HMS Pompee (1793)
{{short description|Ship of the line of the Royal Navy}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2017}}
{{Infobox ship begin}}
{{Téméraire class default image}} {{Infobox ship career |Hide header= |Ship country=France |Ship flag=File:Flag of French-Navy-Revolution.svg {{Shipboxflag|France|naval}} |Ship name=Pompée |Ship namesake=Pompey |Ship ordered= |Ship builder=Toulon shipyard |Ship laid down=January 1790 |Ship launched=28 May 1791 |Ship acquired= |Ship commissioned=February 1793 |Ship decommissioned= |Ship in service= |Ship out of service= |Ship renamed= |Ship captured=29 August 1793 |Ship struck= |Ship reinstated= |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 Pompee |Ship namesake= |Ship acquired=29 August 1793 |Ship commissioned= |Ship decommissioned= |Ship in service= |Ship out of service= |Ship renamed= |Ship captured= |Ship struck= |Ship reinstated= |Ship reclassified=Prison hulk in Portsmouth in 1816 |Ship fate=Broken up in January 1817 |Ship honours= |Ship notes= }} {{Infobox ship characteristics |Hide header= |Header caption= |Ship class={{Sclass|Téméraire|ship of the line}} |Ship tons burthen=1,901{{fraction|8|94}} (bm) |Ship length=*{{convert|182|ft|2|in|m|abbr=on}} (gundeck)
|Ship beam={{convert|49|ft|0+1/2|in|m|abbr=on}} |Ship draught= |Ship hold depth={{convert|21|ft|10+1/2|in|m|abbr=on}} |Ship sail plan=Full-rigged ship |Ship complement=640 |Ship armament=French service:{{unbulleted list| Lower gundeck: 28 × 36-pounder long guns| Upper gundeck: 30 × 18-pounder long guns| Forecastle and Quarter deck: :16 × 8-pounder long guns :4 × 36-pounder obusiers}} British service:{{unbulleted list| Lower deck: 30 × 32-pounder guns| Upper deck: 30 × 18-pounder guns| QD: 12 × 32-pounder carronades| Fc: 4 × 32-pounder carronades| Roundhouse: 8 ×18-pounder carronades}} |Ship notes= }} |
File:Achille (1798); Superb (1798).jpg
HMS Pompee was a 74-gun ship of the line of the British Royal Navy. Built as Pompée, a {{Sclass|Téméraire|ship of the line|0}} ship of the French Navy, she was handed over to the British at Spithead by French royalists who had fled France{{Cite web|url=http://www.godfreydykes.info/POMPEY_WHY_IS_IT_SO_CALLED.htm|title = Pompey_Why_Is_It_So_Called}} after the Siege of Toulon (September–December 1793) by the French Republic, only a few months after being completed. After reaching Great Britain, Pompée was registered and recommissioned as HMS Pompee and spent the entirety of her active career with the Royal Navy until she was broken up in 1817.
Service
During the Siege of Toulon, Captain Poulain, her commanding officer, joined the British. Pompée fled Toulon when the city fell to the French Republicans and sailed to Britain under the temporary command of Lieutenant John Davie. She arrived at Portsmouth on 3 May 1794, and was registered on the navy list under an Admiralty order dated 29 October 1794.{{sfnp|Winfield|2008|p=62}}
Pompée was recommissioned as HMS Pompee under her first commanding officer, Captain Charles Edmund Nugent, in May 1795 and entered service with the Channel Fleet after a period of refitting. The ship retained its original French spelling of the Pompey name and not the anglicised form. From August 1795 she was under Captain James Vashon, and she was later one of the ships involved in the Spithead mutiny in 1797.{{sfnp|Winfield|2008|p=62}}
{{HMS|Leviathan|1790|2}}, Pompee, {{HMS|Anson|1781|2}}, {{HMS|Melpomene|1794|2}}, and {{HMS|Childers|1778|2}} shared in the proceeds of the capture on 10 September of Tordenshiold.{{London Gazette|issue=15704|page=652|date=22 May 1804}}
Under Captain Charles Stirling, she fought at the Battle of Algeciras Bay in 1801. In 1807 the ship, under the command of Captain Richard Dacres served in the Mediterranean squadron under Rear-Admiral Sir Sydney Smith,pp.15-20, Howard as part of the Vice-Admiral Duckworth's Dardanelles Operation and later the Alexandria expedition of 1807.
