HMS Roebuck (1774)

{{short description|1774 ship of the Royal Navy}}

{{other ships|HMS Roebuck}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2017}}

{{Use British English|date=March 2017}}

{{Infobox ship begin

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{{Infobox ship image

| Ship image = Forcing a Passage of the Hudson.jpg

| Ship caption = Roebuck with Phoenix, Tartar and three smaller vessels passing forts Washington and Lee on the Hudson River

}}

{{Infobox ship career

| Hide header =

| Ship country = Great Britain

| Ship flag = {{shipboxflag|Kingdom of Great Britain|naval}}

| Ship name = HMS Roebuck

| Ship namesake =

| Ship ordered = 30 November 1769

| Ship awarded =

| Ship builder =

| Ship original cost = £18,911.0.6d

| Ship laid down = October 1770

| Ship launched = 24 April 1774

| Ship christened =

| Ship completed = 4 August 1775

| Ship acquired =

| Ship commissioned =

| Ship decommissioned =

| Ship homeport =

| Ship motto =

| Ship honours =

| Ship fate =Broken up 1811

| Ship notes =

| Ship badge =

}}

{{Infobox ship characteristics

| Hide header =

| Header caption =

| Ship class = Fifth-rate

| Ship tons burthen = 879 {{small|{{Fraction|26|94}}}} (bm)

| Ship length = *{{convert|140|ft|1}} (gundeck)

  • {{convert|115|ft|9|in|1}} (keel)

| Ship beam = {{convert|37|ft|9 + 1/2|in|m|1}}

| Ship height =

| Ship draught =

| Ship depth =

| Ship hold depth = {{convert|16|ft|4|in|m|0}}

| Ship decks =

| Ship deck clearance =

| Ship propulsion = Sails

| Ship sail plan = Fully-rigged ship

| Ship speed =

| Ship range =

| Ship boats =

| Ship capacity =

| Ship troops =

| Ship complement = 280–300

| Ship armament = *Lower deck: 20 × 18-pounder guns

  • Upper deck: 22 × 9-pounder guns
  • (later upgraded to 12-pounder guns)
  • Quarterdeck: nil
  • Forecastle: 2 × 6-pounder guns

| Ship notes =

}}

HMS Roebuck was a fifth-rate ship of the Royal Navy which served in the American and French Revolutionary Wars. Designed in 1769 by Sir Thomas Slade to operate in the shallower waters of North America, she joined Lord Howe's squadron towards the end of 1775 and took part in operations against New York the following year. She engaged the American gun batteries at Red Hook during the Battle of Long Island in August 1776, and forced a passage up the Hudson River in October. On 25 August 1777, Roebuck escorted troopships to Turkey Point, Maryland, where an army was landed for an assault on Philadelphia. She was again called upon to accompany troopships in December 1779, this time for an attack on Charleston. When the ships-of-the-line, which were too large to enter the harbour, were sent back to New York, Admiral Marriot Arbuthnot made Roebuck his flagship. She was, therefore, at the front of the attack, leading the British squadron across the shoal to engage Fort Moultrie and the American ships beyond.

After the American Revolutionary War ended in October 1783, Roebuck underwent repairs at Sheerness and was refitted as a hospital ship. She served in this capacity during the French Revolutionary war and was with the British fleet under Vice-Admiral Sir John Jervis that captured Martinique, Guadeloupe and St Lucia in 1794. Recommissioned as a troopship in July 1799, during the War of the Second Coalition, Roebuck joined the Anglo-Russian invasion of Holland and was part of the fleet, under the command of Vice-Admiral Sir Andrew Mitchell, to which the Dutch surrendered in the Vlieter Incident. Following the Treaty of Amiens in March 1802, Roebuck was paid off and laid up in ordinary at Woolwich Dockyard. When the War of the Third Coalition broke out in May 1803, she was brought back into service as a guardship at Leith, flying the flags of Vice-Admiral Richard Rodney Bligh and then Rear-Admiral James Vashon under whom she later transferred to Great Yarmouth. In March 1806, she became a receiving ship and in 1810 the flagship of Lord Gardner. Roebuck was broken up at Sheerness in July 1811.

Construction and armament

Roebuck was the prototype of the {{sclass|Roebuck|ship|0}} ships, two-deck, fifth-rate ships built to operate in the shallower waters of North America.Winfield (2007) p. 176{{#tag:ref|The design was so successful, the Admiralty requested four more within a year of Roebuck's launch. By September 1781, a total of nineteen Roebuck-class ships had been ordered.|group=Note}} She was designed by renowned naval architect Sir Thomas Slade in 1769 as an improvement on his Phoenix model, and ordered by the Admiralty on 30 November. Her keel of {{convert|115|ft|9|in|1}} was laid down in October the following year at Chatham Dockyard.

