HMS Deal Castle (1697)

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NameHMS Deal Castle
Ordered24 December 1696
Launched6 November 1697
History
England
NameHMS Deal Castle
Ordered24 December 1696
BuilderRoyal Dockyard, Deptford
Launched6 November 1697
Commissioned28 October 1697
Captured3 July 1706
FateBy French privateer on 3 July 1706
General characteristics
Type20-gun Sixth Rate
Tons burthen240+39 bm
Length
  • 91 ft 11 in (28.0 m) gundeck
  • 77 ft 8 in (23.7 m) keel for tonnage
Beam24 ft 1.25 in (7.3 m) for tonnage
Depth of hold10 ft 9.5 in (3.3 m)
Armament
  • initially as ordered
  • 20 × sakers on wooden trucks (UD)
  • 4 × 3-pdr on wooden trucks (QD)
  • 1703 Establishment
  • 20 × 6-pdrs on wooden trucks (UD)
  • 4 × 4-pdr on wooden trucks (QD)

HMS Deal Castle was a member of the standardized 20-gun sixth rates built at the end of the 17th century. After she was commissioned she was in Newfoundland, the West Indies, the Irish Sea, Jamaica, and back to Home Waters. She was captured by the French in 1706.[1]

Deal Castle was the first ship so named in the Royal Navy.[2]

She was ordered in the Fourth Batch of four ships from Deptford Dockyard to be built under the guidance of their Master Shipwright, Fisher Harding. She was launched on 6 November 1697.[3]

Commissioned service

She was commissioned on 28 October 1697 under the command of Captain Henry Fowles, RN. In 1698 Captain Sir Thomas Hardy took command. Captain Fowles re-assumed command in 1699 and sailed for Newfoundland. In 1700, Captain Edmund Doyley, RN assumed command and sailed to North America and the West Indies in 1700 and 1701. In 1702 she was surveying the Irish Coast. Following Captain Doyley's death on 10 May 1703, Commander Henry Scott, RN assumed command for service in the North Sea. In 1704 Commander John Trehearne, RN took command and proceeded to Jamaica, where he died in 1705. In 1706 Commander Chaloner Ogle, RN took command.[4]

Loss

Citations

References

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