penchant for Greek and Roman mythology. He directed that the vessel be named for the Greek warrior who rode the winged horse Pegasus and slew the monster Chimera[1].

    Contents

    [edit] Early history

    She fought at the battle of The Glorious First of June,[2] the Battle of the Nile[3] and the Battle of Trafalgar, becoming one of the most famous British ships of the Napoleonic Wars. Her crew affectionately called her the Billy Ruffian (or Billy Ruff'n). At Trafalgar she was the fifth in Admiral Collingwood's Southern division and thus was heavily engaged, battling the French L'Aigle to a bloody standstill at the cost of her captain John Cooke dead, 26 other crew killed and 123 wounded. Command was ably assumed by her first lieutenant William Pryce Cumby, who safely steered the battered ship back to Gibraltar. On board during the battle was future Arctic explorer John Franklin, serving as a young midshipman.

    [edit] Napoleon's surrender

    She achieved further fame on July 15, 1815 when Napoleon Bonaparte surrendered to Captain Maitland of the Bellerophon and was transported to Torbay where the ship anchored off Brixham on July 24. There Maitland received orders from Admiral Lord Keith. He was "...most positively ordered to prevent every person whatever from coming on board the ship you command, except the officers and men who compose her crew"[cite this quote].

    In response to his orders, Captain Maitland refused to allow the usual visits of the boats full of traders with supplies of fresh food. John Michelmore, aboard one of the boats hoping to sell bread, saw a sailor in one of the lower gunports who signalled to them and then set adrift a small bottle containing a message that Bonaparte was aboard. He and the baker rowed ashore and the news quickly spread.[citation needed] While Maitland still kept boats from actually coming alongside, there were no further attempts to conceal the Emperor's presence. After two days, Bellerophon received orders to proceed to Plymouth harbour where Lord Keith was anchored aboard his flagship HMS Ville de Paris. Napoleon remained on board Bellerophon and the ship was still kept isolated from the throngs of curious sightseers by two guardships anchored close at hand. On August 4, Lord Keith ordered Bellerophon to go to sea and await the arrival of HMS Northumberland which had been designated to take Napoleon into exile on St Helena. On August 7, Napoleon left the Bellerophon where he had spent over three weeks without ever landing in England and boarded Northumberland which then sailed for St Helena.

    [edit] Eventual fate

    From 1816, Bellerophon was out of commission at Sheerness, and at some point became employed as a prison ship. She was renamed Captivity in 1824, and sold 12 January 1836 and broken up.

    [edit] Further reading

    • David Cordingly, The Billy Ruffian: The Bellerophon and the Downfall of Napoleon (Bloomsbury USA, 2003) ISBN 1-58234-468-X

    [edit] References

    1. ^ Cordingly, page 18
    2. ^ Commanded by Captain William Johnstone Hope. 4 killed and 27 wounded.
    3. ^ Commanded by Captain Henry D'Esterre Darby, who was wounded early in the action. 49 killed and 148 wounded
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