Saturday 20 July 2024

All at Sea - The French 40-Gun Frigate La Coquille & British 56-gun Fourth-Rate Glatton, 3-D Prints from Turner Miniatures & Only Games.

What better illustration to head up this post than Antoine Roux's depiction of a French 40-gun frigate.
 
This post follows on from a series I've been posting here on JJ's looking at new additions to my collection, of specific 1:700 scale 3D-Prints from Turner Miniatures to allow me to field very specific vessels for my Camperdown Project and my Small Ship/Small Squadron Scenarios; and if you are interested in adding these scale models into your own collection you might be interested in the links below to my previous posts.

JJ's Wargames - Camperdown Project, Dutch Corvette Minerva
JJ's Wargames - Speedy and El Gamo
JJs Wargames - US 36-gun Frigate Constellation and French 40-gun Frigate La Virginie

In this post I am showcasing two more additions, starting here with the 40-gun French frigate La Coquille, the lead ship of her class of five sister ships that included, SirèneFranchiseDédaigneuse and Themis.


Coquille
Coquille (Seashell in English) was built at Bayonne as Patriote by Raymond-Antoine Haran, but was renamed Coquille on the 30th May 1795, and was a 40-gun frigate and lead ship of her class, launched in 1794. 

Her general characteristics were:
Tons burthen 1180 tons (bm)
Length of gundeck 137 feet, 6 inches
Beam 34 feet, 9 inches
Depth of hold 17 feet, 7 inches


Her armament consisted of:
Gundeck: 28 x 12-pounder long guns
Quarterdeck & Forecastle: 12 x 6-pounders with up to 2 or 4 of these 6-pounders substituted by 36-pounder carronades (obusiers).

On the 20th March 1796 she was under the command of Captain Pierre-Paul Gourrege and was escorting a convoy from Brest to the Île-d'Aix roads with Proserpine 40-guns, when she encountered a British squadron near Audierne.

Captain Sir John Borlase Warren - RMG

The British 'crack-raiding' squadron was under the command of Captain Sir John Borlase Warren, on this occasion consisting of his pennant ship the 24-pounder Pomone 44, the 24-pounder razee Anson 38, Captain Charles Philip Durham, the 18-pounder Galatea 32, Captain Richard Goodwin Keats, the 18-pounder Artois 38, Captain Sir Edmund Nagle and the lugger Valiant. which engaged the French squadron escorting the convoy near the Bec du Raz capturing four brigs from the convoy.


The British then engaged the French warships escorting the convoy but were not able to bring them to a full battle before having to give up the chase due to the onset of dark and the dangerous location; that saw Galatea the only vessel in the British squadron to suffer casualties losing two men killed and six wounded and the store-ship Etoile, under the command of lieutenant de vaisseau Mathurin-Théodore Berthelin and armed with thirty 12-pounder guns and had a crew of 160 men, struck, whilst the four French frigates (Coquille among them), a corvette, a brig, and the rest of the convoy escaped.

Attack on the French Squadron under Monsr. Bompart Chef d'Escadre, upon the Coast of Ireland, by a Detachment of His Majesty's Ships under the Command of Sir J. B. Warren, Oct. 12th 1798 - Nicholas Pocock 1799. La Coquille can be seen third from left.

On 12 October 1798, Coquille armed with 40 guns, and had a crew of 580 men, under the command of Captain Léonore Depéronne took part in the Battle of Tory Island, where she was captured by the British losing 18 men killed and 31 wounded in the battle.

Battle of Tory Island

The Royal Navy took her into service as HMS Coquille, but an accidental fire destroyed her in December 1798.


The other Coquille class frigates:

Sirène 

Combat de la frégate française La Sirène contre une division anglaise -Pierre-Julien Gilbert
On the 22nd March 1808, at 20:30, off Groix, and the Port of Lorient, Sirène was pursued by the British 74-gun Impetueux and the 36-gun frigate Aigle which managed to close with her and she was taken in a cross-fire of Aigle, which sailed between her and the shore, and Impetueux on the other side. The gunnery exchange lasted one hour and a quarter, after which the British withdrew.

Launched in Bayonne, as Fidèle, she was commissioned as Sirène in May 1795 under Lieutenant Charles Berrenger. She took part in the Expédition d'Irlande.

My take on the Expédition d'Irlande in which the frigate La Sirène participated, with my Battle of Bantry Bay 1796 Scenario here played at the DWG.
Devon Wargames Group - Bantry Bay 1796, Kiss Me Hardy

La Sirène proved a useful raider and taker of merchantmen in her career and also taking part in Admiral Villeneuve's 1805 campaign seeing action at the Battle of Cape Finisterre on the 22nd July 1805, before being part of the French force ordered to attack the British whaling fleet off Greenland in 1806. 

On the 22nd March 1808, she was damaged in an action off Lorient by the British 74-gun Impetueux and the 36-gun frigate Aigle and forced to beach herself to escape, and being too badly damaged to recover and repair, ended her days as a hulk in that port.

Franchise 
Launched in Bayonne in 1798 Franchise joined a squadron of three frigates, Concorde under Commodore Jean-François Landolphe, Médée under Captain Jean-Daniel Coudin, and Franchise under Captain Pierre Jurien, with Landolphe as the overall commander, leaving Rochefort on the 6th March 1799.

Lines and profile of the French Coquille-class frigate Franchise - RMG

The squadron evaded the British Rochefort patrol and began an extended commerce raiding operation, inflicting severe damage on the West African trade for the rest of the year, before wear on all the ships forced them to refit in the Spanish port of Montevideo, not able to set sail until the early summer of 1800.

The force began a raiding spree in the South Atlantic off Brazil, against American merchants, now at war with France in the Quasi War, and British trade, until Concorde was taken in an action on the 4th August 1800, off Rio de Janeiro by HMS Belliqueux 64-guns, leaving Franchise to make her way back to France safely evading the British blockade.


On the 28th May 1803 HMS Minotaur, in company with Thunderer, and later joined by Albion, all of 74-guns captured Franchise, which was 33 days out of Port-au-Prince; of the sixteen 9-pounders on her quarterdeck and forecastle, ten were in her hold. She had a crew of 187 men under the command of Captain Jurien.

Taken into the Royal Navy as HMS Franchise, she was a successful escort taking many enemy privateers in her duties, whilst also serving at the Second Battle of Copenhagen in August-September 1807, before being broken up in 1815.

Dédaigneuse 

Lines and profile of the French Coquille-class frigate Dedaigneuse- RMG
'Dedaigneuse' (1801) arrived at Plymouth Dockyard on 20 February 1801, was docked on 29 July 1801 and her copper was replaced. She was undocked on 24 August, and sailed on 9 November 1801 having been fitted.

Dédaigneuse was launched in 1797 and on Monday, 26th January 1801, at 8.00 a.m., at 45°N 12°W, Oiseau 32-guns, under Captain Samuel Hood Linzee, fell in with and chased Dédaigneuse, which was bound from Cayenne to Rochefort with despatches.

