French corvette Aréthuse (1798)

For other ships of the same name, see French ship Aréthuse and HMS Raven.
Aréthuse
Career (France)
Name: Aréthuse
Namesake: Arethusa
Builder: Louis and Antoine Crucy, Basse-Indre
Laid down: October 1797
Launched: 29 April 1798
Captured: 10 October 1799
Career (United Kingdom)
Name: Raven
Builder: Louis and Antoine Crucy, Basse-Indre
Acquired: 10 October 1799
Fate: Wrecked on 6 July 1804
General characteristics [1]
Class and type:Aréthuse-class corvette
Displacement:464 tons
Tons burthen:389 8294 tons (bm)
Length:31.18 m (102.3 ft) (overall); 27.93 m (91.6 ft) (keel)
Beam:8.93 m (29.3 ft)
Draught:3.8 m (12 ft)
Depth of hold:4.38 m (14.4 ft)
Complement:

French service: 136

British service: 96
Armament:

French service: 18 × 8-pounder long guns

British service:16 × 18-pounder carronades + 2 × 6-pounder bow guns

Aréthuse was a corvette of the French Navy, launched in April 1798. Excellent captured her in 1799. The Royal Navy took her into service under the name HMS Raven. She was wrecked in 1804.

French service

Jean-François Gauthier designed her and she was the only vessel of her class. She carried only 18 cannon, though she was pierced for 20.

Aréthuse served between France and the Caribbean. On 9 October 1799 she was sailing towards Impregnable and her convoy when the 74-gun Excellent, which was to windward of Impregnable, spotted her. Excellent chased Aréthuse, catching her during the night. Captain Robert Stopford of Excellent described Aréthuse as having eighteen 9-pounder guns and a crew of 153 men, all under the command of a lieutenant de vaisseau. She was sailing from Lorient to Cayenne with dispatches that she succeeded in destroying before she struck.[2] Excellent shared the capture with Impregnable.[3]

British service

Aréthuse arrived in Plymouth on 26 November 1799. She was fitted for service with the Royal Navy between September and December 1800.[1] She was commissioned in September 1800 under Commander James Sanders for the Channel.[1] She was recommissioned in June 1802 under Commander Spelman Swaine and in August sailed for the Mediterranean.[1]

Fate

On 4 January 1804 Raven sailed from Malta as escort to the merchant ship Dolphin, bound for Naples.[4] She was following a course along the south coast of Sicily that would take her between the islands of Favignana and Marettimo. In the evening of the next day master's mate Robert Incledon had the watch and saw a light shape in the moonless night.[4] He thought it was a sail but it turned out to be a tower on the cliffs near Mazari, on the south west coast of Sicily. At 11pm she ran aground.[4] Despite efforts to lighten and free her, efforts that extended into the afternoon of 6 January, the pumps were unable to clear the water that was coming in and she had to be abandoned. Dolphin rescued her crew.[4] The court martial on 10 February 1805 admonished the master for having steered too near the land.[5]

See also

Citations

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Winfield (2008), p.286.
  2. The London Gazette: no. 15195. p. 1066. 15 October 1799.
  3. The London Gazette: no. 15229. p. 129. 8 February 1800.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Hepper (1994), p.104.
  5. Gossett (1986), p.41.

References

External links