HMS Saldanha was a 36 gun Apollo-class frigate of the Royal Navy, launched in 1809 and wrecked in 1811. Before she was wrecked she participated in the capture of a noted French privateer. Saldanha was named for the Battle of Saldanha Bay.
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The new frigate was commissioned in April 1810 under Captain John Stuart, who died on 19 March 1811. Captain William Pakenham then was assigned to command her, though in the Spring, Saldanha was temporarily under the command of Captain Reuben Mangin.
On 11 October 1811, Fortunee and Saldanha, under Pakenham, took the French privateer Vice-Amiral Martin. The privateer carried 18 guns and a crew of 140 men.[1] On this cruise she was four days out of Bayonne and had not taken anything. Captain H. Vansitart of Fortunee remarked that Vice-Amiral Martin had superior sailing abilities that in the past had helped her escape British cruisers, and that though this time each of the British vessels was doing 11 knots, she would have escaped if the British had not had two vessels.[1]
Saldanha and the sloop-of-war Talbot were based together in Lough Swilly, Donegal when on 30 November they set out on a cruise to the west. Saldanha shipwrecked in a gale on the night of 4 December 1811 in the Lough while possible attempting to return to her anchorage.[2] There were no survivors out of the estimated 253 aboard, and some 200 bodies washed up on shore at Ballyna Stoker or Ballysmasclaken Bay on the west side of the Lough.[3][Note 1] (Actually, one man did make it to the shore alive but he died almost immediately thereafter.) Initial reports suggested that Talbot too had been wrecked but as it turned out these reports were mistaken.[2] In August a servant at a house some 20 miles from the wreck site shot a bird that turned out to be a parrot with a collar engraved with "Captain Packenham of His Majesty's Ship Saldanha".[3]
Earlier, Pakenham had been captain of Greyhound when she wrecked off the coast the coast of Luzon in the Philippines on 4 October 1808. In that wrecking only one seaman died and the survivors reached Manila.
On Sunday 4 December 2011 a special ceremony was held to mark the 200th anniversary of the sinking in Lough Swilly of the HMS Saldanha. It was the first ever commemorative event recalling what is one of Ireland’s worst ever marine disasters.Until then there had been no permanent memorial to their deaths.[4]