The pursuit of the Dédaigneuse, Monday, 26th January 1801, at 8.00 a.m., at 45°N 12°W

By noon the following day, with Cape Finisterre in sight, Captain Linzee signalled Sirius and Amethyst, both of 36-guns, who were in sight to join the pursuit; however Dédaigneuse maintained her advantage until 2.00 a.m. on the 28th when Oiseau and Sirius were within musket-shot of Dédaigneuse

Actually this is HM Clyde chasing the French frigate Vestale, by Derek Garedner, but captures the chase of Dédaigneuse by HM frigate Oiseau 32-guns equally well.
'In a desperate attempt to shake her pursuers she opened fire from her stern-chasers, which fire the two British ships immediately returned.'

In a desperate attempt to shake her pursuers she opened fire from her stern-chasers, which fire the two British ships immediately returned, and after a running fight of 45 minutes, Dédaigneuse was two miles off shore near Cape Bellem with her running rigging and sails cut to pieces, mainly due to the steady and well-directed fire from Sirius. 

Aboard Dédaigneuse casualties were heavy with several men killed, including her captain and fifth lieutenant, and 17 wounded; she was therefore forced to strike her colours, and although Sirius was the only British ship damaged (rigging, sails, main-yard and bowsprit) in the encounter, there were no fatalities on the British side with Captain Linzee declaring the encounter a long and anxious chase of 42 hours and acknowledged a gallant resistance on the part of Dédaigneuse;  describing her as "a perfect new Frigate, Copper fastened and sails well..."

He sent her into Plymouth with a prize crew under the command of his first lieutenant, H. Lloyd and  Dédaigneuse was afterwards added to Royal Navy under the same name HMS Dedaigneuse.

Themis
Unlike her sisters that were launched at Bayonne, Themis was launched at Rochefort in 1799 and commissioned in 1801, taking part in the Battle of Cape Finisterre (22 July 1805) and in the Battle of Trafalgar (21 October 1805). 

Admiral Sir Robert Calder's Action off Cape_Finisterre, 23rd July 1805 - William Anderson (RMG)

During Trafalgar she was commanded by Captain Nicolas Joseph Pierre Jugan, and after the battle she towed the Spanish ships of the line Principe de Asturias and Santa Ana to safety in Cádiz.

I got to run a re-fight of the Battle of Cape Finisterre (22 July 1805), in which the Themis participated, at the Devon Wargames Group back in January 2022
Devon Wargames Group - An Opportunity Mist! (Battle of Cape Ferrol or 'Calder's Action' - 22nd July 1805)

Still under the command of Captain Jugan, on the 26th February 1806 she took part in Lamellerie's expedition, a squadron commanded by the most senior frigate captain in Cádiz, Captain Louis-Charles-Auguste Delamarre de Lamellerie. 

“Back home” - Carlos Parrilla Penegos
The ship Santa Ana being towed by the French frigate Thémis on its way to Cádiz after the Battle of Trafalgar on 21st October 1805.

The squadron consisted of other French frigates who had survived Trafalgar: Hermione, Hortense (Lamellerie's frigate), Rhin and the brig Furet (a slower ship she was captured by the British while the rest of the squadron escaped into the Atlantic) and its mission was to breakout out of Cádiz into the Atlantic and raid British merchant shipping.

A more contemporary take on Themis (left) depicted here towing Santa Ana - Antoine Roux

Following the escape from Cádiz, the remaining four ships of the squadron sailed southwards, reaching the French African trading post of Senegal in March and then crossing the Atlantic to Cayenne, French Guiana arriving on the 27th March to take on fresh supplies, and then sailing on the 7th April to operate with limited success against British merchant shipping in the Caribbean, including  fifteen days cruising off Barbados. 

Retiring to the Spanish colony of Puerto Rico, Lamellerie resupplied his ships again in preparation for the journey back to France, and on the 18th May the squadron sailed for home.

During the six months expedition the squadron did not cause significant disruption to British trade and
on the 27th July, as they neared Rochefort, the squadron were spotted by HMS Mars 74-guns, which chased the French squadron through the night and into the next morning, by which time the Rhin had fallen behind the others and was captured by Mars. The other ships became separated and Thémis was the only one to reach the intended destination of Rochefort (the other two frigates ended up in Bordeaux).

There is a wonderful level of detail on these prints by Henry Turner with the wheel, quarterdeck guns, ports and railings on this Coquille-class frigate nicely captured, and I can see myself adding other models of this class to add to my Trafalgar collection.

In January 1808 Thémis was sailing in the Atlantic before returning to the Mediterranean, and after passing by Gibraltar on the 17th March, she raided commerce with the French frigate Pénélope 44-guns and sailed to Toulon. From there, she was tasked to ferry supplies to Corfu, along with the Pauline 44-guns. She was trapped there and eventually seized by the British when they captured the island.

HMS Glatton 56-guns

HMS 'Glatton' (1795) after defeating the French squadron on the night of the 15th July 1796

HMS Glatton was a 56-gun fourth rate of the Royal Navy, and was built and launched by Wells & Co. of Blackwell, costing £7,396 and sliding down the slips on the 29th of November 1792 for the British East India Company (EIC) as the Indiaman Glatton


She made one round trip to China for the EIC in 1793-1794, until her commission in April 1795 by the Royal Navy to meet the demand for small two-deckers for convoy duties during the French Revolutionary War.

Her general characteristics were:
Tons burthen 1256 21/94 tons (bm)
Length of gundeck 163 feet, 111/4 inches
Beam 42 feet, 1 inch
Depth of hold 17 feet

Plan showing the inboard profile plan Glatton (1795), a converted East India Company ship, a 54-gun, Forth Rate, two-decker, as fitted at Chatham Dockyard as a convict transport. The plan shows large gun ports on the upper deck to accommodate an all carronade armament. Signed David Polhill (Master Shipwright, 1801-1803)
Annotated on the reverse: "Glatton 54 Guns as fitted at Chatham in 1802 for carrying Convicts to Botany Bay." (RMG)

Her armament consisted of:
Gundeck: 28 x 68-pounder carronades
Upper Deck: 28 x 42-pounder carronades

Later rearmed with 18-pounder long guns on her gundeck


Glatton was unusual in that for a time she was the only ship-of-the-line that the Royal Navy had armed exclusively with carronades at the instigation of her commissioning commander, Captain Henry Trollope. (Eventually she returned to a more conventional armament of guns and carronades.)

Captain Sir Henry Trollope

Trollope entered the navy in April 1771 aboard the 64-gun Captain, and would see service during the American War of Independence on the American station, assuming his first command in 1778 of the 12-gun cutter Kite, based in the Nore under Admiralty orders and in which he achieved notable success earning a staggering £30,000 in prize money for the capture of just two ships carrying seasoned ship timber.

His undoubted skills were also demonstrated on the 30th March 1779 when fighting the Kite in the defence of a 30-ship convoy from a much larger French privateer, exchanging broadsides with her adversary and driving her off to find easier pickings, then later the next day, whilst making repairs, driving off another privateer brig of 18-guns, badly damaging and knocking down her mainmast whilst inflicting forty-five casualties for the loss of just nine men wounded, although the damage received prevented him from attempting to board his adversary.


