French frigate Junon (1778)

{{Other ships|French ship Junon}}

{{Infobox ship begin}}

{{Infobox ship image

|Ship image=Combat de la frégate française la Junon contre la frégate anglaise Fox en septembre 1778.jpg

|Ship caption=A painting of the capture of HMS Fox by Junon (right)

}}

{{Infobox ship career

|Hide header=

|Ship country=France

|Ship flag=Image:Flag of the Kingdom of France (1814-1830).svg

|Ship name=Junon

|Ship ordered=

|Ship builder=Rochefort

|Ship laid down=September 1777

|Ship launched= March 1778

|Ship acquired=

|Ship commissioned=

|Ship decommissioned=

|Ship in service=May 1778

|Ship out of service=

|Ship wrecked=October 1780

|Ship struck=

|Ship reinstated=

|Ship fate=Wrecked by the Great Hurricane of 1780 on 11 October 1780 in Kingstown Harbour, St. Vincent and the Grenadines

|Ship honours=

|Ship notes=

}}

{{Infobox ship characteristics

|Hide header=

|Header caption=

|Ship class={{sclass|Charmante|frigate}}

|Ship tons burthen=535 tonnes

|Ship length={{convert|44.2|m|ftin|abbr=on}}

|Ship beam={{convert|11.2|m|ftin|abbr=on}}

|Ship draught={{convert|5.4|m|ftin|abbr=on}}

|Ship draft=

|Ship propulsion=

|Ship complement=

|Ship armament=32 guns

|Ship notes=

}}

Junon was a 32-gun {{sclass|Charmante|frigate}} of the French Navy.

Career

Junon took part in the Battle of Ushant under Louis Guillouet, comte d'Orvilliers. She captured the 28-gun {{HMS|Fox|1773|6}} on 11 September 1778. Junon tried unsuccessfully to rake Fox from astern but then closed and the two ships exchanged broadsides; Junon fired into Fox{{'}}s hull rather than at her rigging and managed to topple all three masts and cause significant casualties before Fox surrendered.{{sfnp|Hepper|1994|p=53}}

File:Ardent captured mg 0562.jpg]]

On 17 August 1779, under captain Charles de Bernard de Marigny and along with {{ship|French frigate|Gentille|1778|2}}, she captured the 64-gun third rate {{HMS|Ardent|1764|6}} after posing as a British frigate but then hoisting French colors and firing several unanswered broadsides into the larger vessel.{{sfnp|Hepper|1994|p=55-56}} On 13 September 1780, under Lieutenant Kergariou Locmaria, she captured the 18-gun naval sloop {{HMS|Rover|1779|6}} after an overnight chase and a fierce firefight that destroyed Rover{{'}}s rigging.{{sfnp|Hepper|1994|p=59}}

In October 1780, Junon sailed from Martinique to St. Vincent towing a schooner to deliver hospital supplies to the island, which had recently come under French control. Junon anchored beneath the cliffs in Kingstown Harbour and, due to a broken barometer, had no warning when the island was struck by a hurricane. The massive storm, known as the Great Hurricane of 1780, battered the frigate against the cliffs and caused her to sink on 11 October 1780, although her captain managed to lead the entire crew off the ship and up the cliffs in safety.

Archaeological investigations

From December 1997 to January 1998 the Junon shipwreck was investigated by an archaeological team sponsored by the Institute of Maritime History and Florida State University and directed by David Johnson and Chuck Meide. The site was initially thought to be that of the British slave ship Africa , but archaeologists soon realized the size of the wreck and caliber of its guns suggested it was a small warship rather than a slave ship or privateer. After raising a cannon and finding it to be a French 12-pounder naval gun dated 1776, it was realized the ship was most likely a late 18th-century French frigate. Confirmation that the wreck was that of the Junon came over twenty years later after the discovery of archival documents in France by archaeologist Jean-Sébastien Guibert of the University of the French Antilles. Guibert led a second archaeological expedition to the wreck of Junon in October 2021. The 2021 expedition consisted of a French team along with American archaeologist Chuck Meide from the original 1997-1998 investigation. Guibert returned to the site of the Junon with a French and American team to conduct additional excavation in 2023.{{cite journal | url=https://www.academia.edu/3383530| title=In Soufreries Shadow: An Introduction to an Historic Shipwreck in Kingstown Harbour, St. Vincent and the Grenadines | journal=Underwater Archaeology | date=1998 | last=Johnson, David | first=Meide, Chuck | volume=edited by Lawrence E. Babits, Catherine Fach, and Ryan Harris, pp.79-87}}{{cite web | access-date=2020-02-14 | url=http://www.maritimehistory.org/content/kingstown-harbour-shipwreck-project| title=The Kingstown Harbour Shipwreck Project | website=www.maritimehistory.org}}{{cite web | access-date=2022-03-20 | url=https://uswpm01.newsmemory.com/searchlight/news/press-release/2021/10/29/team-studies-wreck-of-french-frigate-lost-in-kingstown-in-1780/| title= Team studies wreck of French frigate lost in Kingstown in 1780 | website=www.searchlight.vc/| date=29 October 2021}}

References

{{Reflist}}

;Bibliography

Guibert, Jean-Sébastien, Hélène Botcazou, Chuck Meide and Christopher K. Waters

2022 Preliminary Report: Naval Shipwrecks in the West Indies During the American Revolution (1774-1783). In ACUA Underwater Archaeology Proceedings 2022, edited by Sarah E. Holland and Paul F. Johnston, pp. 17-24. Advisory Council on Underwater Archaeology, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

  • {{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=9780948864308 }}

Johnson, David A. and Chuck Meide

1998 In Soufrerie's Shadow: An Introduction to an Historic Shipwreck in Kingstown Harbour, St. Vincent and the Grenadines. In Underwater Archaeology, edited by Lawrence E. Babits, Catherine Fach and Ryan Harris, pp. 79-87. Proceedings from the 1998 Conference on Historical and Underwater Archaeology, Society for Historical Archaeology, Atlanta, Georgia.