HMS Mohawk
Thirteen ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Mohawk, after the Mohawk, an indigenous tribe of North America:
- HMS Mohawk (1756) was a 6-gun sloop launched at Oswego on the Great Lakes in 1756 and captured by the French that same year.
- HMS Mohawk (1759) was a 16-gun snow, constructed in 1759, that participated in the Battle of the Thousand Islands, during the French and Indian War. She was lost in 1764.
- HMS Mohawk (1782) was an 18-gun sloop purchased in 1782 and sold in 1783.
- HMS Mohawk (1795) was a schooner listed in 1795 and operating on the Great Lakes out of Kingston, Ontario. She was condemned in 1803.
- HMS Mohawk (1798) was a sloop in service in 1798 and taken by the French in 1799 according to the Captain of Apollo, in a letter.[1]
- HMS Mohawk was the American navy's 12-gun brig Viper captured in 1813 and sold in 1814.[2]
- HMS Mohawk was to have been an 18-gun Cruizer-class brig-sloop but she was renamed HMS Ontario before being launched in 1813. She was sold in 1832.
- HMS Mohawk (1843) was a paddle-vessel launched in 1843 and sold in 1852.
- HMS Mohawk (1856) was a Vigilant-class wooden screw gunvessel launched in 1856. She was sold in 1862 to the Emperor of China and renamed Pekin.
- HMS Mohawk (1886) was an Archer-class torpedo cruiser launched in 1886 and sold in 1905.
- HMS Mohawk (1907) was a Tribal-class destroyer launched in 1907 and sold in 1919.
- HMS Mohawk (F31) was a Tribal-class destroyer launched in 1937. She was torpedoed by an Italian destroyer in 1941 and was subsequently sunk by HMS Janus.
- HMS Mohawk (F125) was a Tribal-class frigate launched in 1962 and sold for scrapping in 1980.
Citations
References
- Winfield, Rif (2008). British Warships in the Age of Sail 1793–1817: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates. Seaforth. ISBN 1-86176-246-1.