French corvette Mutine (1799)
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HMS Racoon capturing French navy corvette Mutine, circle of William John Huggins | |
| History | |
|---|---|
| Name | Mutine |
| Builder | Le Havre[1] |
| Laid down | October 1797 |
| Launched | 17 May 1799[1] |
| Fate | Wrecked in combat 17 August 1803 |
| General characteristics [1] | |
| Class & type | Mutine-class corvette |
| Displacement | 379-400 tons (French) |
| Length |
|
| Beam | 8.61 m (28.2 ft) |
| Depth of hold | 4.3 m (14 ft) |
| Complement | 156 |
| Armament | 18 × 8-pounder guns |
Mutine was the name-vessel of her two-vessel class of corvettes designed by Charles-Henri Tellier. She was ordered as Nouvelle in 1797, but received the name Mutine at her launching in May 1799. She was wrecked near Santiago de Cuba on 17 August 1803 as a consequence of a single-ship action with HMS Racoon.
Her commander in 1799 was Captain Lambert.[2]
On 28 January 1801 HMS Bordelais was west of Barbados when she encountered two French brigs and a French schooner. They gave chase but then Bordelais turned. In the short engagement that followed she captured the larger of the brigs, Curieuse, which sank within an hour or so of her capture. The two other French vessels escaped early in the engagement. Reportedly, the French "brig" that escaped was Mutine, of sixteen 6-pounder guns and 156 men under the command of J. Reybaud (or Raybaun), and the French schooner was Espérance, of six 4-pounder guns and 52 men under the command of Captain Haywood.[3][4]