HMS Nymphe (1780)

For other ships of the same name, see HMS Nymphe.
A sketch of the engagement between Nymphe and Cleopatre by Nicholas Pocock, 1793
History
Kingdom of France
Name: La Nymphe
Namesake: Nymph
Builder: Pierre-Augustin Lamothe, Brest
Laid down: April 1777
Launched: 18 August 1777
Commissioned: November 1777
Fate: Captured by HMS Flora, 10 August 1780
United Kingdom
Name: HMS Nymphe
Acquired: by capture, 10 August 1780
Honours and
awards:
Fate: Wrecked in the Firth of Forth, 18 December 1810
General characteristics [4]
Type: Fifth-rate frigate
Tons burthen: 937 7294 (bm)
Length:
  • 141 ft 5 12 in (43.12 m) (gun deck)
  • 120 ft 4 12 in (36.69 m) (keel)
Beam: 38 ft 3 14 in (11.66 m)
Depth of hold: 11 ft 9 in (3.58 m)
Sail plan: Full-rigged ship
Complement: 240
Armament:
  • 1777[5]
  • UD: 26 × French 12-pounder guns
  • QD: 4 × French 6-pounder guns
  • FC: 2 × French 6-pounder guns
  • 1780
  • UD: 26 × 12-pounder guns
  • QD: 8 × 6-pounder guns
  • FC: 2 × 6-pounder guns
  • 1790
  • UD: 26 × 12-pounder guns
  • QD: 12 × 32-pounder carronades
  • FC: 2 × 9-pounder guns + 2 × 32-pounder carronades
Service record
Operations:

HMS Nymphe was a fifth-rate frigate of the British Royal Navy, formerly the French La Nymphe. She was captured by HMS Flora, under the command of Captain William Peere Williams, off Ushant on 10 August 1780. Indiscriminately referred to as Nymph, Nymphe, La Nymph or La Nymphe in contemporary sources, she served during the American, French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. On 19 May 1793, while under the command of Captain Edward Pellew, she captured the frigate Cléopâtre, the first French warship captured in a single-ship action of the war. After a long period of service in which she took part in several notable actions and made many captures, Nymphe was wrecked off the coast of Scotland on 18 December 1810.

Construction

La Nymphe was built as a 32-gun frigate of the fourth rate (Quatrième Rang) at Brest, designed and constructed by Pierre-Augustin Lamothe. She was laid down in April 1777, launched on 18 August, and commissioned in November. She carried a complement of 290 men, and was armed with twenty-six French 12-pounder guns[Note 1] and six French 6-pounders.[5]

Capture by Flora

The 36-gun frigate Flora was patrolling off Brest on the afternoon of 10 August 1780 when through the haze she sighted two vessels, a square-rigged vessel and a cutter, about four miles away. As Flora approached, the cutter edged away, while the square-rigged vessel waited, accepting battle. When the two ships were within two cables length the French ship raised her colours and opened fire. The battle lasted about an hour, until Flora, being much cut up, moved closer in. After another 15 minutes the French abandoned their guns and attempted to board, but were repulsed and the crew of Flora boarded her and took possession. She proved to be the frigate La Nymphe, pierced for 40 guns, but mounting only 32, and commanded by the Chevalier du Remain, who died that evening of his wounds.[7] Flora, as well as her nominal armament of 36 guns, also carried six recently-introduced 18-pounder carronades, which swept the decks of the French ship with grapeshot. In addition Flora's guns were heavier, 18- and 9-pounders, against the French ship's 12- and 6-pounders. This is reflected in the number of casualties; 9 killed and 17 wounded on Flora out of a crew of 259, and 55 killed and 81 wounded aboard La Nymphe, from a crew of 291.[8]

Service as HMS Nymphe

1780–1793

Nymphe was sent to Portsmouth Dockyard to be repaired and refitted. The work was completed on 27 March 1781 at a cost of £9,657.10s.7d., and she was commissioned under the command of Captain John Ford. Nymphe then served in the American War[4] seeing action at the Battle of the Chesapeake on 5 September 1781, serving as a repeating ship (relaying signals to other ships) in the centre division of Rear Admiral Thomas Graves.[9] She also, in company with Amphion, captured the American privateers Royal Louis, Juno, Molly, Lexington, Racoon, and Lively Buckskin.[10] In 1782 she sailed to the Leeward Islands, and was present at the Battle of the Saintes on 12 April.[4] In May 1783 she arrived back at Portsmouth,[4] and was paid off in June, while under the command of Captain C. Knatchbull.[11]

