French frigate Aigle (1782)
{{Short description|Ship}}
{{Other ships|HMS Aigle|French ship Aigle}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2021}}
{{Infobox ship begin}}
{{Infobox ship image |Ship image=File:AIGLE FL.1782 (FRENCH) RMG J5761.png |Ship caption=Aigle in 1782. }} {{Infobox ship career |Hide header= |Ship country=France |Ship flag=Image:Flag of the Kingdom of France (1814-1830).svg |Ship name=Aigle |Ship namesake=Eagle |Ship ordered= |Ship builder=Dujardin, Saint Malo, plans by Jacques-Noël Sané |Ship laid down=1779 |Ship launched=11 February 1780 |Ship acquired=April 1782 by purchase |Ship commissioned= |Ship decommissioned= |Ship in service= |Ship out of service= |Ship renamed= |Ship captured= |Ship struck= |Ship reinstated= |Ship fate=Captured 15 September 1782 |Ship honours= |Ship notes= }} {{Infobox ship career |Hide header=title |Ship country=Great Britain |Ship flag={{shipboxflag| Kingdom of Great Britain|naval}} |Ship name=HMS Aigle |Ship acquired=September 1782 by capture |Ship commissioned=December 1782 |Ship decommissioned= |Ship in service= |Ship out of service= |Ship renamed= |Ship struck= |Ship reinstated= |Ship honours= |Ship captured= |Ship fate=Wrecked 19 August 1798 |Ship notes= }} {{Infobox ship characteristics |Hide header= |Header caption={{sfnp|Demerliac|1996|p=56, #333}}{{sfnp|Winfield|2008|p=141}} |Ship class= |Ship displacement=1200 tons (French) |Ship tons burthen:1003 (bm) |Ship length=* {{convert|147|ft|5|in|m|1|abbr=on}} at gun deck.{{sfnp|Monaque|2000|p=82}}
|Ship beam={{convert|39|ft|3|in|m|1|abbr=on}} |Ship draught={{convert|5.4|m|1|abbr=on}} |Ship hold depth:{{convert|12|ft|2|in|m|1|abbr=on}} |Ship propulsion=Sail |Ship speed= |Ship range= |Ship endurance= |Ship test depth= |Ship boats= |Ship capacity= |Ship complement=
|Ship time to activate= |Ship sensors= |Ship EW= |Ship armament= *French service: 28 × 24-pounder long guns + 10-14 × 8-pounder guns{{sfnp|Monaque|2000|p=82}}
|Ship armour=Timber |Ship armor= |Ship aircraft= |Ship motto= |Ship nickname= |Ship honours= |Ship notes= |Ship badge= }} |
The French frigate Aigle was launched in 1780 as a privateer. The French Navy purchased her in 1782, but the British captured her that same year and took her into the Royal Navy as the 38-gun fifth rate HMS Aigle. During the French Revolutionary Wars she served primarily in the Mediterranean, where she was wrecked in 1798.
French career
Aigle was built as Saint-Malo as a privateer, and had a private career under Jean Dalbarade. The French Navy purchased her from shipowner Clonard for 450,000 Livres.{{sfnp|Monaque|2000|p=82}} Adapting the privateer to Navy standard was not trivial: she came armed with 28 British 24-pounder long guns, which had to be rebored or replaced to fire the larger French 24-pounder cannonballs, the weight of the French pound being heavier than the British pound.{{sfnp|Monaque|2000|p=82}} Her hull was coppered at Rochefort before she was commissioned in the Navy.{{sfnp|Monaque|2000|p=83}}
In early 1782, Captain Latouche assumed command of Aigle, which, along with the frigate {{ship|French frigate|Gloire|1778|2}} under Captain de Vallongue,{{sfnp|Guérin|1845|p=433}} ferried funds and equipment for the fleet of Admiral Vaudreuil. The ship had a number of guests, among whom Gontaut de Lauzun, Vioménil, Montmorency-Laval, Chabannes, Vauban, Melfort, Talleyrand-Périgord, Champcenetz, Mac-Mahon, Fleury and American Major Porter.{{sfnp|Monaque|2000|p=86}} Gloire was similarly crowded with guests. Latouche had requested permission to bring along fast merchantmen to carry luggage, but Minister Castries denied his request. Nevertheless, the 22-gun merchantman Sophie, carrying Latouche's mistress, followed the division.{{sfnp|Monaque|2000|p=87}} Slower than the warships, she was in tow of Aigle for most of the cruise, and at night Latouche had the division stop to spend the night with his mistress. Vallongue wrote a letter to Castrie to protest.{{sfnp|Monaque|2000|p=88}} The division stopped at the Bay of Angra for three days, after which Sophie detached from the division, around 5 August.{{sfnp|Monaque|2000|p=90}}
On their way, Aigle and Gloire skirmished with the 74-gun HMS Hector in the night Action of 5 September 1782; Hector was sailing to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with a prize crew, under Captain John Bourchier,{{sfnp|Monaque|2000|p=93}} in a convoy under Rear-admiral Graves. Hector was saved from captured when the morning revealed the rest of the convoy and Latouche decided to retreat.{{sfnp|Hepper|1994|p=70}}{{sfnp|Troude|1867|p=207}}
