French ship Suffren (1824)

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Career (France) French Navy  Ensign
Namesake: Pierre André de Suffren de Saint Tropez
Laid down: 21 August 1824
Launched: 27 August 1829
Commissioned: 10 March 1831
Struck: 4 April 1861
Fate: Scrapped
General characteristics
Displacement: 4 070 tonnes
Length: 60.50 metres
Beam: 16.28 metres
Draught: 7.40 metres
Propulsion: 3114 m² of sails
Complement: 810 to 846 men
Armament:

1824-1839:
30 × 30-pounders on lower deck
32 × 30-pounders on middle deck
24 × 30-pounder carronades and 4 × 18-pounders on upper decks
1839-1840
26 × 30-pounders and 4 ×22cm Paixhans guns on lower deck
32 × 30-pounders on middle deck

24 × 30-pounder carronades and 4 × 16 cm Paixhans guns on upper decks
Armour: 6.97 cm of timber

The Suffren was a 90-gun Ship of the line of the French Navy named in honour of Pierre André de Suffren de Saint Tropez.

The Suffren was of the first ships of the line built with straight walls.

She took part in the battle of Tagus on 11 July 1831, and stayed off Lisbonne for one month thereafter, leaving Portugal on 14 August.

The next year, she took part in the battle of Ancona, on 22 February, ferry 1500 infantrymen .

In 1838, she ran aground near Cadix after a tempest. She was refloated by the Iénaand Phare steam ships.

She took part in the war against Morocco in August 1844, bombing Tangier on the 6 August and landing troops in Mogador on 16.

In 1854, the Suffren was involved in the Crimean War. In July, an epidemic of cholera among the fleet of the Black Sea killed 20 and sickened 100 aboard. On 17 October, Suffren took part in the siege of Sevastopol.

The next year, she was converted to a troop ship. From 1857 to 1860, she was used as a gunnery school by the École Navale, before being stricken on 4 April 1861 and converted to a hulk. She was renamed Ajax on 8 April 1865, and scrapped in 1874.

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