In March 1786 Nymphe began "middling repairs" at Portsmouth Dockyard, which were completed in January 1787 at a cost of £9,704.[4] She was briefly recommissioned from October to December 1787 under the command of Captain Albemarle Bertie.[11] Further repair work was carried out at Portsmouth in May and June 1790 at a cost of £2,004.[4]

1793

In response to the looming threat of war, Nymphe was recommissioned under the command of Captain Edward Pellew on 11 January 1793. However, by the time Pellew arrived at Portsmouth on the 15th, the press gangs had swept the town clean of seamen. Pellew prepared his ship for sea, and did his best to recruit a crew. When, as expected, the government of revolutionary France declared war on Great Britain on 1 February 1793 Nymphe was still in dock, and not ready for sea until the 6th. Nymphe finally sailed on the 12th, with barely more than half her complement, which included 32 marines, and 80 Cornish tin-miners, all mere landsmen. Pellew was obliged to bring his crew up to strength by boarding several of the merchant vessels he was escorting in the Channel and impressing experienced sailors.[12]

On 19 May 1793, Nymphe sailed from Spithead in company with the frigate Venus, commanded by Captain Jonathan Faulknor. After chasing some French vessels into Cherbourg, the two frigates lost touch with each other on the 24th. Later that day Nymphe captured the French 16-gun privateer brig Sans Culottes.[13] Venus fared less well, encountering the French frigate Sémillante on the 26th off Finistère, and failing to take her. After a fight lasting some hours both ships were considerably damaged, and Sémillante returned to Cherbourg, and the Venus limped back to Portsmouth, meeting Nymphe on the 29th.[12]

At daybreak on 18 June 1793, Nymphe was sailing alone off Start Point, Devon, when she sighted the 40-gun French frigate Cléopâtre, commanded by Lieutenant de vaisseau Jean Mullon. In the resulting action Cléopâtre was captured at a cost of about 60 killed, including her captain, while Nymphe suffered 23 killed and 27 wounded.[14] The arrival of the ship in Britain was greeted with much rejoicing as the first major French warship captured during the war, and earned Pellew a knighthood. His brother Israel, who was serving aboard as a volunteer, was promoted to captain, the first lieutenant Amherst Morris promoted to commander, and the master, Mr. Thomson, to lieutenant.[12] In 1847 it was among the actions recognised by a clasp, marked "Nymphe 18 June 1793", attached to the Naval General Service Medal awarded upon application to all British participants from Nymphe still living.

Nymphe returned to sea on 26 July, after repairs at Plymouth which cost £6,308. She patrolled the Channel and Bay of Biscay, looking for further prizes.[12] Finally, on 30 November, just outside Brest, she and Circe captured the French sloop, L'Espiegle.[15]

1794–1795

In March 1794 Pellew was appointed to command of the more powerful 38-gun frigate Arethusa,[12] and command of Nymphe was assumed by Captain George Murray.[11] Nymphe was then part of the squadron of five frigates under Sir John Borlase Warren that engaged four French frigates off the Channel Isles on 23 April 1794, and captured three; the Pomone, Engageante and Babet.[16]

Nymphe was then part of the Channel Fleet, under Lord Bridport,[17] which sailed from Spithead on 12 June 1795 to Quiberon Bay. Early on 22 June, a French fleet was sighted west of Belle Île, and the British give chase. After a long pursuit, around 06:00 on the morning of the 23rd the fleets met in the Battle of Groix, in which three French ships were captured before action was broken off. The British fleet then remained off the French coast protecting the Quiberon Bay expedition.[18] Nymphe returned to England in December 1795 under the command of Captain George Losack to be paid off.[11]

1796–1799

After repairs at Plymouth,[4] during which she was coppered, the ship was recommissioned in May 1796 under the command of Captain John Cooke.[11] On 9 March 1797 Nymphe and St Fiorenzo, while making a reconnaissance of Brest, sighted two French ships standing in towards the harbour. After a sharp action lasting no more than 30 minutes they captured both ships, which proved to be the 48-gun frigate Résistance and the 24-gun corvette Constance, both returning from the failed expedition to Wales.[19] There were no casualties or damage on either of the British ships. Resistance had ten men killed and nine wounded; Constance had eight men killed and six wounded.[19] Resistance had 48 guns, with 18-pounders on her main deck, and a crew of 345 men. Constance had twenty-four 9-pounder guns, and a crew of 181 men.[19] The Royal Navy took both into service. Résistance became Fisgard, while Constance retained her name. In 1847 the Admiralty awarded the Naval General Service Medal with clasp "Nymphe 8 March 1797" to surviving claimants from the action.[Note 2]

