HMS Ranger

Fifteen ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Ranger

His Majesty's hired armed vessels

A sloop named Ranger was temporarily hired in 1718 to take part in the successful hunt for the notorious pirate Blackbeard, but does not appear to have ever formally been a part of the Navy.

In July 1809 the Royal Navy hired 10 open boats, all between 14 and 16 tons (bm), for less than a month to serve as pilot boats for the unfortunate Walcheren Campaign. One of these boats was named Ranger.[1]

Lastly, in January 1810, the RN hired the ship Ranger, of 16 guns, for several weeks.[1] This may have been the Ranger, of 326 tons (bm), Deanham, master.[2]

British Revenue vessel

HMS Ranger was a revenue cutter operating off Great Yarmouth. In April 1821, under the command of Captain Sayer, she seized about 400 tubs of Geneva from a smuggling vessel, but was lost in a gale in October 1822 off Happisburgh, with no attempt being made by locals to rescue the crew. [3][4]

In fiction

A fictitious Polaris Resolution class submarine captured in the James Bond film "The Spy Who Loved Me" was also named HMS Ranger.

Citations and references

Citations
  1. 1 2 Winfield (2008), p. 395.
  2. Lloyd's Register (1810).
  3. The Little Book of Norfolk, Neil Storey, p150
  4. Happishburgh, Losses at Sea
References
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