Promoted to Commander in 16th April 1779 he continued to command the Kite until his growing reputation saw him promoted Post Captain in 1781 before appointed to command the Rainbow 44-guns in March 1782 an experimental vessel whose original 18 and 9-pounder main armament had been changed in favour of 20 x 68-pounder carronades on her gundeck, and 22 x 42-pounder carronades on her upper deck, with a further 6 x 32-pounder carronades on her forecastle and quarterdeck.

Originally designed in 1759 by a British officer named Robert Melville, carronades were adopted by the Royal Navy in 1779, under the sponsorship of Admiral Sir Charles Middleton, Comptroller of the Navy from 1778 to 1790 and created Baron, Lord Barham in May 1805 when he took the post of First Lord of the Admiralty. Called 'the smasher' by Melville and 'the devil's gun' by British seaman, the carronade had two main functions: to smash through one side of an opposing ship's hull (creating a torrent of wood-splinters) and to clear the crew off an enemy's main-deck.

'The smasher' or 'The devil's gun'

First manufactured by the Carron Iron Works in Stirlingshire, Scotland, carronades came in calibres ranging from two-pounders -- usually carried on the quarter-deck -- to 68-pounders (HMS 'Victory' carried two of these on her forecastle). The typical fourth-rate warship of 50 to 54 guns in the Napoleonic Wars carried six 12-pounder and six 24-pounder carronades.

In the early morning of 4th September 1782 the Rainbow came upon the new French frigate Hebe 38-guns, off the Isle de Bas and rather surprisingly her astonished commander, Chevalier Pierre Joseph de Vigny, surrendered after the first massive shot from the Rainbow destroyed his wheel, surmising that if the British ship s forecastle guns alone could inflict so much damage then the rest could undoubtedly do much more. This feeble defence by the French captain ultimately led to his being cashiered and sentenced to fifteen years imprisonment. 


Denied any further opportunity to properly test his experimental command, Trollope paid the Rainbow off following the peace in March 1783, thus it was likely little surprise that Trollope, given the liberty for arranging Glatton's armament when he took command of her in 1794, should choose to replicate the fitout of his previous command in 1782, looking to demonstrate its full capability as soon as the opportunity presented.

HMS "Amelia" Chasing the French Frigate "Aréthuse" 1813 - John Christian Schetky
Amelia was the former French frigate Proserpine, sister ship to Hebe engaged and captured by Trollope's Rainbow.

Classed as a fourth-rate, HMS Glatton was assigned to the North Sea Fleet, under Admiral Adam Duncan, and on the 14th July 1796, she was directed to sail to join a squadron of two ships of the line and several frigates cruising off the Dutch coast, the Netherlands being by this stage a French satellite.

In the early afternoon of the 16th, close to the Dutch naval base of Helevoetsluis, Trollope and HMS Glatton sighted a powerful enemy squadron* consisting of six large frigates, a brig, and a cutter, with one of them, as far as could be made out, mounting 50 guns, two 36, and the other three 28. Given these odds, Trollope might be forgiven for judging discretion to be the better part of valour. He banked however on the same advantage that had proved so decisive in his earlier action with HMS Rainbow, the surprise element and the devastating firepower of the carronades if the range could be closed. He therefore ordered HMS Glatton to be cleared for action and steered towards the enemy.

*Various sources I have suggest, Brutus 44/46-gun razee, Incorruptible 38/40-gun frigate, Magicienne 32/36-gun frigate, and possible Republicaine 28-gun corvette plus two 22-gun corvettes, and a brig or just two 24-gun corvettes.

Frankly when I get around to fighting this scenario, I may well have either of these two options to field, perhaps with a random selection to keep things interesting.

William James gives the following account of the action that followed;

Having cleared for action, the Glatton stood on with a light breeze in her favour; and, so far from being daunted at the formidable appearance of the enemy, Captain Trollope was rejoiced at the opportunity thus afforded him of trying the effect of the heavy carronades in his ship. At 6 p.m. the wind freshened, and the four ships formed in close line of battle with their heads to the north-east. At 8 p.m., as a proof how confident they were of success, the strangers shortened sail, backing their mizen topsails occasionally to keep in their stations.

At about 9 h. 45 m. p.m. the Glatton, having hoisted the St.-George's ensign, arrived abreast of the three smaller and rearmost ships, but reserved her fire for the next ship, the latter from her superior size appearing to be the commodore; and which ship was now the second in the line, the ship next ahead of her having fallen to leeward. At a few minutes before 10 p.m., as the Glatton ranged up close alongside of the supposed commodore, Captain Trollope, hailing the ship, desired her commander to surrender to a British man-of-war. In an instant French colours and a broad pendant were displayed, and the commodore, and immediately afterwards all the other ships commenced firing at the Glatton.

An aquatint engraving by Robert Dodd, dated 19th December 1796, entitled,
'To the Right Honourable Earl Spencer . . . This plate representing His Majesty's Ship Glatton . . . attacking a French Squadron consisting of six frigates, a brig and a cutter, on the night of the 15th July 1796.' Glatton's stern gallery can be seen amid the smoke of battle, surrounded by the enemy.  

The Glatton was not slow in returning the compliment, and poured into the French commodore, at the distance of not more than 20 yards, a broadside such as perhaps no single-decked ship ever before received. While the Glatton and the French commodore were continuing to go ahead and mutually engaging, 
the French van-ship tacked, in the expectation of being followed by her squadron, and thereby driving the Glatton upon the Brill shoal, which was close to leeward. The French van-ship soon arrived within hail on the Glatton's weather beam, and received a fire from her larboard guns, the effects of which were heard in the cries and groans of the wounded, and partially seen in the shattered state of the ship's side. This quickly elicited the cheers of the British crew, and the discomfited enemy passed on to the southward; leaving the Glatton still engaged with the French commodore upon her lee bow, another large frigate (the latter's second ahead when the action commenced) upon her lee quarter.

The action had now lasted about 20 minutes; when the Glatton's pilot called out, that the ship, if she did not tack in five minutes, would be on the shoal. Captain Trollope replied "When the French commodore strikes the ground, do you put the helm a-lee." Almost immediately afterwards the French commodore tacked to avoid the shoal, and, while in stays, received a heavy raking fire that much disabled him. The other French ships had previously gone about; and the Glatton, as well to continue the action, as to escape running on the shoal, prepared to do the same, but, owing to the damaged state of her sails and rigging, experienced a great difficulty in getting her head round.

The combatants were now all on the starboard tack; and, although the three large and hitherto principally engaged frigates had fallen to leeward, the three smaller ones still kept up a harassing long-shot fire; to which the Glatton, on account of the distance, could not make a very effectual return. 

My surmise on a likely position for the encounter between Glatton and the French squadron close
to the Dutch naval base of Helevoetsluis, and the shoal off Briel, referred to as 'Brill' in James' account, and showing the proximity to Flushing, where the French withdrew to, post action.