As built, Roebuck was {{convert|140|ft|1}} long at the gundeck, with a beam of {{convert|37|ft|9 + 1/2|in|m|1}} and a depth in the hold of {{convert|16|ft|4|in|m|0}}. She measured 879 {{small|{{Fraction|26|94}}}} tons burthen. Launched on 24 April 1774 and completed by 4 August 1775, Roebuck cost £18,911.0.6d plus a further £1,749.5.5d for fitting.

Roebuck was built with two rows of windows in the stern, giving the illusion of an extra deck, but behind them was a single-level cabin. The design was eventually phased out for Roebuck-class ships completed after {{HMS|Dolphin|1781|6}}. Most of the remaining ships of the class had a traditional frigate-style stern.

On her lower gun deck, Roebuck carried twenty 18-pounder long gun guns. Her upper deck originally had twenty-two {{convert|9|pdr|adj=on}} guns but these were later upgraded to 12-pounder long gun guns. There were two {{convert|6|pdr|adj=on}} guns on the forecastle but the quarterdeck was devoid of armament. When fully manned, Roebuck had a complement of 280 officers and enlisted men. This was increased to 300 in 1783.

Service

=American Revolutionary War=

First commissioned by Captain Andrew Snape Hamond in July 1775, Roebuck left for North America in September, joining Lord Howe's squadron and taking part in operations against New York the following year. On 25 March 1776, she was cruising alone off Cape Henlopen when she ran aground. She suffered no damage, enabling her crew to get her off and into deep water where she was anchored. The following day, a sail was sighted in the bay and Hamond sent two of the ship's boats to investigate. The craft turned out to be a small American schooner, which the crew abandoned on seeing the British boats approaching. The newly acquired prize and Roebuck{{'}}s tender then pursued and caught two sloops.Journal of HMS Roebuck, Captain Andrew Snape Hammond p. 596 On 28 March, Roebuck{{'}}s boats were again in action, taking another sloop. In the afternoon, her tender narrowly avoided capture by the American 10-gun sloop {{USS|Hornet|1775|2}}. On hearing of the encounter, Roebuck set off in pursuit of the American vessel but was unable to locate her.Journal of HMS Roebuck, Captain Andrew Snape Hammond pp. 596–598

Roebuck took part in the Battle of Long Island on 27 August 1776, attacking the American gun batteries at Red Hook.Lossing p. 809 On 9 October she was in action on the Hudson River, with HMS Phoenix and {{HMS|Tartar|1756|6}}, where she destroyed two armed galleys and forced her way upstream, whilst engaging, on either side, the two forts of Washington and Lee.Clowes (Vol.III) p. 386 Between 10 March and 21 December 1776, Howe's squadron captured or destroyed 166 vessels, of which Roebuck claimed partial responsibility for at least twenty-three.{{London Gazette|issue=11769|pages=1–3|date=10 May 1777}} In April 1777, she took two warships, the 14-gun Carolina State Navy Defence and the 10-gun {{USS|Sachem|1776|6}}.{{London Gazette|issue=12427|page=2|date=29 March 1783}}

In August 1777, the British were planning to land an army at the head of the Elk River with the object of securing Philadelphia. Because of Hamond's familiarity with the local waters, Roebuck, which had hitherto been involved in operations on the Delaware River, was withdrawn to mark out a channel through Chesapeake Bay for Howe's 267-strong flotilla. Roebuck, with the 32-gun Apollo and four smaller vessels, escorted the troopships up the river on 25 August and provided cover while the army disembarked about {{convert|6|mi|km|spell=in}} from Turkey Point.{{London Gazette|issue=11818|page=1|date=28 October 1777}}{{#tag:ref|The four other vessels were {{HMS|Sphynx|1763|2}} and {{HMS|Vigilant|1777|2}}, both of 20 guns, the 16-gun Senegal, and the 14-gun {{HMS|Swift|1777|2}}.|group=Note}}

==Assault on Philadelphia==

Following the defeat of an American force at the Battle of Brandywine and its subsequent retreat to Philadelphia in September, Howe led Roebuck and a squadron of small vessels up the Delaware where the Americans had erected redoubts overlooking the river and sunk obstructions to prevent its navigation.Lossing pp. 291–292 At Billingsport, a large earthworks and gun battery protected a channel, blocked with a submerged cheval de frise. This impediment was constructed of large wooden frames, filled with stones and fronting iron-tipped spears. Stationed along the river were floating batteries and gunboats, and {{convert|3|mi|adj=}} further upstream, another set of obstacles had been sunk between Fort Mifflin and Fort Mercer.

