HMS Boadicea (1797)
{{short description|Frigate of the Royal Navy}}
{{other ships|HMS Boadicea}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2021}}
{{Infobox ship begin}}
{{Infobox ship image |Ship image=Entering Brest with HM Ship making a signal to a repeating frigate, of the number of French and Spanish ships in the harbour.jpg |Ship caption=Boadicea leaving Brest during the blockade in 1799, signals a repeating frigate (in the foreground) of the number of French and Spanish ships in the harbour, by John Thomas Serres }} {{Infobox ship career |Hide header= |Ship country=Great Britain |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|Kingdom of Great Britain|naval}} |Ship name=HMS Boadicea |Ship namesake=Boudica |Ship operator=Royal Navy |Ship ordered=30 April 1795 |Ship awarded= |Ship builder= Adams yard, Bucklers Hard |Ship laid down=September 1795 |Ship launched=12 April 1797 |Ship sponsor= |Ship christened= |Ship completed= |Ship acquired= |Ship commissioned=9 September 1797 |Ship recommissioned= |Ship decommissioned= |Ship in service= |Ship out of service= |Ship renamed= |Ship reclassified= |Ship refit= |Ship struck= |Ship reinstated= |Ship homeport= |Ship motto= |Ship nickname= |Ship honours=Naval General Service Medal with clasp "Boadicea 18 Sept. 1810"{{London Gazette|issue=20939|pages=236–245|date=26 January 1849}} |Ship captured= |Ship fate= Broken up 1858 |Ship notes= |Ship badge= }} {{Infobox ship characteristics |Hide header= |Header caption= |Ship class= |Ship tons burthen=1052 {{small|{{frac|5|94}}}} (bm) |Ship length=*{{convert|148|ft|6|in|m|1|abbr=on}} (overall)
|Ship beam={{convert|39|ft|11+1/2|in|m|1|abbr=on}} |Ship height= |Ship draught= |Ship hold depth={{convert|12|ft|8|in|m|1|abbr=on}} |Ship sail plan= |Ship propulsion=Sail |Ship speed= |Ship range= |Ship endurance= |Ship boats= |Ship capacity= |Ship complement=284 |Ship crew= |Ship troops= |Ship armament=*Upper deck: 28 × 18-pounder guns
|Ship armour= |Ship notes= }} |
HMS Boadicea was a 38-gun fifth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy. She served in the Channel and in the East Indies during which service she captured many prizes. She participated in one action for which the Admiralty awarded the Naval General Service Medal. She was broken up in 1858.
Design
Boadicea was one of a batch of large frigates ordered in 1795, all of which were the largest of their type, and the majority of which were to the draught of captured French ships. She was built to the design of {{HMS|Imperieuse|1793|2}}, a 40-gun ship completed in 1787 and captured in October 1793.{{sfnp|Winfield|2008|p=150}} Changes were made to the shape of the topsides, and the scantlings and fastenings were strengthened to reflect British practice. She retained her shallow French hull form, and as a result the holds and magazines were considered cramped.
French Revolutionary Wars
Boadicea was commissioned under Captain Richard Keats{{sfnp|Hannah|2021|p=}} for service in the Channel Fleet.{{Cite book | last = Longman |author2=Rees |author3=Orme |author4=Brown |author5=Green |author6=Longman | title = The Annual Biography and Obituary 1835, Volume 29 | publisher = Fisher, Son and Jackson | year = 1837 |pages=44}} Under Keats she served on this station for several years during which time she captured many prizes.
On 19 September 1797 Boadicea and {{HMS|Anson|1781|2}} captured the French privateer brig Zephyr. She was out of Nantes, was armed with two brass 12-pounder guns and six 6-pounder guns, and had a crew of 70. She had not made any captures.{{London Gazette|issue=14065|page=1090|date=14 November 1797}} The next day the two British vessels recaptured the ship Eliza, which was sailing under American colours. She had been sailing from London to the Cape of Good Hope with a cargo of merchandise when the French privateer Confiance had captured her. Then on the day after that, they recaptured the ship Jenny, of Greenock, which had been sailing from Liverpool to Virginia with a cargo of salt, earthenware and bale goods. The Jenny had fallen prey on 10 September, after a fight, to the privateer Hazard of Rochelle.