=Capture=
{{further|Action of 15 September 1782}}
Aigle and Gloire captured {{HMS|Racoon|1780|6}} off the Delaware River on 12 September 1782.{{sfnp|Monaque|2000|p=93}} The following day, a small British squadron consisting of {{HMS|Vestal|1779|6}}, {{HMS|Bonetta|1779|6}}, and the prize Sophie, led by Captain G.K. Elphinston in {{HMS|Warwick|1767|6}}, sighted the three vessels anchored in the Delaware River off Cape Henlopen Light. The British set out in chase, but the French were able to navigate the sandbanks with the help of Racoon{{'}}s pilot, who agreed to help the French for a payment of 500 Louis d'or. Still, Aigle ran aground, which enabled the British to capture her, and with her all of Racoon{{'}}s crew. Aigle had had on board some senior French officers, who escaped ashore, as did the now-wealthy pilot.{{efn|The French officers who escaped included "Baron Viomini" [sic] (commander of the French army), Mons. La Va de Montmerancy, Duke Laurun, Viscount de Fleury, and some others. They took most of the treasure she was carrying, as well.}} Latouche had cut away her masts in an attempt to lighten her, and when that failed, had had holes bored in her hull. He remained with her and struck her colours on 15 September.{{efn|Latouche was freed when the peace was signed in 1783.}} Despite the attempts to scuttle Aigle, the British were able to refloat her and took her into service under her own name. Gloire and Racoon escaped.{{London Gazette|issue=12388|pages=3–4|date=12 November 1782}}
British career
The British commissioned Aigle under Captain Richard Creyk in December 1782 for the Leeward Islands station. She was paid off in August 1783.{{cite web|url=http://www.nmm.ac.uk/upload/pdf/Warship_Histories_Vessels_v.pdf|archive-url=http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20110802041628/http://www.nmm.ac.uk/upload/pdf/Warship_Histories_Vessels_v.pdf|url-status=dead|archive-date=2 August 2011|title=NMM, vessel ID 379533|work=Warship Histories, vol v|publisher=National Maritime Museum|access-date=30 July 2011}}
In December 1792 Captain John Nicholson Inglefield commissioned Agile. On 7 April 1793 he sailed for the Mediterranean. Shortly thereafter, the British were dissatisfied with the actions of the neutral Genoa, in allowing the French frigate {{HMS|Modeste|1793|2}} and two French tartanes to 'insult' and 'molest' Aigle while she was also in Genoa.
On 10 August 1794, Aigle was present at the surrender of Calvi, on the island of Corsica. She therefore shared in the first grant of £6000 in prize money.{{London Gazette|issue=14088|page=113|date=3 February 1798}}
In 1795 Captain Samuel Hood took command. On 9 December 1795, the French frigate Sensible and corvette Sardine captured {{HMS|Nemesis|1780|2}} while she was at anchor in the neutral port of Smyrna. Nemesis did not resist but Samuel Hood Linzee, captain of Nemesis, protested the illegality of the action. The British frigates Aigle and {{HMS|Cyclops|1779|2}} blockaded the three ships until Ganteaume's squadron drove the British ships off. The French sailed Nemesis to Tunis in January 1796, but the British recaptured her on 9 March. Samuel Hood's replacement, in April 1797, was Captain Charles Tyler.{{efn|Tyler brought with him his protege George Nicholas Hardinge.}}
In 1797 Aigle captured several French privateers. On 13 June she captured a brig of six guns and 24 men off Lisbon. The vessel was eight days out of Bordeaux, on her way to Île de France.{{London Gazette|issue=14029|page=677|date=18 July 1797}}
On 16 April, Aigle was in company with {{HMS|Boston|1762|2}} when Boston captured the French privateer Enfant de la Patrie.{{London Gazette|issue=15187|page=989|date=24 September 1799}} Enfant de la Patrie was armed with 16 guns and had a crew of 130 men. She surrendered after a chase of six hours, and after her captain, who reportedly was drunk, had fired at Boston and run into her, with the result that five of his men were killed, he himself drowned, and ten men were wounded.{{London Gazette|issue=14010|page=447|date=16 May 1797}}
On 12 June, Aigle and Boston captured the French brig Henrietté.{{London Gazette|issue=15241|page=289|date=22 March 1800}} Henrietté (or Hariotte), was a privateer of six guns.
