HMS Saint Lucia (1803)

For other ships of the same name, see HMS St Lucia.
Career (France)
Name: Enfant Prodigue
Builder: Bordeaux
Captured: 24 June 1803
Career (UK)
Name: HMS Saint Lucia
Acquired: 24 June 1803 (by capture)
Captured: 29 March 1807
General characteristics [1]
Type:French privateer: schooner
British service: brig-sloop
Tonnage:183 bm
Length:c.85 ft 6 in (26.06 m) (overall)
c.65 ft 0 in (19.81 m) (keel)
Beam:c.23 ft 0 in (7.01 m)
Propulsion:Sails
Sail plan:Brig
Armament:14 guns

HMS Saint Lucia was a brig-sloop, the former French privateer schooner Enfant Prodigue, which the British captured in 1803 and took into service with the Royal Navy. Under the British flag she captured three small French privateers and several prizes in the Leeward Islands before two French privateers recaptured her.

Privateer

Enfant Prodigue was a schooner, built in Bordeaux in 1794-95.[1] In 1799 she captured the British schooner HMS Charlotte in a fight that resulted in Charlotte having one man wounded.

Capture

On 24 June 1803, Emerald captured Enfant Prodigue between St Lucia and Martinique after a chase of 72 hours. Captain James O'Bryen of Emerald reported that Enfant Prodigue was pierced for 16 guns but had thrown all of her guns, however many she actually mounted, overboard during the chase.[2] Head money was paid 25 years later.[3]

The British took Enfant Prodigue into service as the brig-sloop HMS Saint Lucia, of 14 guns. She was commissioned in August under Commander Conway Shipley.[1]

British warship

On 16 August 1803, Saint Lucia captured the French privateer Sally. Sally was armed with six guns and had a crew of 28 men.[4][Note 1]

In August–September Saint Lucia captured three prizes:

Around November, Saint Lucia recaptured the brig Earl St. Vincent, which had been sailing from Dublin to Barbados, and a Swedish schooner. The French privateer Harmonie, of Martinique, had captured them three days earlier. '"Saint Lucia was unable to capture the privateer which escaped by throwing her guns overboard and sawing down her gunwales.[7]

On 25 January 1804, Saint Lucia captured the French privateers Furet and Bijou.[1] Furet was out of Guadeloupe. She was armed with four guns and had a crew of 45 men.[8] Bijou, captured off Grenada, was armed with six guns, and had a crew of 60 men, twenty of whom she had put on two prizes.[8] These were the brig Good Intent, which had been sailing from Barbados to Demarara, and which Guachapin had since retaken, and the schooner Fancy, which had been sailing from Demarara to Barbados.[8]

In May Commander Robert Reynolds replaced Shipley, who transferred to Hippomenes, and in November Commander James Ayscough replaced Reynolds. Commander Charles Gordon replaced Ayscough in 1806.[1]

Fate

On 20 March 1807 the French privateers Vengeance and Friponne captured Saint Lucia off Guadeloupe. Before she struck her colours, Saint Lucia had suffered seven men dead and eight wounded.[1] Gordon had initiated the action but his first broadside disabled three of his cannonades when the recoil pulled their breeching bolts out of the timbers.[9] The fourth broadside similarly disabled a fourth cannonade. He turned to use his other broadside, but lost two more cannonades when their recoil caved in the bulwarks.[9] Saint Lucia fought on for two more hours but then surrendered when the French approached with the intention of boarding her.[9][Note 2]

Footnotes

Notes
  1. A first-class share of the head money (a bounty for the number of prisoners taken) was worth £35 11s 6¾d; a fifth-class share, that of an able seaman, was worth 8s 8¾d. By the time of the payment in 1827, Conway Shipley was already dead.[5]
  2. A number of sources give the name of the commander of Saint Lucia as Michael De Courcy, but the court-martial records confirm that her commander was Gordon.
Citations
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Winfield (2008), p.348.
  2. Norie (1842), pp.254 & 421.
  3. The London Gazette: no. 18486. p. 1351. 11 July 1828.
  4. The London Gazette: no. 15669. p. 109. 24 January 1804.
  5. The London Gazette: no. 18402. p. 2053. 5 October 1827.
  6. The London Gazette: no. 15669. p. 110. 24 January 1804.
  7. The London Gazette: no. 15662. pp. 4–5. 31 December 1803.
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 The London Gazette: no. 15697. pp. 537–538. 28 April 1804.
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 Hepper (1994), p. 119.

References