Then on 19 November 1797, Boadicea and Anson captured the privateer Railleur. She had a crew of 160 men and had been armed with 20 guns, but had thrown most of them overboard during the chase. She was one day out of Rochelle and had not taken any prizes. Nymph, Sylph and the hired armed cutter Dolly shared in the prize money.{{London Gazette|issue=15007|page=316|date=14 April 1798}} The same vessels shared in the recapture of several other vessels: Henniker, Active, Fanny, Mohawk, and Catherine. Around the 19th, Boadicea and Anson also recaptured a brig. Anson was running low on water and Keats sent her back into port.{{London Gazette|issue=14069|page=1140|date=28 November 1797}}
Boadicea shared with {{HMS|Révolutionnaire|1794|2}}, {{HMS|Pique|1795|2}}, and the hired armed cutter Nimrod in the capture of Anna Christiana on 17 May 1798.{{London Gazette|issue=15720|pages=878–879|date=17 July 1804}}
Around 18 June 1798 Boadicea captured the American ships Fanny and Lydia.{{London Gazette|issue=15173|page=860|date=27 August 1799}} On 9 December Boadicea captured Invincible Buonaparte, a French privateer of 20 guns (12 and 18-pounders) and 170 men.{{London Gazette|issue=15092|page=1237|date=22 December 1798}} She was a new vessel, sixteen days out of Bordeaux and reportedly had not made any captures. However, a privateer by the same name had taken and burned the Friendship, Smith, master, which had been sailing from St Ube's to Falmouth.Lloyd's List,[http://www.1812privateers.org/LLOYDS/1798/12-28-1798.jpg] - Retrieved 19 December 2013. Boadicea sent Invincible Buonaparte, of "18 guns and 175 men" into Portsmouth.Lloyd's List,[http://www.1812privateers.org/LLOYDS/1798/12-25-1798.jpg] - Retrieved 19 December 2013. The Admiralty took Invincible Buonaparte into service as the 18-gun sloop Brazen. On the last day of the year, Boadicea recaptured the brig Adventure.{{London Gazette|issue=15109|page=180|date=19 February 1799}} The privateer Intrepid had captured Adventure, Warrington, master, as she was sailing from Tortola to London; Boadicea sent Adventure into Plymouth.Lloyd's List, no. 3051,[http://www.1812privateers.org/LLOYDS/1799/01-15-1799.jpg] - Retrieved 21 May 2014.
On 20 or 21 February 1799, Boadicea, {{HMS|Atalante|1797|2}}, and {{HMS|Brilliant|1779|2}} shared in the capture of the French privateer cutter Milan. She was armed with 14 guns and had a crew of 44 men. Keats ordered Atalante to take Milan into port, land the prisoners, and then rejoin Boadicea on station.{{London Gazette|issue=15110|page=191|date=23 February 1799}}
On 7 March Boadicea recaptured an American vessel sailing from Charlestown to Hamburg. The next day Boadicea interrupted the capture of a neutral vessel, which had been sailing from Charlestown to Embden, by a French privateer, which Boadicea captured. The privateer was the brig Requin, pierced for 18 guns but mounting 14. She had a crew of 70 men. On 9 March a gale caused Requin to overturn even though she had no sails set; the prize crew of ten men from Boadicea and a prisoner all drowned.{{London Gazette|issue=15120|pages=304–305|date=30 March 1799}}
Still, on 1 April, Boadicea captured her third privateer of the cruise, the brig {{HMS|Utile|1799|2}}. Utile was armed with sixteen 8-pounder guns, of which ten were brass. She had a crew of 120 men and was three weeks out of Bordeaux.{{London Gazette|issue=15123|page=335|date=9 April 1799}}
On 2 July Boadicea and some other frigates under Keats's overall command protected bomb vessels that bombarded some Spanish ships of the line anchored under the protection of batteries on the Île de Ré and a floating mortar battery moored near the Île d'Oléron. The British conducted their bombardment from too far away with the result that it was completely ineffective. They then broke off the attack and sailed away.Marshall (1823), Vol. 1, pp.90-1.