Nymphe was one of the ships involved in the Spithead Mutiny of April and May 1797, when the men of the Channel Fleet struck for improved pay and conditions. According to statements by the crew, no particular accusation was brought against Captain Cooke, but his conduct was considered unsatisfactory. The chief complaints were made against the lieutenants, particularly Irwin, the first lieutenant. On one occasion, after receiving a flogging, a seaman was seen to smile. Irwin promptly ordered that he receive an additional 36 lashes for "silent contempt". The lieutenants of the Nymphe made a practice of beating the men themselves if they considered that the boatswain's mates were not putting enough effort into it. They would order floggings for the most trivial offences. On one occasion two men were beaten for "slackness", in not carrying out an order fast enough, both received twelve lashes. For a similar offence another seaman was beaten and kicked so severely that he was advised to go on the sick list. The seaman refused, through fear of the officers. As a result Cooke and his two lieutenants were sent ashore by the mutineers.[20]

Captain Percy Fraser was appointed commander of Nymphe in June 1797.[11] On 6 September 1798 Nymphe, in company with Aurora and the privateer Lord Hawke, captured the Spanish ship L'Edad de Oro, which had sailed from La Guaira, Venezuela, with a cargo of cocoa, bound for Corunna, but was captured only a few miles from her destination. The next day Nymphe recaptured the sloop Charlotte of London, originally bound for Newfoundland.[21] On 7 November 1799, Nymphe, Indefatigable, and Diamond recaptured the ship Brailsford from the French,[22] and 10 November Nymphe recaptured the merchant ship Astrea.[23]

1800

Operating in company with Amethyst, Nymphe made a series of valuable captures and recaptures in early 1800. The French privateer cutter Le Vaillant was taken on 15 February.[24] On 24 February, off Bordeaux, they captured the 16-gun French merchant ship La Modeste, nine weeks out of Mauritius, and laden with cotton, coffee, tea, sugar and indigo.[25] The Julius Pringle was recaptured 27 February, followed by the Active on 4 March, and the Amity the 21st. The 22-gun French privateer Mars was taken on the 31st,[26] and the ship Caroline was recaptured on 14 April.[27]

1801

Nymphe operated in the English Channel during 1801,[4] under the command of Captain Stair Douglas. On 23 January 1801 Nymphe counted twenty-eight sail of the line and nine frigates at anchor in the outer roads at Brest. Two days later not a ship was to be seen. Douglas reported that although a squadron may have escaped the rest had probably gone into the inner roads to deceive the watching ships. He returned to Plymouth on 20 February and sailed again on 29 April for a long cruise off Corunna.[28] On 14 July, she recaptured the ship Lady Arabella,[29] returning to her home port on 31 August.[28] Her next cruise was off Brest and, although news of the preliminary agreement of the Treaty of Amiens reached Plymouth on 4 October, she did not return until 15 November. On 29 December she was in Portsmouth.[28]

1802-1806

During the temporary peace Nymphe operated on anti-smuggling patrols. At the end of January 1802 she intercepted a cutter, the Flora of Fowey, Captain Dunn, being chased by the frigate Fisgard. The cutter struck after her mizzen shrouds got entangled with Nymphe's bowsprit. Unfortunately, during the action a midshipman had his hand so badly injured that it had to be amputated, and a seaman was washed overboard. On 13 February Nymphe sailed from Plymouth on a six-day cruise against smugglers, and was finally was paid off at Portsmouth on 30 April 1802.[28]

Nymphe was commissioned in 1803 under the command of Captain Somerville. During the night of 29 December a fierce gale wrecked a number of ships in Plymouth Sound. The men from a wrecked Prussian galliot were rescued by Nymphe.[28]

Nymphe remained out of commission, maintained "in Ordinary" at Portsmouth[18] until June 1806 when large repairs where undertaken at Deptford Dockyard.[4]

1807-1808

Nymphe was recommissioned in March 1807 under the command of Captain Conway Shipley.[11] On 25 July 1807 she joined the fleet assembling at Yarmouth for the expedition to Copenhagen. She sailed with the first division under Admiral Lord Gambier in the Prince of Wales the next evening.[28] She was employed in the Great Belt, preventing Danish troops crossing to Zealand, before taking part in the siege and bombardment of Copenhagen and capture of the Danish Fleet.[18] On 4 November 1807 she sailed for Portugal.[11]