File:British Operations on the Delaware in 1777.png before travelling up the river to engage the American fleet|alt=Outline map of the Delaware River and the shores of New Jersey and Pennsylvania, just south of Philadelphia. The movements of the British and American forces during October and November 1777 are marked on the map]]

File:Representation of the action off Mud Fort in the River Delaware - (coloured).jpg on 15 November 1777]]

The British captured Philadelphia on 26 September but control of the river was crucial to keeping their forces there supplied. Hamond offered to force a channel at Billing's Point, if Howe could muster sufficient men to put the fort there out of action. Two regiments from Chester, Pennsylvania, crossed the river and chased off the American garrison while the men of Roebuck breached a {{convert|7|ft|m|adj=on|spell=in}} opening for Roebuck, {{HMS|Augusta|1763|2}}, two frigates, a sloop and a galley to sail through. After unsuccessful attempts to take the forts Mifflin and Mercer, the six British vessels were subjected to heavy fire when they engaged the American flotilla at the Battle of Red Bank. Augusta ran aground and caught fire, and the sloop, Merlin, blew up; Roebuck and the remaining force broke off the attack and returned to Billingsport.Lossing pp. 295–296

Still requiring a supply route to Philadelphia but unable to open up the Delaware while Fort Mifflin was occupied, Howe took possession of Province Island in November and began erecting gun batteries. Following a six-day bombardment, the Americans abandoned the fort. Two days later Fort Mercer also fell, leaving the British free to work their way upriver in pursuit of the enemy fleet which was later scuttled at Gloucester.Lossing pp. 296–299 By 18 May 1778, Roebuck was in Philadelphia where she took part in celebrations, held in honour of Howe and his brother William who was Commander-in-Chief of the British land forces.Lossing pp. 303–304

In July 1778, Roebuck was at Sandy Hook, near New York Bay, and in August she took part in an action against a French fleet. France had entered the war on the American side in February that year. On 29 July, the French fleet from Toulon, commanded by Charles Hector, comte d'Estaing, arrived in Narragansett Bay, and the next day they began raiding British positions on Conanicut and Goat Island.Clowes (Vol.III) pp. 402–403 On 8 August, 4,000 French soldiers and sailors were landed to reinforce the 10,000 American troops who had just crossed from the mainland to attack the British garrison on Rhode Island.Clowes (Vol.III) p. 403 Howe's fleet arrived off Point Judith on 9 August and, fearing the British might soon be reinforced, d'Estaing sailed out the next morning while he still had superior numbers and guns.Clowes (Vol.III) p. 405 Several days of manoeuvring, in which both parties sought the weather gage, were curtailed by a violent gale which scattered the fleets.Clowes (Vol.III) pp. 405–408 The storm abated on 13 August, leaving Roebuck, Apollo, {{HMS|Centurion|1774|2}}, {{HMS|Ardent|1764|2}}, {{HMS|Richmond|1757|2}}, {{HMS|Vigilant|1777|2}}, and Phoenix within sight of each other. Apollo, then serving as Howe's flagship, had lost two masts during the previous night and Roebuck, also with a mast missing, was ordered to escort her to Sandy Hook. Howe moved his flag to Phoenix and, after searching for the French fleet, followed a few days later.{{London Gazette|issue=11921|page=5|date=24 October 1778}}

Roebuck captured an American privateer in February 1779, before setting sail for Woolwich where she underwent a refit and had her hull sheathed in copper. This took until April.

File:Sullivans-island-1050x777.jpg

==Operations against Charleston==

Roebuck returned to American waters by 5 December 1779, when she captured the American privateer, Lady Washington. Then, with five ships-of-the-line, the 50-gun {{HMS|Renown|1774|2}}, the 44-gun {{HMS|Romulus|1777|2}}, four sixth-rate frigates and two 20-gun sloops, she accompanied transports, carrying 7,550 troops for an attack on Charleston. Under the command of Admiral Marriot Arbuthnot, the ships left New York on 26 December and in January 1780, in need of repairs, called in at Savannah, captured by the British the previous month.Clowes (Vol. IV) pp. 47–48 From there, the convoy proceeded to the North Edisto River where the army disembarked on 10 February. The troops marched the {{convert|30|mi|adj=}} overland and occupied James Island, while the ships sailed to the entrance and effected a blockade of Charleston harbour.Clowes (Vol. IV) p. 48 Some of Roebuck{{'}}s company were among the 450 seamen and marines later sent to lay siege to the town. The 64-gun and 74-gun ships-of-the-line, being too large to be of any use in the shallow waters around the harbour, left for New York in March 1780, leaving Renown, Romulus, {{HMS|Blonde|1760|2}}, {{USS|Raleigh|1776|2}}, {{HMS|Perseus|1776|2}}, {{HMS|Camilla|1776|2}}, and Roebuck, to which Arbuthnot moved his flag. These ships were lightened while they awaited a high enough tide and favourable conditions to carry them over the sandbank which lay across the entrance to the harbour.{{London Gazette|issue=12078|page=4|date=25 April 1780}}