Around the turn of the year, Boadicea shared with a number of other vessels in her squadron in the capture of St. Francoise (25 December), St. Pierre de Carnac (12 January 1800), a brig of unknown name (17 January), and Anna Louisa (22 January).{{London Gazette|issue=15300|page=1161|date=7 October 1800}} On 21 and 22 April 1800, Boadicea and {{HMS|Stag|1794|2}} captured Zeegen and Hoop.{{London Gazette|issue=15351|page=376|date=4 April 1801}}
On 14 May Keats sent a boat with six men under the command of a midshipman on a reconnaissance mission into the outer roads of Brest.{{sfnp|Hannah|2021|p=50-52}} They encountered a French guard boat that they were able to repulse with the loss of one man. The midshipman later boarded a small sloop from whom he found out that the French fleet was in the inner road and that the Spanish vessels there were plagued by illness among the crew.Naval Chronicle, Vol. 3, p.510.
Then towards the middle of the year, on 24 June, Boadicea recaptured the sloop Gipsey, of Greenock,{{London Gazette|issue=15341|page=248|date=26 February 1801}} or Liverpool.Naval Chronicle, Vol. 4, p.79. Gipsey had been a prize to the French privateer Brave, of 36 guns, under the command of Captain Le Bee, and had been sailing from the West Indies when originally captured.
On 4 July Boadicea was in sight when {{HMS|Sirius|1797|2}} and {{HMS|Indefatigable|1784|2}} captured the French vessel Favori.{{London Gazette|issue=15533|page=1211|date=16 November 1802}} Four days later, Boadicea was in company with the same two warships when they recaptured Cultivator.{{London Gazette|issue=15442|page=1307|date=27 October 1801}} Cultivator (or Cultivateur), was a West Indiaman sailing from Demerara and Essequibo, with a cargo valued at £20,000.Naval Chronicle, Vol. 4, p.161.
A week later, {{ship||Bordelais|1798 ship|2}} captured Phoenix. Boadicea was one of the vessels that would later share in the prize money by agreement.{{London Gazette|issue=15334|page=281|date=10 March 1801}} One month later, on 14 August, Boadicea captured the Spanish vessel Union. She was a large vessel of 650 tons, armed with 22 guns, and carrying a crew of 130 men. She had sailed from Corunna the day before, heading towards Buenos Aires with a cargo of merchandise.{{London Gazette|issue=15290|page=1006|date=2 September 1800}} {{HMS|Fisgard|1797|2}}, {{HMS|Uranie|1797|2}}, {{HMS|Unicorn|1794|2}} and the hired armed cutter Earl St Vincent shared in the prize.{{London Gazette|issue=15481|page=509|date=18 May 1802}}
Boadicea also shared in several other prizes that other frigates under Keats' command captured between 4 July and 23 October. In addition to Phoenix, these included {{ship|French brig|Gironde|1793|2}}, Alerte, Joseph, Magicienne, Dicke, Rancune, Vivo, Favorite, and Venus.{{London Gazette|issue=15426|page=1362|date=10 November 1801}} Several of these were privateers.
In 1801 Captain Charles Rowley took command of Boadicea. With her he commanded a light squadron in Quiberon Bay where she "greatly molested the enemy".Annual Register, Vol. 88, p.223. On 10 January Boadicea captured the {{ship|French gun vessel|Bombarde|1800 ship|6}},{{London Gazette|issue=15481|page=508|date=18 May 1802}} which had been sailing from Havre to Brest. Bombarde arrived in Plymouth six days later.
On 20 August, the boats of Fisgard, {{HMS|Diamond|1794|2}}, and Boadicea carried out a cutting-out expedition at A Coruña. The boats went in at night and brought out Neptune, a new ship belonging to the Spanish Navy and pierced for 20 guns, a gunboat armed with a long 32-pounder gun, and a merchant vessel. The Spanish vessels were anchored close to the batteries that protected the fort and sentinels challenged the British. The Spaniards commenced fire, but the cutting-out party was able to bring the vessels out without having suffered any casualties.{{London Gazette|issue=15403|page=1071|date=1 September 1801}} One of the vessels was the packet ship Reyno Duno.{{London Gazette|issue=15435|page=1480|date=12 December 1801}} She came into Plymouth on September and the Naval Chronicle described her as "Beautiful,... of four suits of sails and other naval stores". She had apparently been on her way to Havana.Naval Chronicle, Vol. 6, p.253.