In April 1808 Nymphe was cruising off Lisbon, in company with the 18-gun sloop Blossom, Commander George Pigot, when Captain Shipley learned that the 20-gun brig Garotta was lying by Belém Castle, making ready to sail. At 21:00 on the evening of 23 April a force of eight boats with 150 officers and men from Nymphe and Blossom set out to capture her. Unfortunately, a strong ebb tide fed by heavy rains set in, slowing their approach and it was not until 02:30 that the boats of Nymphe reached the brig. Captain Shipley led the boarders, climbing the fore-rigging and attempting to cut away the boarding-netting, but he was shot and fell into the river. His brother, Charles Shipley, serving as a volunteer, immediately ordered the gig to pick him up, but the boats fell afoul of each other and became entangled with a caulking stage moored astern. Having lost the element of surprise, and with the boats of Blossom failing to reach the brig, the enterprise was abandoned. As well as her captain,[30] Nymphe lost a seaman, and one marine was wounded. Captain Shipley's body was later recovered and it was evident that he had been killed instantly by a musket ball through the forehead.[31] Commander Pigot was appointed by Admiral Sir Charles Cotton, the commander-in-chief on the coast of Portugal, to be Captain Shipley's successor on board Nymphe; and on 17 September he was confirmed in his post-rank.[32] Captain The Hon. Josceline Percy, was later appointed to command her, while operating off coast of Spain.[28]

1810

On 14 May 1810 Captain Edward Sneyd Clay assumed command. On 26 October 1810 he captured the 2-gun Danish privateer Norwegian Girl.[33] On the evening of 18 December 1810 Nymphe and Pallas, were wrecked off Dunbar at the mouth of the Firth of Forth.[4] All the crew except nine were saved. Captain Clay and his officers were cleared of blame at the subsequent court martial with the exception of Mr G. Scott, the master, and C. Gascoigne, the pilot, who were judged to have mistaken fires from a lime kiln on shore for the light on the Isle of May.[28]

Footnotes

Notes
  1. As the French pound (livre) was equal to 1.097 English pounds, the French "12-pounder" fired a slightly heavier (13.164 lb) ball than its British equivalent.[6]
  2. The reason for the discrepancy between the date of the action and the date on the clasp was that the Admiralty considered that a day ran from noon to noon. Thus the morning of 9 March was, to the Admiralty, the end of 8 March.

References

Citations
  1. The London Gazette: no. 20939. p. 236. 26 January 1849.
  2. The London Gazette: no. 20939. p. 237. 26 January 1849.
  3. The London Gazette: no. 20939. p. 238. 26 January 1849.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Winfield (2008).
  5. 1 2 Demerliac, Alain (1996). La marine de Louis XVI: Nomenclature des Navires Français de 1774 à 1792 (in French). Nice: Éditions Oméga.
  6. "A Walking Tour of Leutze Park". Naval History & Heritage Command. 2015. Retrieved 14 November 2015.
  7. The London Gazette: no. 12110. p. 4. 15 August 1780.
  8. Clowes (1899), p. 56.
  9. Landers (1931), p. 164.
  10. The London Gazette: no. 12447. pp. 2–3. 7 June 1783.
  11. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "NMM, vessel ID 372306" (PDF). Warship Histories, vol ii. National Maritime Museum. Retrieved 14 November 2015.
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 Parkinson (1934), pp. 80–96.
  13. The London Gazette: no. 13603. p. 1121. 14 December 1793.
  14. The London Gazette: no. 13539. p. 517. 18 June 1793.
  15. The London Gazette: no. 13640. p. 326. 12 April 1794.
  16. The London Gazette: no. 13646. pp. 377–379. 28 April 1794.
  17. The London Gazette: no. 20939. p. 237. 26 January 1849.
  18. 1 2 3 Benyon, P. (2011). "HMS Nymphe". pbenyon.plus.com. Retrieved 20 February 2012.
  19. 1 2 3 The London Gazette: no. 13992. p. 251. 14 March 1797.
  20. Neale (1842), pp.270-271
  21. The London Gazette: no. 15061. p. 879. 15 September 1798.
  22. The London Gazette: no. 15239. p. 262. 15 March 1800.
  23. The London Gazette: no. 15346. p. 309. 17 March 1801.
  24. The London Gazette: no. 15233. p. 187. 22 February 1800.
  25. The London Gazette: no. 15236. p. 225. 4 March 1800.
  26. The London Gazette: no. 15246. p. 345. 8 April 1800.
  27. The London Gazette: no. 15301. p. 1175. 11 October 1800.
  28. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Phillips, Michael (2011). "Nymphe (36) {1780}". ageofnelson.org. Retrieved 20 February 2012.
  29. The London Gazette: no. 15495. p. 725. 6 July 1802.
  30. O'Byrne (1849), p. 785.
  31. Allen (1852), pp. 226–227.
  32. James (1837), pp. 38–40.
  33. O'Byrne (1849), p. 198.
Bibliography

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External links

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