HMS Sabrina (1806)

For other ships of the same name, see HMS Sabrina.
Volcano in the Sea, as seen from His Majesty's Ship Sabrina, off the Azores, June 19th, 1811, by Lt John William Miles
Career (UK)
Name: HMS Sabrina
Ordered: 12 July 1805
Builder: Robert Adams, Chapel, Southampton
Laid down: December 1805
Launched: 1 September 1806
Completed: 30 November 1806 at Portsmouth Dockyard
Commissioned: September 1806
Out of service: Sold 18 April 1816
General characteristics [1]
Class and type:18-gun Cormorant-class sloop
Tons burthen:4264294 (bm)
Length:108 ft 3 in (33.0 m) (overall)
90 ft 7 in (27.6 m) (keel)
Beam:29 ft 9 in (9.1 m)
Depth of hold:9 ft 0 12 in (2.76 m)
Sail plan:Ship
Complement:121
Armament:Upper deck: 16 x 32-pounder carronades

QD: 6 x 18-pounder carronades

Fc: 2 x 6-pounder long guns + 2 x 18-pounder carronades

HMS Sabrina was an 18-gun Royal Navy ship-sloop of the Cormorant class, launched in 1806 at Southampton. She seems to have had a surprisingly uneventful career before the Admiralty sold her in 1816.

Design

Sabrina was one of the second batch of Cormorant-class ship-sloops. As such she carried 32-pounder carronades in her main battery instead of 6-pounder guns. In 1810 she was reclassed as a 20-gun post-ship, and again re-rated as 24 guns in 1816, just before she was broken up. Under the rating system of the day her number of guns could be largely nominal (in this case the number of long guns she would have carried had she been so-armed); the re-rating included her carronades in the total and did not involve any actual change to her armament.

Service

Sabrina was commissioned under Commander Edward Kittoe in September 1806 and he sailed her to the Mediterranean on 4 January 1807.[1] At some point her boats and those of her squadron attacked a Spanish flotilla. A subsequent expedition saw her boats and those of Chiffone cut out a brig and a schooner under the guns of a 4-gun battery on the south coast of Spain.[2] On 20 November she and Euryalus were in company with Niger when Niger captured the Lady Washington.[3] In early 1809 Kittoe sailed Sabrina to Cartagena, Colombia, bringing the news that Spain and England had signed a peace. Some dual citizens (Anglo-Americans) held prisoner in Colombia asked him to intercede with the viceroy for their freedom, which he did, but to no avail, as they had been incarcerated at the behest of the Captain General of Caracas.[4]

In 1809 she participated in the ill-fated Walcheren Campaign.[5] At one point during the campaign she served as the flagship for Admiral Keats.[6] During the campaign Rear Admiral William Albany Ottway appointed Commander Abraham Lowe to take command of her.[4][7]

Sabrina Island

In 1810 Sabrina came under the command of Commander James Tillard, who sailed her for Portugal on 20 July.[1] During June and July 1811 a volcanic eruption in the sea formed a new island off São Miguel Island. Tillard went ashore on 4 July and claimed the island for Great Britain, naming it Sabrina Island. He later wrote a description of what he had seen and done for the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society.[8][9] The claiming of the island gave rise to considerable diplomatic wrangling that proved moot when the island subsided into the sea a few months later.[10]

In November 1811 Captain the Honourable William Walpole took command and sailed Sabrina for Portugal on 19 November.[1] On 30 January 1812, Sabrina and Vesta captured the Peyo slave schooner.[11] In May command passed to Captain Alexander R. MacKenzie, who sailed her to Portugal.[1] In June she brought back to England Captain Samuel Hood Linzee of Union, who had been knifed by a seaman and was no longer well enough to command.[12] On 5 January 1813, she and Myrtle detained the Edward and Albert.[13][Note 1]

Fate

Sabrina was sold on 18 April 1816 at Portsmouth.[1]

Notes

Footnotes
  1. For the Myrtle, a first-class share of the allocation of expenses of $1000 was worth £18 6s 2½d. A sixth-class share, that of an ordinary seaman, was worth 7s 5½d.[14]
Ciitations
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Winfield (2008), pp.259-50.
  2. O'Bryne (1849), p.197.
  3. The London Gazette: no. 16402. p. 1355. 4 September 1810.
  4. 4.0 4.1 The American historical review, Volume 3, pp.694-5.
  5. The London Gazette: no. 16650. p. 1971. 26 September 1812.
  6. The London Gazette: no. 16282. pp. 1233–1234. 7 August 1809.
  7. The London Gazette: no. 16328. p. 2057. 26 December 1809.
  8. Tillard (1812), pp.152-8.
  9. Jamleson (1821), Vol. 1, pp.43-7.
  10. "Geology of the Azores at EWP.net". Retrieved 2009-08-15.
  11. The London Gazette: no. 17144. p. 1123. 11 June 1816.
  12. Marshall (1833), Vol. 4, pp.156-7.
  13. The London Gazette: no. 16978. p. 132. 24 January 1815.
  14. The London Gazette: no. 17027. p. 1198. 20 June 1815.

References

External links