Between April 1802 and March 1803 Boadicea was fitted at Plymouth. She was recommissioned in December 1802 under Captain John Maitland.{{sfnp|Winfield|2008|p=150}} He went on to command Boadicea in the Channel.
On 20 May 1803, Boadicea and {{HMS|Kite|1795|2}}, captured the Dutch ship Minerva.{{London Gazette|issue=15915|page=559|date=3 May 1806}} On 30 May Boadicea detained the Dutch ship Vrow Elizabeth. The London Gazette mentions that this was "previous to the Declaration of Hostilities". (Britain and France renewed hostilities on 18 May 1803, but the issue may have been hostilities with the Dutch.) Still, prize money was awarded.{{London Gazette|issue=15793|page=408|date=30 March 1805}} Furthermore, on 31 May Boadicea captured Joanna Catharina.{{London Gazette|issue=16403|page=1380|date=8 September 1810}}
Napoleonic Wars
While Maitland and Boadicea were serving with the inshore squadron at Brest, Boadicea hit the Bas de Lis. This caused a large hole in her hull with the result that she started taking on water. Even the contribution of 100 seamen from other vessels, together with additional pumps, barely kept her afloat. A frigate escorted her to Portsmouth. Boadicea returned to her station within eight days, having spent only three days in dock undergoing repairs.Marshall (1823), Vol. 1, Part 2, pp. 840–46.
On 9 June 1803 Boadicea sent into Plymouth the small French privateer Eleonore,{{London Gazette|issue=15751|page=1359|date=3 November 1804}} which had a crew of 27 men. The privateer was 11 days out of St. Maloes but had not made any captures.{{London Gazette|issue=15591|page=678|date=7 June 1803}}{{efn|Eleonore, of about 25 tons burthen, was offered at auction at Plymouth on 17 January 1804.Advertisements & Notices 23 January 1804, Hampshire/Portsmouth Telegraph (Leeds, England) Issue: 224.}} On the same day Boadicea recaptured London Packet.{{London Gazette|issue=15624|page=1327|date=27 September 1803|}} London Packet, Brown, master, had been sailing from Virginia to Guernsey when she was captured earlier that day. Boadicea sent her into Plymouth.[https://hdl.handle.net/2027/uc1.c2735021?urlappend=%3Bseq=99 LL 10 June 1803, No. 4357.]
Then on 25 November, Maitland and Boadicea were eight leagues off Cape Finisterre when they captured the French navy lugger Vautour, commanded by Monsieur Bigot, lieutenant de vaisseau. She was 43 days from St. Domingo and had on board a Commissarie de Marine with dispatches from General Rochambeau at Cape François. Vautour was pierced for 16 guns but mounted twelve 6-pounder guns, 10 of which she threw overboard during the chase. She had a crew of 92 men.{{London Gazette|issue=15656|page=1759|date=13 December 1803}}{{efn|Michel Colin-Olivier had built Vautour at Dieppe in 1795.{{sfnp|Winfield|Roberts|2015|p=242}} Vautour, of about 130 tons burthen was offered at auction at Plymouth on 17 January 1804. Vautour was a sister ship to the French navy lugger {{ship|French lugger|Affronteur|1795|2}}, which {{HMS|Doris|1795|6 }} had captured,{{sfnp|Winfield|2008|p=348}} on 18 May 1803, the first day of the war.}}
On 24 and 25 September Boadicea was in sight when {{HMS|Pickle|1800|2}} captured two French chasse-marees loaded with supplies for the French fleet at Brest, and brought them into Plymouth. Lapenotiere had driven them into the Bay there and then sent his boats to bring them out.Naval Chronicle, Vol. 12, p.420. The two French vessels may have been Marie Française from Bordeaux and Desirée from Quimper.Naval Chronicle, Vol. 13, p.167.{{London Gazette|issue=15811|page=726|date=28 May 1805}}
On 28 March 1805, Boadicea arrived at Yarmouth with 250 men that she had brought from the Texel. They were part of the crew of {{HMS|Romney|1762|2}}, which had wrecked there in late 1804.Naval Chronicle, Vol. 13, p.334.