On 9 April Roebuck led the squadron across the bar. An exchange of heavy fire while passing Fort Moultrie resulted in considerable damage to the masts and rigging of the British ships and the loss of 27 lives. The expedition continued to James Island and anchored, whereupon it came under attack from the batteries at Charleston. Some of the shot passed right through Roebuck but she did not return fire. Consequently, she was thought to be out of range and the bombardment soon stopped. An American naval force which included the frigates {{USS|Providence|1776 frigate|2}}, {{USS|Boston|1777|2}} and {{USS|Queen of France|1777|2}}, Bricole of 44 guns, a large polacca and two armed brigs were to oppose the British fleet at Fort Moultrie but instead retired to the Cooper River where some were scuttled.Simms pp. 83 & 99{{#tag:ref|The ships sunk in the Cooper River were Truite, Notre Dame, Queen of France, Bricole and some smaller vessels. All were stripped of their armament which was used to reinforce the American batteries. Boston, Providence, Ranger and the galleys were taken to Charleston where some of the guns were removed to form additional defences for the town.Simms p. 99 |group=Note}} This action later denied the British control of the river; on 7 May, they instead landed seamen and marines near Mount Pleasant, where they captured a battery and went on to force the surrender of Fort Moultrie. Some of Roebuck{{'}}s crew were used in these land operations.Clowes (Vol. IV) p. 49 The town capitulated on 11 May and the remaining American ships were subsequently captured. The crew of Roebuck were awarded a share of the prize money for the frigates Boston and Providence.{{London Gazette|issue=12335|page=2|date=28 September 1782}} Hamond was ordered to England with dispatches on 15 May 1780, and was succeeded in command of Roebuck by his nephew, Andrew Snape Douglas.Jones, Clarke, Jones (1811) p. 354

==Blockade duty==

Roebuck was absent from the fleet during a violent storm on 23 January 1781. The British had been blockading the French in Newport and were still repairing their weather-beaten ships on 8 February, when Arbuthnot received information that a French 64-gun ship and two frigates had left Rhode Island for Virginia. He immediately dispatched HMS Charlestown (the captured and renamed USS Boston) to find Roebuck, {{HMS|Chatham|1758|2}} and Romulus, which he knew to be somewhere off Carolina with some frigates, and ordered them to intercept. The message was received too late, however, and Romulus was thus alone and unaware, when she was captured by the French squadron returning from its aborted mission.{{London Gazette|issue=12181|pages=1–2|date=21 April 1781}}

While Roebuck was cruising with {{HMS|Orpheus|1780|6}} off the coast of Delaware on 14 April 1781, they captured the 36-gun frigate, {{USS|Confederacy|1778|6}}.{{London Gazette|issue=12420|page=2|date=4 March 1783}} She had been on her way from the West Indies to Washington with supplies for the Continental Army. Taken into service as HMS Confederate, she became, at that time, the largest 36-gun ship in the Royal Navy.Clowes (Vol.IV) p. 63 The following month, Roebuck was with {{HMS|Medea|1778|6}} when they captured the 28-gun {{ship||Protector|1779 frigate|2}} near Sandy Hook.{{London Gazette|issue=12484|page=3|date=14 October 1783}} Douglas received another commission in July and was replaced by Captain John Orde. In the summer of 1781, Roebuck set sail for Europe with Arbuthnot, who was to be redeployed, and dispatches from Sir Henry Clinton and Lord Rawdon.{{London Gazette|issue=12212|page=1|date=31 July 1781}} She briefly returned to American waters where she captured the French privateer Providence on 24 February 1782. Afterwards, she was sent to the North Sea station where she finished her war service, paying off in April 1783.