Then on 30 July, she, with Boston in company, captured the French privateer lugger Hazard of eight guns and 50 men. Hazard was from Bayonne, but on this cruise she had last left Corunna. She had made no captures. Then on 13 August Aigle captured the French privateer lugger La Manche (or La Mouche), of eight guns and eight swivel guns, and 49 men. She was 13 days out of Nantes and had made no captures. She was sent into Lisbon and sold there. Four days later, Tyler observed two vessels sailing out of the Bay of Lax. He ordered his lugger to cut them out. The weather prevented the lugger from bringing one out, a brig, so Tyler had her cargo of rice taken out and then burnt the vessel, which was Spanish, bound for Corunna.{{London Gazette|issue=14063|page=1066|date=7 November 1797}}
On 13 October, Aigle and Boston captured the Spanish packet ship Patagon. She was sent into Lisbon and sold there.{{London Gazette|issue=15054|page=817|date=28 August 1798}}
At the end of November, on the 30th, Aigle captured a French privateer of four guns and 52 men. She had taken three English merchant vessels and sent one into Lachs Bay. Tyler sent Aigle{{'}}s master, Mr. Tritton, with 20 men to bring her out. She turned out to be the Requin. That same evening they also captured a Spanish ship with a cargo of sardines, and sent her into Lisbon.{{London Gazette|issue=14086|page=88|date=27 January 1798}}
The day after Christmas, Aigle was in company with {{HMS|Aurora|1777|2}} chased three vessels into the bay of Corunna, where they captured their quarry. Tyler left Aurora in charge of the prizes while he chased a strange sail. When he got back, he discovered that one had capsized, but her crew had been saved. The two remaining prizes were carrying hemp, coals, and nails.
On 4 January 1798 Aigle captured a French privateer off the coast of Corunna. The privateer carried 20 guns and crew of 90 men. She was eight days out of Lorient and had not made any captures. Tyler noted that the prize was coppered and a fast sailer.{{London Gazette|issue=14088|page=110|date=3 February 1798}} She turned out to be Minerve.{{London Gazette|issue=15086|page=1175|date=4 December 1798}}
On 13 January {{HMS|Gorgon|1785|2}} captured the French privateer Henri, from Nantes. She carried 14 guns, five of which she had thrown overboard during the chase. She also had a crew of 108 men. She had been cruising for five days but had taken nothing. Captain Richard Williams of Gorgon put a prize crew aboard and took her with him into Lisbon. The prize crew consisted mostly of 16 men from Aigle, plus Mr. Tritton.{{London Gazette|issue=14088|page=111|date=3 February 1798}}
Fate
Aigle was under Tyler's command when she was wrecked on 19 August 1798 on Plane Island off Cape Farina, Tunisia, due to an error in navigation. All the crew were saved.{{sfnp|Hepper|1994|p=87}} Tyler was also acquitted of the loss.
Notes
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Citations
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References
- {{cite book | title=La marine de Louis XVI : nomenclature des navires français de 1774 à 1792 |first=Alain |last=Demerliac | publisher=Omega | year=1996 | oclc=1254967392 | url=http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k33635560 | language=fr }}
- {{cite book|title=Les marins illustres de la France|last=Guérin|first=Léon|author-link=Léon Guérin|year=1845|publisher=Belin-Leprieur et Morizot|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uutuoMfBe4AC|language=fr}}
- {{cite book|last=Hepper|first=David J.|year=1994|title=British Warship Losses in the Age of Sail, 1650-1859|publisher=Jean Boudriot|location=Rotherfield|isbn=0-948864-30-3}}
- {{Cite book|last=Monaque|first=Rémi|author-link=Rémi Monaque|title=Les aventures de Louis-René de Latouche-Tréville, compagnon de La Fayette et commandant de l'Hermione|year=2000|location=Paris|publisher=SPM|language=fr}}
- {{Cite book|first=Onésime-Joachim|last=Troude|author-link=Onésime-Joachim Troude|year=1867|publisher=Challamel ainé|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TwZv6FX-RpsC|title=Batailles navales de la France|language=fr|volume=1}}
- {{cite book |first=Rif|last=Winfield|title=British Warships in the Age of Sail 1793–1817: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates|publisher=Seaforth Publishing|year=2008|isbn=978-1-86176-246-7}}
{{WarshipHist}}
{{1798 shipwrecks}}
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Category:Privateer ships of France
Category:Sailing frigates of the French Navy
Category:Frigates of the Royal Navy
Category:Ships built in France
Category:Maritime incidents in 1782
Category:Shipwrecks of the Delaware coast