On 19 April 1805 Boadicea captured Zeldenrust.{{London Gazette|issue=16342|page=237|date=13 February 1810}} Boadicea shared with {{HMS|Penelope|1798|2}} and {{HMS|Moselle|1804|2}} in the proceeds of Jonge Obyna, Smidt, master, on 13 June.{{efn|A seaman's share of a £1700 advance on the prize money was 16s {{frac|2|1|2}}d.{{London Gazette|issue=16200|page=1543|date=12 November 1808}}}} That same day they also captured Sophia.{{London Gazette|issue=17251|page=1166|date=17 May 1817}} The final payment for Jonge Obyna and Sophia did not get paid out until June 1817.{{efn|A first-class share, such as a captain would receive, was worth £104 3s 4d; a fifth-class share, that of a seaman, was worth 11s {{frac|10|1|4}}d.{{London Gazette|issue=17262|page=1419|date=24 June 1817}}}}
Next, in company with {{HMS|Dryad|1795|2}}, Boadicea fell in with four French line-of-battle ships under Rear-Admiral Pierre Dumanoir le Pelley, off Ferrol. The four French vessels had escaped from the Battle of Trafalgar. Boadicea and Dryad tried to lead the enemy into the path of a Royal Navy squadron by firing rockets but lost them a short time after Sir Richard Strachan saw their signals. Neither Boadicea nor Dryad therefore shared in the Battle of Cape Ortegal, in which the British captured all four French ships.
On 12 December, Boadicea, {{HMS|Arethusa|1781|2}}, and {{HMS|Wasp|1800|2}} left Cork, escorting a convoy of 23 merchant vessels. Four days later the convoy encountered a French squadron consisting of five ships of the line and four sailing frigates, as well as nine other vessels that were too far away for assessment. The letter writer to the Naval Chronicle surmised that the distant vessels were the Africa squadron that had been escorted by {{HMS|Lark|1794|2}} and that they had captured. On this occasion, The British warships and six merchant vessels went one way and the rest went another way. The French chased the warships and the six for a day, ignored the 17, and eventually gave up their pursuit. Boadicea then shadowed the French while Wasp went back to French and Spanish coasts to alert the British warships there. Arethusa and her six charges encountered the French squadron again the next day, but after a desultory pursuit the French sailed off.Naval Chronicle, Vol. 15, pp.300-1.
In the autumn of 1806 or early 1807 Boadicea was employed protecting the whale fishery in the Davis Strait, in company with {{HMS|Topaze|1793|2}}.Marshall (1825), Vol. 2, Part 2, p. 575. Maitland then sailed to Newfoundland, from where he brought back a convoy for Oporto. On the way he found out that the French had entered Portugal so he diverted to London. On 4 September 1807, Loire, with Boadicea, {{HMS|Defender|1804|2}}, and {{HMS|Strenuous|1805|2}} in company, captured the American ship Exchange, Peter Ledet, Master.{{London Gazette|issue=16379|page=884|date=16 June 1810}}
On 26 October 1807, Tsar Alexander I of Russia declared war on Great Britain. The official news did not arrive there until 2 December, at which time the British declared an embargo on all Russian vessels in British ports. Boadicea was one of some 70 vessels that shared in the proceeds of the seizure of the 44-gun Russian frigate Speshnoy (Speshnyy), and the Russian storeship Wilhelmina (or Vilghemina) then in Portsmouth harbour.{{London Gazette|issue=16276|page=1129|date=15 July 1809}} The Russian vessels were carrying the payroll for Vice-Admiral Dmitry Senyavin's squadron in the Mediterranean.{{sfnp|Tredrea|Sozaev|2010|pp=98 & 391}}{{efn|Consequently, a seaman on any one of the 70 British vessels received 14s {{frac|7|1|2}}d in prize money.{{London Gazette|issue=16195|page=1460|date=25 October 1808}}}}
On 26 January 1808 Boadicea was in company with {{HMS|Resistance|1805|2}} when they captured the French privateer General Conclaux.{{London Gazette|issue=16160|page=949|date=5 July 1808}} Resistance also captured another French privateer. Their captors sent both privateers into Portsmouth.Lloyd's List, no. 4227, [http://www.1812privateers.org/LLOYDS/1808/02-09-1808.jpg] - Retrieved 21 May 2014.