=French Revolutionary Wars=

File:Capture of Fort Louis, Martinique, 1794.jpg

After a survey in October 1783, Roebuck underwent repairs at Sheerness which took until February 1785 and cost £11,038.0.10d. In June 1790, Roebuck was recommissioned as a hospital ship and, following renewed hostilities with France in the War of the First Coalition, served in this capacity at the capture of Martinique in March 1794.{{London Gazette|issue=13641|page=336|date=17 April 1794}}Clowes (Vol. IV) p. 247 On 2 February a British fleet under Vice-admiral Sir John Jervis and 6,100 troops under Lieutenant-general Sir Charles Grey left Barbados.Clowes (Vol. IV) pp. 246–247 The troops were landed on Martinique on 5 February and by 16 March had gained control of the whole island, save the town of Fort Royal and the forts Bourbon and Louis.Clowes (Vol. IV) p. 247 Seaman and marines from the fleet then joined the troops in laying siege to the town and the forts.Clowes (Vol. IV) pp. 247–248 The whole of Martinique had surrendered by 22 March.Clowes (Vol. IV) p. 248 Leaving a contingent to hold the island, the British left for St Lucia on 31 March, capturing it on 4 April. Jervis then took his fleet to Guadeloupe, forcing the capitulation of Grande-Terre and Basse-Terre on 12 and 20 April respectively.Clowes (Vol. IV) pp. 248–249 The British were ousted from St Lucia by the French the following year, but in May 1796, Roebuck returned, part of a force that repossessed it.Howard p. 72{{London Gazette|issue=15265|page=623|date=7 June 1800}}

==Anglo-Dutch War==

The French intervention in the Dutch Republic and subsequent exile of William V, Prince of Orange in January 1795 led to the formation of the French-allied Batavian Republic, upon which Britain immediately declared war.Ball pp. 1–3

Roebuck was serving in support of the war in the Leeward Islands, under Rear Admiral Henry Harvey, when on 6 July 1797, she captured Batave, a Dutch 10-gun privateer, just off Barbados.{{London Gazette|issue=14045|page=881|date=12 September 1797}}{{#tag:ref|Also listed as Bataaf with 12 guns.Clowes (Vol.IV) p. 558 |group=Note}} More captures followed in February 1798; a brig William and a schooner Betsey were captured on 8 February but both were later condemned by a prize court.{{London Gazette|issue=15299|page=1146|date=4 October 1800}} While cruising off Martinique on 19 February, Roebuck fell in with and captured a French 10-gun privateer, Parfait.{{London Gazette|issue=15013|page=378|date=5 May 1798}} Arriving in Deptford in November 1798, Roebuck was refitted as a troopship, at a cost of £10,044. She was recommissioned in July 1799.Winfield (2008) p. 125

Roebuck was part of the fleet, under the command of Vice-Admiral Sir Andrew Mitchell, that took part in the Anglo-Russian Invasion of Holland and to which the Dutch surrendered in the Vlieter roadstead on 30 August 1799.{{London Gazette|issue=15531|page=1184|date=9 November 1802}} Two days previous, the fleet had captured four Dutch ships and two hulks in Hollands Diep.{{London Gazette|issue=15454|page=168|date=16 February 1802}} Believing Dutch public opinion was against the republic and in favour of restoring the monarchy, the British government began preparing an invasion force as early as June.Clowes (Vol. IV) p. 407 Comprising 27,000 men and 250 vessels, the force arrived off the Dutch coast under a flag of truce on 21 August. Terms were not agreed however and British troops were landed on 27 August. The fortifications at Den Helder were captured the next day and the ships in the Diep were taken.Clowes (Vol. IV) p. 409 Mitchell's squadron entered the Vlieter on the morning of 30 August. The Dutch fleet within surrendered without a shot being fired on either side.Clowes (Vol. IV) pp. 409–410

On 12 November 1799 Roebuck arrived in the Downs with 500 men of the 20th Regiment of Foot after a 12-day passage from Holland in bad weather."Ship News". 13 November 1799,

The Times (London, England) issue: 4638.

Roebuck and {{HMS|Dictator|1783|6}} left Plymouth for Cork, Ireland, on 31 January 1800 with the 46th (South Devon) Foot Regiment.Jones, Clarke, Jones (1800) p. 152 They returned to England with {{HMS|Trusty|1782|6}} on 24 March, having carried the 54th Regiment from Ireland to Portsmouth. Roebuck left there on 9 April with a convoy for the Downs.Jones, Clarke, Jones (1800) p. 329

Between March and September 1801, Roebuck was involved in operations against Egypt.{{London Gazette|issue=17915|page=633|date=19 April 1823}} Because Roebuck served in the navy's Egyptian campaign (8 March to 2 September 1801), her officers and crew qualified for the clasp "Egypt" to the Naval General Service Medal, which the Admiralty issued in 1847 to all surviving claimants.{{London Gazette|issue=21077|pages=791–792|date=15 March 1850}}

=Napoleonic Wars=

On 21 March 1802 Roebuck, armed en flute, came into Portsmouth from the Mediterranean and immediately went into quarantine. She was carrying the Queen's German Regiment (96th Regiment of Foot)."Ship News", 23 March 1802 Morning Post (London, England) Issue: 10440."NAVAL JOURNAL". Hampshire/Portsmouth Telegraph Leeds, England

