Career (UK) | |
---|---|
Name: | HMS Doris |
Ordered: | 5 June 1803 |
Builder: | Bombay Dockyard |
Laid down: | 25 April 1806 |
Launched: | 24 March 1807 |
Renamed: | Launched as Salsette Renamed Pitt on 26 August 1807 Renamed HMS Doris on 3 April 1808 |
Fate: | Sold in April 1829. |
General characteristics | |
Class and type: | 36-gun fifth-rate frigate |
Tons burthen: | 870 tons |
Length: | 137 ft (42 m) |
Beam: | 38 ft (12 m) |
Propulsion: | Sails |
Sail plan: | Full rigged ship |
Complement: | 260 |
Armament: |
(Original) 36 guns:
(By 1815)
|
HMS Doris was a 36-gun fifth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy that served between 1808 and 1829. She was the second ship of the Royal Navy to be named after the mythical Greek sea nymphe Doris.
Doris was originally built as an East Indiaman in Bombay in 1807. She was launched as Salsette, but was renamed Pitt later that year. The Royal Navy purchased her in 1808 and renamed HMS Doris because there was already an HMS Pitt in service, which in turn the Navy renamed Salsette.
HMS Doris initially saw service in the Malacca Straits and the South China Sea, and was involved in the Mauritius campaign of 1810, and the [Invasion of Java (1811)|invasion of Java]] in 1811. After a trip to Chile in 1821, she was mainly active on the South American side of the Atlantic Ocean until she was sold out of the service in 1829.
During her 21 years in the Royal Navy she had eight captains. One of them was Barrington Reynolds, who commanded her for a short period in 1812, between his commands of HMS Sir Francis Drake and HMS Bucephalus. Another was Thomas Graham, who died on route to Chile in 1822, with his wife, the travel writer Maria Graham, on board.
By the late 1820s, her decayed timbers made her unfit for further service, and she was sold at Valparaiso in April 1829.