Then on 27 March, Boadicea, {{HMS|Medusa|1801|2}}, the cutter {{HMS|Alphea|1806|2}}, and schooner {{HMS|Ant|1797|2}} captured 25 French fishing vessels.{{efn|A seaman's share of the prize money was 14s {{frac|2|3|4}}d, or about two weeks' wages.{{London Gazette|issue=16167|page=1052|date=30 July 1808}}}} On 8 August Boadicea was in company with {{HMS|Solebay|1785|2}} and the gun-brig {{HMS|Linnet|1806|2}} when they captured the Pappenbourg galiot Yonge Harriot or Young Harriot.{{London Gazette|issue=16199|page=1524|date=8 November 1808}}
In June 1808 Captain John Hatley took command of Boadicea. She sailed from Portsmouth to the Cape of Good Hope on 9 February 1809.{{sfnp|Winfield|2008|p=150}}
File:Réunion, 1809 RCIN 735153.jpg
In September 1809 she served in a squadron of frigates and sloops in the expedition against Saint-Paul, on Bonaparte Island (also known as Île de Bourbon and today as Réunion). The naval commander was Captain Josias Rowley, aboard the Third Rate {{HMS|Raisonnable|1768|2}}. Rowley assigned Boadicea to blockade the port.{{London Gazette|issue=16341|pages=214–215|date=10 January 1810}}
The British troops and Royal Marines landed without alarming the batteries, which they stormed and carried. The rest of the squadron then stood into the bay and exchanged fire with the French frigate Caroline. Soon the batteries, town and shipping were all in British hands for the total loss of 22 killed, 76 wounded, and four missing. Boadicea, which had not been able to maintain the blockade, contributed Royal Marines to the attack, one of whom was killed and five of whom were wounded. The British had achieved their objectives, the capture of French shipping and the destruction of the defenses of the only safe anchorage on the island. They then withdrew.
Captain Rowley moved to Boadicea and on 7 July 1810, and with three other frigates, he escorted a force of 1,650 European soldiers and 1,600 sepoys from Madras, together with 1,000 from Rodriguez, against Réunion again, but this time with the aim of taking the island.Marshall (1823) Vol. 1, Part 2, pp.626-633. Boadicea herself transported troops and her boats were active in landing troops. The island surrendered on 9 July. Rowley appointed Lieutenant Robb, Boadicea{{'}}s First Lieutenant, to carry the dispatches to Cape Town in the brig Anna.{{London Gazette|issue=16417|pages=1685–1686|date=26 October 1810}}
On 28 August Boadicea, {{HMS|Staunch|1804|2}}, and {{HMS|Otter|1805|2}} shared in the capture of Garronne.{{London Gazette|issue=17166|page=1645|date=24 August 1816}} On 4 September the same three vessels shared in the capture of {{ship||Ranger|1796 ship|2}}.{{London Gazette|issue=17268|page=1575|date=15 July 1817}}{{efn|The prize money for a first-class share was worth £55 14s 11d; an ordinary seaman received 10s {{frac|7|1|2}}d.{{London Gazette|issue=17273|page=1687|date=2 August 1817}}}}
After the Battle of Grand Port, which was a disaster for the British, Commodore Josias Rowley sent urgent messages to Madras and Cape Town requesting reinforcements. The first to arrive were Africaine and Ceylon, both of which were sailing alone. In the action of 13 September 1810, Iphigénie and Astrée captured Africaine. She had been sailing with Boadicea, Otter, and Staunch trailing some distance behind. When she chased the French frigates and the brig Entreprenant early on the morning of 13 September, she outdistanced her companions, with unfortunate results. Africaine had 49 men killed and 114 wounded. The French took about 90 survivors prisoner and conveyed them to Mauritius where they remained until the British took the island in December. The French lost nine killed and 33 wounded in Iphigénie and one killed and two wounded in Astrée.
The next day Boadicea and her two companions recaptured Africaine. Because she was dismasted and damaged the French had not tried to tow her. When Boadicea recaptured her, Africaine still had 70 of her wounded and some 83 uninjured of her crew aboard, as well as a ten-man French prize crew.