29 March 1802 Issue 129.

The Treaty of Amiens was ratified in March 1802 and two months later Roebuck was paid off and laid up in ordinary at Woolwich Dockyard. The peace was short-lived; hostilities resumed in May 1803, and in July Roebuck was recommissioned as a guardship at Leith.Winfield (2008) p. 126 She served in this capacity as the flagship of Vice-Admiral Richard Rodney Bligh between November and the following February. Between April and October 1805, she flew the flag of Rear-Admiral James Vashon, first at Leith, then from September at Great Yarmouth. In March 1806, she became a receiving ship, flying the flag of Lord Gardner from some point in 1810 until she was broken up at Sheerness Dockyard in July 1811.

Prizes

class="wikitable" style="width:85%; align-center"

!colspan="6" | Vessels captured or destroyed for which Roebuck's crew received full or partial credit

Date|| Ship || Nationality|| Type ||Fate || Ref.
March to December 1776

| Maria

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Not recorded

| Captured

|{{London Gazette|issue=11769|page=2|date=10 May 1777}}

March to December 1776

| Grace

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Not recorded

| Captured

|

March to December 1776

| Not recorded

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Sloop

| Destroyed

|

March to December 1776

| Not recorded

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Pilot boat

| Destroyed

|

27 March 1776

| Polly

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Sloop

| Captured

|

27 March 1776

| Not recorded

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Sloop

| Captured

|

28 March 1776

| Dove

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Sloop

| Destroyed off Cape Henlopen

|

29 March 1776

| Dolphin

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Sloop

| Destroyed off Cape Henlopen

|

29 March 1776

| Betsey

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Sloop

| Destroyed off Cape Henlopen

|

March to December 1776

| Sally

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Not recorded

| Destroyed off Cape Henlopen

|

March to April 1776

| Chance

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Ship

| Captured

|{{London Gazette|issue=11947|page=2|date=23 January 1779}}

March to April 1776

| Juno

| Not recorded

| Brig

| Captured

|

March to December 1776

| Dove

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Not recorded

| Cut-out from Egg Harbour

|

March to December 1776

| Cazia

| Not recorded

| Not recorded

| Captured

|

March to April 1776

| Dolphin

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Schooner

| Captured

|

March to April 1776

| Ranger

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Pilot vessel

| Captured

|

December 1776

| Little John

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Schooner

| Captured

|

March to December 1776

| Dolphin

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Merchant vessel

| Captured

|

March to December 1776

| Suzannah

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Merchant vessel

| Captured

|

December 1776

| Pigeon

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Sloop

| Captured

|{{London Gazette|issue=11952|page=3|date=9 February 1779}}

March to December 1776

| Success

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Merchant vessel

| Captured

|

March to December 1776

| Two Friends

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Not recorded

| Captured

|

December 1776

| Adventure

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Brigantine

| Captured

|

March to December 1776

| Delight

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Merchant vessel

| Captured

|

March to December 1776

| New York

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Brig

| Captured

|{{London Gazette|issue=11951|page=4|date=6 February 1779}}

9 October 1776

| Independence

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Galley

| Destroyed in North River

|{{London Gazette|issue=11769|page=3|date=10 May 1777}}

9 October 1776

| Crane

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Galley

| Destroyed in North River

|

January 1777

| Speedwell

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Sloop

| Captured

|

January 1777

| Peggy

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Sloop

| Captured

|

3 January 1777

| Betsey

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Sloop

| Captured

|{{London Gazette|issue=12222|page=1|date=4 September 1781}}

2 April 1777

| Defense

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Brigantine

| Captured

