French frigate Résolue (1778)


Engageante (left) and Résolue (right) battling HMS Concorde at the Action of 23 April 1794
Career (France)
Name: Résolue
Namesake: Resolute
Builder: Saint Malo; plans by Guignace
Laid down: April 1777
Launched: 16 March 1778
In service: April 1778
Captured: 14 October 1798
Career (UK)
Name: HMS Resolue
Acquired: 14 October 1798
Fate: Hulk in Plymouth
Broken up 1811
General characteristics
Class and type: Iphigénie-class frigate
Displacement: 620 tonnes
Length: 44.2 metres
Beam: 11.2 metres
Draught: 4.9 metres
Sail plan: Full-rigged ship
Armament:

32 guns: 28 18-pound long guns

4 6-pound long guns

Résolue was an Iphigénie-class 32-gun frigate of the French Navy.

Contents

French service

On 19 March 1779, Résolue captured a British fort in Senegal.

In November 1791, as she was escorting merchant ships, Résolue was captured at the Battle of Tellicherry by HMS Phoenix and HMS Perseverance, and restored to France at Mahé.

She took part in the Action of 23 April 1794, when a squadron comprising Résolue, Engageante, Pomone and the 22-gun corvette Babet met a squadron of five British heavy frigates. Résolue managed to escape but the British took the other three ships.

She took part in the Expédition d'Irlande, under captain Montalan. On 22 December 1796, she collided with Redoutable in Bantry Bay, dismasting her. A boat was sent to seek help from Immortalité, but it was washed up on the shore on Clough Beach, and its crew taken prisoner. The boat is now a local attraction. Résolue managed to return to Brest under emergency rigging, and in tow from Pégase.

She was later captured by HMS Melampus on 14 October 1798 at the Battle of Tory Island. Résolue was fitted with hanging ports to her main deck. To meet a coming storm, her crew had run in and double-breeched her 12-pounders, and shut and barred the ports. She was, therefore, in a comparatively defenseless state with only her quarterdeck guns able to respond to Melampus's broadsides. Before she struck her colours, Résolue lost ten men killed and had some wounded, out of a crew of about 500 men.[1] She was purchased for the Royal Navy as HMS Resolue but never saw active service.

Fate

She became a slop ship in 1805 and was broken up in 1811. As late as 1810 she did have men aboard, including some African-Americans impressed into service, who wrote letters attempting to secure their release.[2]

References

  1. ^ William James. 1837. Naval History of Great Britain from the Declaration of War by France in 1793 to the Accession of George IV. (London: Richard Bentley), pp. 135-7.
  2. ^ W. Jeffrey Bolster. 2007. Notes and Documents: Letters by African American Sailors, 1799–1814. The William and Mary Quarterly, vol. 64, no. 1.

External links