The wounded state of the topmasts and the increasing power of the wind rendering it necessary to take a reef in the topsails of the Glatton, her men unhesitatingly flew upon the yards, which were also wounded by shot, and performed their task in the face of a smart cannonade from the nearest of the three ships to leeward left in a state to continue the action; and which ship, mistaking the cause of the cessation of the Glatton's fire, was seemingly advancing to reap the fruits of her prowess. 

The British crew, however, were soon at their guns again, and the fall of a topsail yard belonging to one of the French ships, coupled with some other damage, convinced the Frenchmen on board that the victory was not yet to them, and very soon induced these three ships to follow the example of their three more powerful companions, and withdraw themselves from the combat.


The six French ships, thus beaten, were not; however, the only opponents that had been assailing the Glatton. Towards the close of the action the brig and cutter, the first mounting 16, and the other eight or ten guns, had stationed themselves under her stern, and opened a smart fire; a fire which the Glatton; from the defects in her equipment already noticed, could only answer by musketry. After receiving a few well-directed volleys, the brig and cutter made sail after their companions; and at 11 p.m. all firing ceased between the Glatton and her many opponents.

The dismantled state of the Glatton rendered pursuit on her part out of the question. Every brace, and every stay except the mizen, had been cut away or rendered useless; and so had all the running and the greater part of the standing rigging. The principal part of the enemy's fire had passed between her tops and gunwale, so that the lower sails of the Glatton were cut nearly from the yards: the jib and mainsail, indeed, were in ribands. The mainmast, and the fore and main yards, were also badly wounded, and ready to fall. 

Scarcely half a dozen shot had struck the hull; and, in consequence, no men were killed, and, except a few bruises and scratches, two only wounded. One of the latter was Captain Henry Ludlow Strangeways of the marines; the other, a corporal of the same corps. The first-named gallant officer, although badly wounded by a musket-ball in the thigh, and compelled in consequence, to have a tourniquet applied, insisted on returning to his quarters; where he remained until, being faint with loss of blood, he was carried off the deck: he died shortly afterwards.

Captain Henry Trollope with the mortally wounded Marine Captain Henry Ludlow Strangeways on the deck of HMS Glatton

The Glatton, during the night, used every exertion to put herself in a state to renew the action by morning, with the assistance, it was hoped, of one or two ships of Captain Savage's squadron. 

On the 16th, at daybreak, the French squadron, drawn up in a close head and stern line, was still in sight, with the advantage, by a shift of wind during the night to south-west, of the weathergage. At 8 a.m., having knotted and spliced her rigging, bent new sails, and otherwise refitted herself, the Glatton offered battle to her opponents; but these, having felt too sensibly the effects of her 68lb. shot, declined a renewal of the engagement, and about noon bore away for Flushing, followed by the Glatton. 

Having thus compelled a whole squadron of French ships to take shelter in port, the Glatton turned her head to the northward, and, standing in need of great repairs, steered for Yarmouth roads; where, on the 21st, she came to an anchor.

The Glatton's affair, like many other drawn battles, is imperfect in its details, for the want of any correct information as to the names, force, damage, and loss, of the ships which she had engaged. One French frigate was known to be the Brutus, a 74-gun ship cut down, mounting from 46 to 50 guns; 24-pounders on the first or main deck, and 12-pounders, with 36-pounder carronades, on the quarterdeck and forecastle. A second ship is stated to have been the 38-gun frigate Incorruptible; and a third, the 36-gun frigate Magicienne. 

A Flushing paper, of July 5, 1796, states that the French frigate, Incorruptible, with another frigate, a 36, not named, the 28-gun frigate Républicaine, two ship-corvettes of 22 guns each, and an armed brig or snow, were lying in the road waiting an opportunity to get to France. These then, with the Brutus, were probably the squadron which the Glatton had engaged.


That the French ships sustained considerable damage in their hulls may reasonably be inferred, from the size of the Glatton's shot, the closeness of the action, and the shyness which they ultimately evinced. Moreover, on the morning succeeding the action, the Glatton's people plainly saw men, on stages, over the sides of the French ships, stopping shot-holes. In further corroboration, several of the Flushing fishermen afterwards reported, that considerable damage had been sustained by three or four of the frigates, so much so, indeed, that one of them had sunk in the harbour; that either that or one of the others had lost 70 men in killed and wounded, and that the French were astonished at finding the decks of their ships so ripped up by the Glatton's shot.

Viewed in every light, the action between the Glatton and this French frigate-squadron was highly honourable to the officers and crew of the former. The prompt decision of Captain Trollope to become the assailant, when one of the six opponent ships, admitting her to have been the Brutus, was 300 or 490 tons larger than the Glatton, coupled with the latter's conduct throughout the engagement, well entitled her commander to the honour of knighthood subsequently conferred upon him by his sovereign. The merchants of London, too, with their usual liberality, presented Captain Trollope with an elegant piece of plate. The three lieutenants of the Glatton on this memorable occasion were Robert Williams, Alexander Wilmot Schomberg, and William Pringle.

The Turner Miniatures model of Glatton, completed with Warlord masts, anchors figurehead and boats, shows off her top deck carronades.

The crew of the Glatton not being sufficiently numerous to man her guns on both sides, the following expedient was resorted to: The allotment of men for each gun upon either broadside was divided into two gangs; one of which, having loaded and run out the gun, left it to be pointed and fired by the other, composed of picked hands, and then ran across and did the same to the gun on the opposite side. And how well the British crew plied their guns has already been shown in the result of the engagement.'

Glatton continued to serve in the North Sea and the Baltic, and as a transport for convicts to Australia. She then returned to naval service in the Mediterranean. After the end of the Napoleonic Wars the Admiralty converted her to a water depot at Sheerness, and later in 1830 the Admiralty converted Glatton to a breakwater and sank her at Harwich.

The Models
I have to say that I am enjoying the detail on these models and I hope my efforts have helped to illustrate it ,with the individuality of the prints nicely adding another level of detail to my collection overall.

They really work well alongside the Warlord range of models as amply illustrated with the ability to add parts from the plastics, such as boats, anchors, masts and figureheads.

Some further new additions arrived this week from Only Games, with two small French frigates, five French brigs and the schooner 'Pickle', with some of these models destined for a bit of a conversion job.

More of these models to come, with a new addition to the Trafalgar collection and then the last few models to complete the fleets for Camperdown before a fleet review of the collection as a whole.

More anon
JJ

Friday 12 July 2024

Buckler's Hard - The Eighteenth Century Shipbuilding Village in the New Forest.

 
One place that has been long on the list of 'Must Visit Soon' has been Buckler's Hard on the River Beaulieu in Hampshire, a beautifully preserved and maintained little hamlet given over to tourism, with a small maritime museum and a modern yachting marina, that recall's through its buildings and facilities the glory days of being a major eighteenth century naval shipbuilding centre.

The old main street in Buckler's Hard, closed to traffic in 1971, to the right-centre with the prominent chimney is the former 'Ship Inn' that opened its door to customers in 1752 until replaced in 1792 by New Inn out of picture on the right. Henry Adam's Ship Builder's House is the last property on the left with its views out over the former yard and river.  