|

5 April 1777

| Sachem

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Privateer

| Captured

|{{London Gazette|issue=12132|page=2|date=31 October 1780}}

16 April 1777

| Brothers

| Not recorded

| Brig

| Captured off Anguilla

|{{London Gazette|issue=11828|page=4|date=2 December 1777}}

1 June 1777

| General Washington

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Schooner

| Captured

|{{London Gazette|issue=11828|page=1|date=2 December 1777}}

2 June 1777

| Empereur

| File:Pavillon royal de France.svg French

| Brig

| Captured

|

3 June 1777

| Polly

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Sloop

| Captured

|

5 June 1777

| Not recorded

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Schooner

| Burnt

|

5 June 1777

| Not recorded

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Schooner

| Burnt

|

5 June 1777

| Not recorded

| File:Grand Union Flag.svg American

| Schooner

| Burnt

|

4 July 1777

| Hero

| File:US flag 13 stars – Betsy Ross.svg American

| Brig

| Captured

|

4 July 1777

| Sally

| File:US flag 13 stars – Betsy Ross.svg American

| Brig

| Captured

|

4 July 1777

| Jenny

| File:US flag 13 stars – Betsy Ross.svg American

| Sloop

| Captured

|

4 July 1777

| Polly

| File:US flag 13 stars – Betsy Ross.svg American

| Schooner

| Captured

|{{London Gazette|issue=11828|page=2|date=2 December 1777}}

4 July 1777

| Polly

| File:US flag 13 stars – Betsy Ross.svg American

| Sloop

| Burnt

|

4 July 1777

| Mary

| File:US flag 13 stars – Betsy Ross.svg American

| Sloop

| Burnt

|

4 July 1777

| Not recorded

| File:US flag 13 stars – Betsy Ross.svg American

| Sloop

| Sunk

|

4 July 1777

| Sally

| Not recorded

| Sloop

| Sunk

|

4 July 1777

| Liberty

| File:US flag 13 stars – Betsy Ross.svg American

| Sloop

| Captured

|

15 August 1777

| Rochester

| Not recorded

| Brig

| Captured

|{{London Gazette|issue=12166|page=5|date=27 February 1781}}

29 May 1778

| Hope

| File:Union flag 1606 (Kings Colors).svg British

| Snow

| Recaptured

|{{London Gazette|issue=11950|page=3|date=2 February 1779}}

31 May 1778

| General Hackman

| File:US flag 13 stars – Betsy Ross.svg American

| Brig

| Captured

|

21 October 1778

| Betsey

| File:US flag 13 stars – Betsy Ross.svg American

| Sloop

| Captured

|

Before February 1779

| Ann

| Not recorded

| Brig

| Captured

|{{London Gazette|issue=11951|page=3|date=6 February 1779}}

Before February 1779

| Nancy

| Not recorded

| Brig

| Captured

|

Before February 1779

| Kitty

| Not recorded

| Brig

| Captured

|

Before February 1779

| Friendship

| Not recorded

| Schooner

| Captured

|

24 February 1779

| Revenge

| File:US flag 13 stars – Betsy Ross.svg American

| Privateer

| Captured

|

August to November 1779

| Juene Francois

| File:Pavillon royal de France.svg French

| Snow

| Captured off Newfoundland

|{{London Gazette|issue=12060|page=2|date=22 February 1780}}

August to November 1779

| Orient

| Not recorded

| Schooner

| Captured

|

29 October 1779

| Revenge

| File:US flag 13 stars – Betsy Ross.svg American

| Privateer

| Captured

|{{London Gazette|issue=12264|page=3|date=22 January 1782}}

5 December 1779

| Lady Washington

| File:US flag 13 stars – Betsy Ross.svg American

| Privateer

| Captured

|

April to November 1780

| Henrico

| Not recorded

| Schooner

| Captured

|{{London Gazette|issue=12468|page=3|date=19 August 1783}}

12 May 1780

| Boston

| File:US flag 13 stars – Betsy Ross.svg American

| Frigate

| Captured at Charleston

|

12 May 1780

| Providence

| File:US flag 13 stars – Betsy Ross.svg American

| Frigate

| Captured at Charleston

|

Before June 1780

| Adventure

| File:US flag 13 stars – Betsy Ross.svg American

| Snow

| Captured

|{{London Gazette|issue=12093|page=5|date=17 June 1780}}

Before June 1780

| Union

| File:US flag 13 stars – Betsy Ross.svg American

| Schooner

| Captured

|

Before June 1780

| Champion

| File:US flag 13 stars – Betsy Ross.svg American

| Schooner

| Captured

|

Before June 1780

| Little John

| File:Union flag 1606 (Kings Colors).svg British

| Schooner

| Recaptured

|

Before June 1780

| Thomas

| File:Union flag 1606 (Kings Colors).svg British

| Snow

| Recaptured

|

Before June 1780

| Mackerell

| File:Union flag 1606 (Kings Colors).svg British

| Ship

| Recaptured

|

Before June 1780

| Marquis of Rockingham

| File:Union flag 1606 (Kings Colors).svg British

| Ship

| Recaptured

|

14 April 1781

| Confederacy

| File:US flag 13 stars – Betsy Ross.svg American

| Frigate

| Captured

|

6 May 1781

| Protector

| File:US flag 13 stars – Betsy Ross.svg American

| Frigate