The French had also captured Ceylon, but Boadicea quickly retook her too. Then Rowley was able to seize Jacques Hamelin and his flagship Vénus at the action of 18 September 1810. Nearly four decades later the Admiralty recognized Boadicea by authorizing the clasp "Boadicea 18 Sept. 1810" to the Naval General Service Medal, awarded upon application to all British participants still living in 1847.
On 21 November 1810 Vice Admiral Bertie led a large fleet of warships and transports to attack Isle de France (now Mauritius), the French surrendering on 7 December 1810.{{efn|The admiral's share of the prize money was £2650 5s 2d. A first-class share was worth £278 19s {{frac|5|3|4}}d; a sixth-class share, that of an ordinary seaman, was worth £3 7s {{frac|6|1|4}}d.{{London Gazette|page=1923|issue=16938|date=24 September 1814}} A fourth and final payment was made in July 1828. A first-class share was worth £29 19s {{frac|5|1|4}}d; a sixth-class share was worth 8s {{frac|2|1|2}}d. This time, Bertie received £314 14s {{frac|3|1|2}}d.{{London Gazette|pages=1376–1377|issue=18487|date=15 July 1828}}}} Captain Rowley and Boadicea returned to England with Vice Admiral Bertie's dispatches.
Captain Viscount Ralph Neville took command of Boadicea in February 1811. She was then laid up in ordinary in May 1811.{{sfnp|Winfield|2008|p=150}}
Post war
Boadicea underwent extensive repairs, costing some £35,433, in Plymouth between February 1815 and August 1816. She was then laid up.{{sfnp|Winfield|2008|p=150}}
In October 1824 Captain Sir James Brisbane recommissioned Boadicea, which underwent fitting for sea, at a cost of £9,387, between October and January 1825.{{sfnp|Winfield|2008|p=150}}
Brisbane then sailed her to the East Indies, where she participated in the First Anglo-Burmese War. Brisbane retired to Pulo Penang early in 1826 due to ill-health. He died on 19 December 1826. Commander John Wilson then sailed Boadicea back to Britain.{{sfnp|Winfield|2008|p=150}}
Fate
Boadicea underwent a repair at Chatham between December 1829 and 1830 that cost £10,027. She was then laid up. She was on harbour service in 1854. Her break up was completed at Chatham on 22 May 1858.{{sfnp|Winfield|2008|p=150}}
Sailing Qualities
"Average under sail, not recording more than 9kts close hauled and 11.5kts off the wind, good sea boat ... tolerably handy in staying and wearing."{{sfn | Gardiner | National Maritime Museum (Great Britain) | 1994 }} She received extensions to her gripe and another 4 inches onto her false keel, suggesting a lack of weatherliness as built.
Fiction
Boadicea is Jack Aubrey's command in the book The Mauritius Command, which follows the events of the historical Mauritius campaign, with Aubrey replacing the historical commander of Boadicea, Josias Rowley.
See also
Notes
{{notelist}}
Citations
{{reflist}}
References
- {{cite book | last=Gardiner | first=Robert | author2=National Maritime Museum (Great Britain) | title=Heavy Frigate. 18-pounder Frigates |volume=1 | publisher=Conway Maritime Press | year=1994 | isbn=0-85177-627-2 | oclc=911347655}}
- {{cite book|first1=Peter|last1=Hannah|title=Keats, A Treasure to the Service|publisher= Green Hill|year= 2021|isbn=978-1-922629-73-9}}
- {{cite book |first1=John|last1=Tredrea|first2=Eduard|last2=Sozaev|title=Russian Warships in the Age of Sail 1696–1860|publisher=Seaforth|year=2010|isbn=978-1-84832-058-1}}
- {{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}}
- {{cite book|last1=Winfield|first1=Rif|last2=Roberts|first2=Stephen S.|year=2015|title=French Warships in the Age of Sail 1786–1861: Design Construction, Careers and Fates|publisher=Seaforth Publishing|isbn=978-1-84832-204-2}}
External links
- [http://www.ageofnelson.org/MichaelPhillips/info.php?ref=0352 Ships of the Old Navy]
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