The construction that happened here made a major contribution to British naval supremacy in the late 18th and early 19th century with the building and launching of fifty-four warships from 74-gun third-rates to 14-gun brigs and lowly 4-gun transports but also included such famous ships as 'Nelson's favourite, HMS Agamemnon 64-guns and the 36-gun frigate Euryalus, nicknamed 'Nelson's Watchdog' after her reporting the movements of the Franco-Spanish fleet in Cadiz harbour shortly before the battle of Trafalgar.

Carolyn and I enjoyed gloriously sunny weather for our three and a half hour drive to the New Forest following the coast road via Bridport and Wimborne, avoiding a lorry fire just south of Verwood before heading towards the coast and Buckler's Hard.

In 1203 King John founded the Beaulieu Abbey as a Cistercian abbey on the River Beaulieu in Hampshire, populated by thirty monks sent from the abbey of Cîteaux in France.

The summer has finally arrived here in the UK and Carolyn and I took full advantage of it with a day out at Buckler's Hard in Hampshire. To the right is the entrance to the Maritime Museum, but we're on our way to catch a boat trip along the river first.

In April 1538 the abbey was confiscated by King Henry VIII under the Dissolution of the Monasteries, and the estate was purchased by Sir Thomas Wriothesley, later 1st Earl of Southampton, who built the first Beaulieu Palace House which subsequently passed through marriage into the Montagu family and is still owned by the 1st Earl's descendant, the 4th Baron Montagu of Beaulieu.

A period map of the River Beaulieu leading into Southampton Water between it and the Isle of Wight, with Beaulieu, Buckler's Hard and Lepe shown. Warship construction here was ideal in many ways, with a large supply of timber from the New Forest and Portsmouth Naval Dockyard close by for fitting out newly completed vessels with masts, rigging, guns and stores.

As well as 3,441 hectares of estate lands the new estate also came with rights to the river bed, the river being an important twelve mile long asset that saw the establishment of three small settlements along its banks, with Beaulieu developing close to the original abbey and its bridge crossing nearest to the sea, Lepe Hamlet at the entrance to the river; and the third, described as an accident of history, Buckler's Hard, planned as a sugar port, Montagu Town, in the 1720's but eventually to flourish as a naval shipbuilding centre, close to the timber resources of the New Forest and within easy access of the Portsmouth naval base with stores for fitting and finishing warships.

The mouth of the River Beaulieu, with the Isle of Wight beyond and showing Lepe (pronounced Leap) where the 50-gun HMS Greenwich was built and launched in 1747. We took a boat cruise down to the mouth of the river, enjoying the sight of a sunbathing seal.

At the start of the eighteenth century, Buckler's Hard was little more than a convenient landing place on the Beaulieu River, the 'hard' being the one of the few places where gravel ran down to the watermark.

John, Second Duke of Montagu, circa 1740 (1690-1749) - George Knapton.

In 1722, John, Second Duke of Montagu had ambitious plans to build a free port for the import and export of sugar from the West Indies, the settlement to be called Montagu Town, in combination with a plan to colonise the islands of St Lucia and St Vincent.

Map showing the position of St Lucia and St Vincent in the West Indies and
the focus of the Duke of Montagu's failed expedition in 1722,

The expedition organised by the Duke and led by Captain Nathanial Uring consisted of seven ships and cost around £40,000 to prepare with the equipage of cannon, muskets and bayonets together with two prototype machine-guns, the invention of Sussex lawyer, James Puckle, using a revolving block mechanism that held seven to nine bullets, the guns never subjected to test firing.

Puckle's Machine-gun in the Buckler's Hard Museum.

However the expedition proved ill-fated as by the time the flotilla reached St Lucia in December 1722 the French had claimed it as their own which was ignored by Uring and his party, and a colony established, named Montagu Point, lasting only a month before French forces landed and expelled them with a similar situation in St Vincent that led to the whole project being abandoned. 

This wonderful model illustrates the layout of Buckler's Hard on the 3rd June 1803, three days before the launch of the 36-gun Apollo class frigate Euryalus - Model built by Gerald Wingrove in 1/200 scale.

With seven houses already built and nearby woodland cleared in 1731, all at the Duke's expense, a new reason for being was needed following the Caribbean failure, and with the Royal Dockyards struggling to keep pace with the demand for new warships, help from civilian shipbuilders lent the new hamlet that much needed reason, this following the construction and launching of the 48-gun Salisbury in 1698, probably from Bailey's Hard, about a mile upstream.   


In the 1740's Buckler's Hard thought to have been named after the Buckle family, one of the first to register in the new Beaulieu Parish, was chosen for the site of the new civilian yard, ideally situated as it was, surrounded by woods of oak and elm needed to build ships and owned by the Duke.

The great Royal Dockyard in Deptford in 1755 from which Henry Adams was sent from to Buckler's Hard to supervise the building of the Surprise.

A private shipyard, Wyatt & Co., adjoining the hamlet was established by James Wyatt, a local entrepreneur and timber merchant from Hythe on Southampton Water, and won a contract to build the Navy ship HMS Surprise in 1744, and subsequently another, HMS Scorpion, at Buckler's Hard. 

Henry Adams, Master Shipbuilder, 1713-1805

In 1744 Henry Adams, a master shipwright, was sent from Deptford Dockyard to Buckler's Hard by the Admiralty to oversee the building of these ships by Wyatt & Co., and it would be Adams having seen several different tenants attempt to make a commercial success out of building naval ships at the Hard between 1744 and 1749, who would take over the tenancy, launching his first ship, the 24-gun Mermaid, that same year, managing to keep his business going and reaping the rewards of the boom in demand for ships with the outbreak of the Seven Years War in 1756.

A reconstruction of Henry Adams' office, showing Adams discussing the building of the Agamemnon with James Dann, the Navy Board Overseer. 

Buckler's Hard grew to national prominence under Adams and won subsequent Royal Navy contracts over the following sixty years, with Adams supervising the building of forty-three Royal Navy ships at Buckler's Hard, including three that fought at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805: HMS Euryalus, HMS Swiftsure, and HMS Agamemnon.

The building of the 64-gun Agamemnon at Buckler's Hard - Harold Wyllie.
Nelson wrote of her: "My ship is without exception the finest 64 in the service and has the character of sailing remarkably well".

In 1760 following the death of his first wife, Elizabeth Smith, Adams married Anne Warner, having eight children, two of whom, Balthazar and Edward succeeded their father as tenants of the shipyard in 1793, but with Adams senior keeping an interested eye on the business of the yard from a specially constructed crow's nest built onto his house


Sadly Henry Adams died in 1805, before news of Nelson's victory at Trafalgar reached Britain and without knowing the part his ships built at Buckler's Hard played at the battle.

Inboard profile plan of HMS Conway - RMG
The Conway class of ten 20-28gun 6th-rates saw nine of them built and launched in 1814, that included the Towey at Buckler's Hard.   