| Captured

|

24 February 1782

| Providence

| File:Pavillon royal de France.svg French

| Privateer

| Captured

|

6 July 1797

| Batave

| File:Flag of the Batavian Republic.svg Dutch

| Privateer

| Captured

|

8 February 1798

| William

| Not recorded

| Brig

| Captured, later condemned

|

8 February 1798

| Betsey

| Not recorded

| Schooner

| Captured, later condemned

|

19 February 1798

| Parfait

| File:Flag of France.svg French

| Privateer

| Captured

|

28 August 1799

| Drochterland

| File:Flag of the Batavian Republic.svg Dutch

| Hulk

| Captured in Hollands Diep

|

28 August 1799

| Brooderschap

| File:Flag of the Batavian Republic.svg Dutch

| Hulk

| Captured in Hollands Diep

|

28 August 1799

| Helder

| File:Flag of the Batavian Republic.svg Dutch

| Ship

| Captured in Hollands Diep

|

28 August 1799

| Venus

| File:Flag of the Batavian Republic.svg Dutch

| Ship

| Captured in Hollands Diep

|

28 August 1799

| Minerva

| File:Flag of the Batavian Republic.svg Dutch

| Ship

| Captured in Hollands Diep

|

28 August 1799

| Hector

| File:Flag of the Batavian Republic.svg Dutch

| Ship

| Captured in Hollands Diep

|

Notes

{{Reflist|group=Note|1}}

Citations

{{reflist|30em}}

References

  • {{cite web | year =1969| url =http://ibiblio.org/anrs/docs/E/E3/ndar_v04p04.pdf | title =Journal of HMS Roebuck, Captain Andrew Snape Hammond| work=Naval Documents of the American Revolution, Volume 4| location=Washington | publisher = United States Government Printing Office|oclc=34931260| access-date =28 May 2017 }}
  • {{cite book|last = Ball|first = Philip|year = 2017|title = A Waste of Blood and Treasure: The 1799 Anglo-Russian Invasion of the Netherlands|publisher = Pen and Sword|location = Barnsley|isbn = 978-1-47388-518-9}}
  • {{cite book|last = Clowes|first = William Laird|year = 1996|orig-year= 1900|title = The Royal Navy, A History from the Earliest Times to 1900, Volume III|publisher = Chatham Publishing|location = London|isbn = 1-86176-012-4}}
  • {{cite book|last = Clowes|first = William Laird|year = 1997|orig-year= 1900|title = The Royal Navy, A History from the Earliest Times to 1900, Volume IV|publisher = Chatham Publishing|location = London|isbn = 1-86176-013-2}}
  • {{cite book|last = Howard|first = Martin R. |year = 2015 |title = Death Before Glory – The British Soldier in the West Indies in the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars |publisher = Pen and Sword Publishing|location = Barnsley|isbn= 978-1-78159-341-7}}
  • {{cite book |first1=Stephen |last1=Jones |first2=James |last2=Stainer Clarke |first3=John |last3=Jones |title=The Naval Chronicle, Containing a General and Biographical History of the Royal Navy of the United Kingdom, with a Variety of Original Papers on Nautical Subjects, Volume III |location=London |publisher=J. Gold |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UjsDAAAAYAAJ |year=1800 |oclc=1759531}}
  • {{cite book |first1=Stephen |last1=Jones |first2=James |last2=Stainer Clarke |first3=John |last3=Jones |title=The Naval Chronicle, Containing a General and Biographical History of the Royal Navy of the United Kingdom, with a Variety of Original Papers on Nautical Subjects, Volume XXV |publisher=J. Gold |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SghdAAAAcAAJ |location= London|year=1811 |oclc=967380280}}
  • {{cite book|last = Lossing|first = Benson J.|year = 1852|title = A Pictorial Field Book of the Revolution, Volume II|publisher = Harper and Brothers Publishing|location = New York|oclc=560599621}}
  • {{cite book|last = Simms|first = William Gilmore |year = 1853 |title = South-Carolina in the Revolutionary War: Being a Reply to Certain Misrepresentations and Mistakes of Recent Writers in Relation to the Course and Conduct of this State |url = https://archive.org/details/southcarolinainr00simm_0|publisher = Walker and James Publishing|location = Berkeley, California|oclc=23730140}}
  • {{cite book |first1=Rif |last1=Winfield |title=British Warships in the Age of Sail 1714–1792: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates |publisher=Seaforth Publishing |location=Barnsley |year=2007 |isbn=978-1-84415-700-6 }}
  • {{cite book |first=Rif|last=Winfield|title=British Warships in the Age of Sail 1793–1817: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates|publisher=Seaforth Publishing|location=Barnsley|year=2008|isbn=978-1-86176-246-7}}

{{Roebuck class ship}}

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{{DEFAULTSORT:Roebuck (1774), HMS}}

Category:1774 ships

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Category:Hospital ships of the Royal Navy

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