Pompee was on her way to Barbados on 20 October 1808 when she encountered Pylade. After a chase of 18 hours, Pompee was able to catch Pylade, which struck. Pylade was under the command of lieutenant de Vaisseau Cocherel. She was eight days out of Martinique but had not made any captures. Captain George Cockburn of Pompee described Pylade as "only Three Years old, in perfect good State, and in every Respect fit for His Majesty's Service." Her officers had also told him that she was "the fastest sailing Vessel the French had in these Seas."{{London Gazette|date=3 January 1809 |issue=16215 |page=16}} The Navy took Pylade into service as {{HMS|Vimiera|1808|6}}.
Pompee shared with {{HMS|Captain|1787|2}}, {{HMS|Amaranthe|1804|2}}, and {{HMS|Morne Fortunee|1806|2}} in the prize money pool of £772 3s 3d for the capture of Frederick on 30 December 1808. This money was paid in June 1829.{{London Gazette|date=28 April 1829|issue=18571|page=784}}
Pompee participated in the capture of Martinique in January 1809. Later, she and {{Ship|French ship|D'Hautpoul|1807|2}} took part in an action on 17 April 1809.
In April 1809, a strong French squadron arrived at the Îles des Saintes, south of Guadeloupe. There they were blockaded until 14 April, when a British force under Major-General Frederick Maitland and Captain Philip Beaver in {{HMS|Acasta|1797|2}}, invaded and captured the islands.{{London Gazette|issue=16262|pages=779–782|date=30 May 1809}} Pompee was among the naval vessels that shared in the proceeds of the capture of the islands.{{refn|The prize agent for a number of the vessels involved, Henry Abbott, went bankrupt. In May 1835 there was a final payment of a dividend from his estate. A first-class share was worth 10s {{frac|2|3|4}}d; a sixth-class share, that of an ordinary seaman, was worth 1d. Seventh-class (landsmen) and eighth-class (boys) shares were fractions of a penny, too small to pay.{{London Gazette|date=3 April 1835|issue=19255|page=643}}|group=Note}}
Fate
Pompee was fitted out for service as a prison hulk between September 1810 and January 1811. She was finally broken up at Woolwich in January 1817.{{sfnp|Winfield|2008|p=62}}
The acquisition of Pompée allowed the British to design a copy of the Téméraire class, the {{Sclass|Pompée|ship of the line|4}}.
Pompey nickname
The Portsmouth nickname Pompey may have originated from HMS Pompee, which served as guard ship and prison hulk within Portsmouth Harbour. The northern England slang for prison is Pompey, possibly derived from criminals who may have served time aboard the prison ship Pompee.{{Cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/notesandqueries/query/0,5753,-2010,00.html?gusrc=gpd|title = Why is Portsmouth called Pompey? {{pipe}} Notes and Queries {{pipe}} guardian.co.uk| website=TheGuardian.com }} The ship's career as Portsmouth guard ship and prison hulk may have led to the ship becoming nationally associated with Portsmouth itself, although the ship's original French name becoming anglicised from Pompée to Pompey.
Notes
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Citations
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References
- Howard, Edward, Memoires of Admiral Sir Sidney Smith, K.C. B., & c., Volume 2, Adamant Media Corporation, 2003
- {{cite book |first=Rif|last=Winfield|title=British Warships in the Age of Sail 1793–1817: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates |publisher=Seaforth |location=London |year=2008 |isbn=978-1-86176-246-7}}
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Category:Ships of the line of the Royal Navy
Category:Ships of the line of the French Navy