Balthazar and Edward Adams continued to build ships at Buckler's Hard, but the business ran into difficulties, with inflation combined with shortages of timber and manpower leading to fewer large naval contracts that saw the last naval ship, the 24-gun Towey, being launched in 1814

Two motor-torpedo-boats undergoing repair or servicing at Buckler's Hard, part of the flotillas that patrolled the Channel against German E-boats and submarines in WWII 

During World War II, the village was used to build motor torpedo boats, and the river was a base for hundreds of landing craft for the Normandy invasion, Operation Overlord. Today the hamlet is given over to tourism, with a small maritime museum and a modern yachting marina. 


Buckler's Hard was where Sir Francis Chichester began and finished his solo voyage around the world in the Gipsy Moth IV, returning to Buckler’s Hard on 17th September 1967, his 66th birthday, to the recognition of cheering crowds and the sound of horns and sirens that greeted him, whilst an 18-gun salute marked his return to shore.

Chichester spent 226 days at sea in his 54 foot ketch, with only one stop in Sydney, setting set seven records:
  • Fastest voyage around the world in a small vessel – almost twice as fast as the previous record
  • First true solo circumnavigation of the world via the Capes of Good Hope, Leeuwin and Horn
  • Longest passage made by a small vessel without calling in to port – on the homeward leg from Sydney to Plymouth 15,250 miles
  • Longest passage made by a solo sailor without calling in to port – on the homeward leg, almost twice as long as the previous record
  • Longest distance covered by a solo sailor in a week – twice broke the record by more than 100 miles
  • Fastest solo speed record for a long passage – twice broke the record, going from Plymouth to Sydney in 107 days at an average of 131 miles a day and from Sydney to Plymouth in 119 days at an average of 130 miles a day
  • Set a solo record by travelling 1,400 miles in 8 days during the voyage

Soon after his return, Chichester was knighted for “individual achievement and sustained endeavour in the navigation and seamanship of small craft”. For the ceremony, the Queen used the sword which had belonged to Sir Francis Drake, the first Englishman to complete a circumnavigation with his crew.


For our visit to this remarkable place, we decided to start on the part of it that explains the whole story, namely the River Beaulieu, taking full advantage of the weather and grabbing a seat on the midday river cruise from the Hard up to the mouth of the river and back to better appreciate the place from the water.

Grey mullet, cruising close to the jetty, and smaller fish crowding in close to shore were nice to see in a very busy river. 

One thing that was immediately noticeable and very nice to see whilst waiting to board the boat was the river teeming with fish, from small fry close into shore to large grey mullet cruising out in the deeper water, indicating a clean river free from pollution despite the amount of boat traffic that was all to obvious.
 


As we pulled away from the jetty I had grabbed a seat at the back of the boat to get a shot of the old wharfs.

The two larger launching hards or wharfs can be seen to the right of picture and one of the smaller ones to the left and in close up below. The depth and width of the river at this point was ideal for controlled launchings and the situation was sheltered from prevailing westerly winds.

My mind's eye immediately imagined David Bell's great picture below of the launch of Euryalus with Swiftsure close alongside, a year away from joining her afloat and Agamemnon being launched as envisaged by Harold Wyllie in a similar rendition.


The launch of Euryalus at Buckler's Hard, 6th June 1803, with another Trafalgar veteran under construction in the dock close by, the 74-gun Swiftsure only a year away from her launch. Picture by David Bell.

One of the best parts of our hobby is combining the history with exploring the ground over which it occurred and envisaging the events that took place, a more problematic challenge when looking at naval battles, many miles out in the oceans and seas, but here in a place like this you can actually see a moment in time in the history of naval warfare captured in the view .

One of the smaller wharfs used for constructing smaller projects such as the Archer class 12-gun brig Growler, launched on the 10th August 1804.

The Wingrove model below shows four launching wharfs in 1803, with the two larger ones being used by Euryalus and Swiftsure and a supply boat in the landing wharf and the two smaller launch sites on the extreme left of the picture with one containing the recently laid keel of the brig Growler


Continuing on down the river I couldn't help noticing a very appropriately named craft, considering her home port.

The very appropriately named Caronade hailing from Buckler's Hard

A little further on down as we neared the mouth of the river, we paid our respects to one of the locals out for an early afternoon sunbathe, but I couldn't help hoping he had remembered to bring the high factor lotion as the sun was becoming fearsomely hot as it rose higher in a cloud free azure blue sky.



The lower reaches of the River Beaulieu are not served by a footpath and so catching a river cruise like this is probably one of the best ways to see it and get a better appreciation of the location, its history, the local wildlife, and better still to do it on a day like the one we enjoyed.



Back on dry land and with lunch time beckoning we decided to work our way back up through the village via the pub and ending up at the maritime museum that was reopened after a major refurbishment in 2011.


The first building that beckoned our attention on the way to the pub was the building that once housed the blacksmith's shop together with two forges that produced the nails and other small iron work for the ships but today is used to house a video presentation on the history of Buckler's Hard and the building of perhaps one of its most famous ships, the 64-gun Agamemnon together with a very fine scale model of her.


Before going inside we took time to check out the examples of timber preparation and the tools required that produced the great ships built here and these exhibits are examples of work carried out by the Southampton University students from the Centre of Maritime Archaeology when they spent time here practising 18th century shipbuilding methods.




The model of the Agamemnon was well worth seeing and a great inspiration to those of us interested in recreating these models for the tabletop hence my attention to the detail captured here that naval wargamers want to know such as stern and bow fittings and colour options for deck fittings, guns and bulwarks.


HMS Agamemnon was one of the fifty-four warships built here for the British Royal Navy between 1745 and 1814, and saw service in the American War of Independence, French Revolutionary, and Napoleonic Wars fighting in many major naval battles; but she is perhaps best remembered as Horatio Nelson's favourite ship, and was named after the mythical ancient Greek king Agamemnon, the first ship of the Royal Navy to bear the name.

Launch of the 'Agamemnon', Buckler's Hard, 1781 - Harold Wyllie

Agamemnon, joined with the Mediterranean fleet soon after commissioning in January 1793 under Captain Horatio Nelson, and under Vice-Admiral William Hotham, she participated in the Battle of Genoa when a French fleet, comprising 15 ships of the line, was sighted on the 10th of March 1795. 

 Sketch of HMS Agamemnon fighting French ship Ca Ira at the Battle of Genoa, 1795 - Nicholas Pocock (NMM)

Three days later, after the French had shown no signs that they were willing to give battle, Admiral Hotham ordered a general chase. The French ship Ça Ira 80-guns lost her fore and main topmasts when she ran into one of the other ships of the French fleet, Victoire 80-guns, allowing HMS Inconstant 36-guns to catch up with and engage her. 

Agamemnon opens fire on the Ca Ira - Geoff Hunt

Agamemnon 64-guns and Captain 74-guns came up to assist soon after, and continued firing into the French ship until the arrival of more French ships led to Admiral Hotham signalling for the British ships to retreat, an order that infuriated the aggressive Nelson, however Ça Ira was captured the following day by Captain and Bedford, along with Censeur 74-guns which was towing her.


