HMS Redbridge (1798)

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NameHMS Redbridge
BuilderHobbs & Hellyer, Redbridge
Laid down1796
Acquired1798 by purchase
Plans for HMS Eling, National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London;[1]
History
Great Britain
NameHMS Redbridge
BuilderHobbs & Hellyer, Redbridge
Laid down1796
Acquired1798 by purchase
FateCaptured 1803
French Navy EnsignFrance
NameRedbridge
LaunchedAugust 1803 by capture
Decommissioned1813
FateSold 1814
General characteristics [2][3]
TypeExperimental design
Displacement150 tons (French)
Tons burthen148 (bm)
Length
  • 80 ft 0 in (24.4 m) (overall)
  • 56 ft 7+12 in (17.3 m) (keel)
Beam22 ft 2 in (6.8 m)
Depth of hold11 ft 6 in (3.5 m)
Sail planSchooner
Complement
  • British service: 50
  • French service: 107
Armament
  • British service: 12 × 18-pounder carronades + 2 × 12-pounder carronades
  • French service: 12 × 16-pounder guns (British 18-pounder?), or 14 × 22-pounder carronades (British 24-pounder?)

HMS Redbridge was one of four schooner-rigged gunboats built to an experimental design by Sir Samuel Bentham. Her launch date is unknown, but the Admiralty purchased her in April 1798.[2] She had a short, relatively uneventful career before the French captured her in 1803. The French Navy sold her in January 1814.

Hobbs & Hellyer built six vessels to Bentham's design. Redbridge was the second of a two-vessel class of schooners, and she and her classmate Eling were the smallest of the six vessels, smaller even than the other two schooners, Milbrook and Netley. The design featured a large-breadth to length ratio with structural bulkheads, and sliding keels. The vessels were also virtually double-ended.[2]

French Revolutionary wars

Lieutenant George Hays took command of Redbridge on 10 April 1798. He remained in command of her until 11 December 1800.[4]

Hayes's replacement was Lieutenant George Lemprière, and she was stationed in the Channel.[2] The great gale of 8–9 November 1800 caught Redbridge and several other vessels in St Aubyn's Bay, Jersey. Redbridge, which managed to get to sea, was widely believed to have been lost. Still, she arrived in Spithead on Wednesday 12 November, though without her guns, which she had thrown overboard to lighten her. She went into harbour to effectuate repairs.[5][6] Havik, Pelican, the hired armed cutter Lion, and a Guernsey privateer were driven ashore.[7] Havick was so badly damaged that she was abandoned as a wreck.[8] The other three vessels were refloated. The hired armed brig Telegraph too got out to sea and was saved though she lost her mast.

On 31 March 1801 Redbridge engaged a French brig in the Bay of Saint-Brieuc.[9]

On 24 April 1802 Lemprière sailed Redbridge to Dublin, carrying seamen.[10]

Capture

In May 1803, shortly after the onset of the Napoleonic Wars, Redbridge was in Malta. She sailed from Malta on 6 July carrying some supernumeraries for Admiral Nelson's fleet and escorting the transport Caroline, Dandison, master, which was carrying water.[11] Lemprière cruised off Toulon but could not find the fleet and decided to sail to Gibraltar. Early on 3 August he encountered Cameleon, which advised him the British fleet was further west. That evening Redbridge encountered the frigate Phoebe. Next morning Phoebe and Redbridge sighted four sail. Phoebe advised that they were probably French and the British ships set sail to escape. Phoebe was able to outpace their pursuers, but Redbridge was not and fell prey to them.[12]

The four sail were a squadron of French frigates, Cornélie, Rhin, Uranie, and Tamise,[13] and possibly some corvettes that had sortied in the night from Toulon. The French also captured the transport.[14] Redbridge's actual captor was Cornélie.[2] Admiral Nelson attempted to send into Toulon a boat under a flag of truce offering the French a prisoner exchange, but the French refused his letter proposing the exchange.[14]

French service and fate

The French commissioned Redbridge on 5 August 1803. They decommissioned her at Leghorn in 1813, and sold her in January 1814.[3]

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