Her general characteristics were:
Tons burthen 1384 tons (bm)
Length of gundeck 160 feet 
Beam 44 feet, 4 inches
Depth of hold 19 feet

Agamemnon depicted leaving Portsmouth harbour - David Bell

Her armament consisted of:
Gundeck: 26 x 24-pounder long guns
Upper gundeck: 26 x 18-pounder long guns
Quarterdeck & Forecastle: 10 (QD) & 2 (Fc) x 9-pounders long guns and 6 (QD) x 18-pounder carronades & 2 (Fc) x 24-pounder carronades


She fought at the Battle of Trafalgar on 21 October 1805 under Captain Sir Edward Berry one of Nelson's Battle of the Nile 'band of brothers', as part of Nelson's weather column, where she fired a broadside into the by then floating hulk of the Bucentaure, before sailing north to engage Rear-Admiral Dumanoir's returning ships of the allied van, briefly engaging the Intrépide, suffering two killed and eight wounded in the battle.
 

It was only a year ago that I was busy preparing my own model of the ship in preparation for our big Trafalgar game, using the new model from Warlord Games.

JJ's Wargames- All at Sea, Two for Trafalgar

Agamemnon's Battle Honours are very impressive, especially for a 64-gun ship of the line which was already considered obsolete for use in the line of battle for the period in which she served:

Battle of Ushant, 1781
Battle of the Saintes, 1782
Battle of Genoa, 1795
Battle of the Hyères Islands, 1795
Battle of Copenhagen, 1801
Battle of Cape Finisterre, 1805
Battle of Trafalgar, 1805
Battle of San Domingo, 1806
Battle of Copenhagen, 1807


Agamemnon's later career was served in South American waters off Brazil and by then her worn-out and poor condition contributed to her being wrecked when, in June 1809, she grounded on an uncharted shoal in the mouth of the River Plate whilst seeking shelter with the rest of her squadron from a storm. 


All hands and most of the ship's stores were saved, but the condition of the ship's timbers made it impossible to free her, and her captain was cleared of responsibility for the ship's loss thanks to documents detailing her defects. 


In 1993, the wreck of Agamemnon was located, and several artefacts have since been recovered, including one of her cannons and an original piece of her coppering to be seen in the Buckler's Hard Maritime Museum.

The view of the village walking up from the old launching wharfs, with the Master Builder's House on the right, Henry Adams' old home and converted to a hotel for yachtsmen and motor tourists in 1926.

After checking out the Agamemnon, and a well earned refreshment break we worked our way up through the village and more specifically the houses that have been opened to the public with displays of life in these period buildings for the workers and their families.


As well as Agamemnon there are some other notable ships that were built at Buckler's Hard, and while enjoying my lunch it was an impressive list of ships that I perused in the Buckler's Hard guide book

HMS Spencer 74-gun third-rate, 1800
Five third-rate 74's were built and launched at the Hard with the largest built here being the Spencer at 1917 tons, launched on the 10th of May 1800.

HMS Spencer would be the largest warship built at Buckler's Hard. The 74-gun third rate displaced 1917 tons, with a length of 181 feet and beam of 49 feet, 6 inches.

Her battle honours would include the First and Second Battle of Algeciras 6th and 12th of July 1801 and was at the Battle of San Domingo 6th February 1806 where she engaged and took the French 74-gun Indivisible.

Duckworth's action off San Domingo, 6th February 1806 - Nicholas Pocock
Admiral Sir John Duckworth was watering and refitting his squadron off the Caribbean island of St Kitt's when he learnt that a large French force was intending to attack the economically important British colony of Jamaica. In a successful action on the 6th of February 1806, he managed to run two of the French ships ashore and capture the remaining three. Duckworth's action secured the way for the capture of Curacao, Martinique, Cayenne, and Guadeloupe.

HMS Surprise, 24-gun sixth-rate, 1745
The first ship built at Buckler's Hard was HMS Surprise, a 24-gun sixth-rate ship-sloop built to the 1741 revised specifications of the 1719 Establishment, a set of mandatory requirements governing the construction of all Royal Navy warships capable of carrying more than 20 naval long guns and designed to bring economies of scale through uniform vessel design, and ensure a degree of certainty about vessel capability once at sea, specifying the overall dimensions of each type of warship, and other factors used in constructing the ship, down to the thickness of timbers ("scantlings") used in construction and planking.

A contemporary full hull model of a 24-gun, sixth-rate sloop (circa 1745), built in the Georgian style - RMG. This model gives an impression of the likely look of HMS Surprise launched 27th January 1745 displacing 508 tons, with a length of 112 feet, 6 inches and beam of 32 feet.


HMS Heroine, 32-gun fifth-rate, 1783
Launched in 1783, the twenty fifth warship to be built at the Hard, the 32-gun frigate HMS Heroine represented a calculated risk to Henry Adams, as she was built on speculation, not in response to a firm order from the Navy.

Heroine was an Hermione class 32-gun frigate of which there were seven built, including this, the drawing for HMS Andromeda launch a year after the Heroine

Adams was already contracted at the time to build the 64-gun Agamemnon, but his second launch way was empty and his workforce underemployed, so he used his own capital for the venture, as well as many of the timbers that were too small for the larger ship.

The gamble paid off and the Navy purchased Heroine on completion for £10,274, or £1,941,287.74 in today's money.

The cutting out of HMS Hermione off Puerto Cabello by the boats from HMS Surprise - Nicholas Pocock.
JJ's Wargames - The Black Ship & Mutiny on the Spanish Main - Dudley Pope & Angus Konstam

Heroine was a Hermione class 32-gun frigate built to the same plans as her infamous sister ship HMS Hermione launched in Bristol in 1782 and whilst under the command of her tyrannical captain, Hugh Pigot was involved in the bloodiest mutiny in British naval history in September 1797 which saw Pigot and most of his officers killed. 

The mutineers then handed the ship over to the Spanish Empire on the 27th September 1797 and the Spanish renamed her Santa Cecilia, however on the 25th of October 1799, Captain Edward Hamilton, aboard the 32-gun HMS Surprise, cut her out of Puerto Cabello harbour and she was returned to Royal Navy service under the name Retaliation with the Admiralty later renaming her Retribution on the 31st of January 1800. I covered these events in my October 2023 book review with a link above.

HMS Thames, 32-gun fifth-rate, 1758
HMS Thames, a Richmond class 32-gun frigate was launched by Henry Adams on the 10th of April 1758, and unusually she was built of imported oak, with Adams himself providing yards, masts, furniture and stores. It seems likely that the strains of war against France were beginning to tell on the Royal Dockyards.

A contemporary full hull model of a ‘Richmond’-class 32-gun frigate (circa 1757) - RMG. Although not named the model gives a good representation of the style and look of HMS Thames.

Thames enjoyed a long career seeing service in the Seven Years War, the American War of Independence and the Revolutionary Wars against France, until her capture by a French squadron in the Bay of Biscay consisting of three frigates and a brig (The 40-gun frigate Carmagnole (flag), the 36-gun frigates Résolue and Sémillante, and 16 gun brig-corvette Espiègle.) under the command of Captain Zacharie-Jacques-Théodore Allemand, with the Thames making urgent repairs to the damage she had received after beating off the French 40-gun frigate Uranie and given a broadside to her stern by one of the newly arrived French opponents, and in no state to resist, struck her colours.

The Action of 24 October 1793 between Uranie and Thames

She was taken into French service as the Tamise, but on the 8th June 1796 in company with the 36-gun frigate Tribune and the 18-gun corvette Légère, fifty miles west of the Isles of Scilly, they encountered the British frigates Unicorn 32-guns and Santa-Margarita 36-guns, which gave chase and resulted in individual actions between Santa-Margarita and Tamise and the Unicorn versus Tribune as the Légère broke company and departed, seeing both French frigates taken in their respective fights.

The capture of the French Frigate Tamise by Santa Margarita, under the command of Captain T. Byam Martin, off the Scilly Isles, 8 June 1796 -  Nicholas Pocock

I ran a refight of the chase of the Tamise as an early test game of War by Sail way-back in 2020, as I started getting going with the 1:700 collection and will likely come back to this action with more appropriate models.

Santa Margarita in pursuit of Tamise, from our test game back in 2020
JJ's Wargames- All at Sea, First Games, New Rules

HMS Santa Margarita, 36-gun fifth-rate, 1774
HMS Santa Margarita mentioned in the account above of the recapture of the Tamise (HMS Thames) was a 36-gun fifth-rate frigate, that had been originally built for service with the Spanish Navy, but was captured off Lisbon after five years in service, eventually spending nearly sixty years with the British.

Action Between the 'Amazone' and HMS 'Santa Margarita': Cutting the Prize Adrift, 30 July 1782 - Robert Dodd

As well as taking on contracts to build new ships, Adams was also contracted to repair and rebuild them, which included the Santa Margarita, following her service during the American War of Independence and between 1791 and 1793 he rebuilt the former Spanish frigate, that would be instrumental in returning to the Royal Navy one of his former projects.

HMS Indefatigable, 64-gun third-rate, reduced to a 44-gun razee, 1795
HMS Indefatigable was one of the Ardent-class 64-gun third-rate ships-of-the-line designed by Sir Thomas Slade in 1761 for the Royal Navy and was built as a ship-of-the-line, but most of her active service took place after her conversion to a 44-gun razee frigate.

HMS Indefatigable 64-guns - Derek G. M. Gardner

Indefatigable was ordered on 3 August 1780 (long after Slade's death), and her keel was laid down in May 1781 at the Bucklers Hard shipyard. She was launched in early July 1784 and completed from the 11th of July to the 13th of September of that year at Portsmouth Dockyard as a 64-gun two-decked third rate for the Royal Navy. 

HMS Indefatigable 64-guns

She had cost £25,210 4s 5d (about £4,514,324.89 today) to build; her total initial cost including fitting out and coppering was £36,154 18s 7d. (about £6,741,466.41 today) By that time, she was already anachronistic for the role of a ship of the line, and was never commissioned in that role.

HMS Indefatigable 44-gun fifth-rate - Derek G. M. Gardner

In 1794, she was razéed; her upper gun deck was cut away to convert her into a large and heavily armed frigate. 

HMS Indefatigable 44-gun fifth-rate

The original intention was to retain her twenty-six 24-pounder guns on her gundeck, and to mount eight 12-pounder guns on her quarterdeck and a further four on her forecastle, which would have rated her as a 38-gun vessel; however, it was at this time that the carronade was becoming more popular in the Navy, and her intended armament was altered on the 5th of December 1794 with the addition of four 42-pounder carronades to go on her quarterdeck and two on her forecastle, and she was thereafter rated as a 44-gun fifth-rate frigate.


She took some 27 prizes, alone or in company, and the Admiralty authorised the issue of four clasps to the Naval General Service Medal in 1847 to any surviving members of her crews from the respective actions. ("Indefatigable 20th April 1796 - Capture of the Virginie", "Indefatigable 13th January 1797 - Destruction of the Drots de l'Homme", "16th July Boat Service 1806 - Cutting out of the French 16-gun brig-corvette César from the Gironde estuary." and "Basque Roads 1809 - Destruction of French ships in the Battle of the Basque Roads 11th-12th April 1809. "

Sir Edward Pellew by Sir Thomas Lawrence, 1797

Perhaps Indefatigable's most famous commander was Sir Edward Pellew, appointed commodore of the Western Frigate Squadron in 1794 and a year later took command of HMS Indefatigable, the ship with which he is most closely associated; the squadron also comprising the frigates HMS Argo, HMS Concord, HMS Révolutionnaire, and HMS Amazon.

Indefatigable, 44, with Jason, Concorde and Duke of York (lugger) leaving Falmouth, April, 1795 - Derek G. M. Gardner.

He was a good swimmer and noted for saving the lives of several seamen who had fallen overboard, with his most striking life-saving event happening on the 26th of January 1796 when the East Indiaman Dutton was carrying more than four hundred troops, together with many women and children, and ran aground under Plymouth Hoe. 

Due to the heavy seas, the crew and soldiers aboard were unable to get to shore, and Pellew swam out to the wreck with a line and, with help from young Irishman Jeremiah Coghlan, helped rig a lifeline that saved almost all aboard, for which feat he was created a baronet on 18 March 1796.

Indefatigable took part in some famous sea-fights which included the Action of the 13th of January 1797 with an engagement off the Penmarks involving the two frigates Indefatigable, under Pellew, and Amazon against the French Droits de l'Homme 74-guns, that ended with Droits de l'Homme being driven onto shore in a gale and also the Amazon running onto the shore, but with almost her entire crew surviving both the battle and the grounding to be captured.

HMS Indefatigable vs. Droits de l’Homme,13th January 1797 - John Steven Dews

On the 5th of October 1804 the Indefatigable, under Captain Graham Moore as commodore, and frigates Medusa, Lively, and Amphion intercepted four Spanish frigates off Cadiz under the command of Rear-Admiral Don Joseph Bustamente, Knight of the Order of St. James.

They were carrying bullion from Montevideo, South America to Spain, which at the time was a neutral country, but was showing strong signs of declaring war in alliance with Napoleonic France. 

Capture and destruction of four Spanish frigates, 5 October 1804 - Francis Sartorius

Acting on Admiralty orders, Moore required the Spaniards to change their course and sail for England but Admiral Bustamente refused and a short engagement ensued, which saw first the Mercedes blow up, Indefatigable capturing Medée, Lively capturing Clara, and after a further chase, Lively and Medusa capturing Fama.


Continuing our progress through the village we entered one of the cottages set up to illustrate what life was like for men, women and children who lived art Buckler's Hard in the 18th and early 19th century.

Mrs Arabella Burlace at work in the living room.

Many skilled craftsmen were needed to build the large naval ships at Buckler's Hard, but some of the workforce was temporary and itinerant, living in lodgings, and staying only for the duration of a contract.

Others settled in the village and of these the shipwrights earned the most, taking home around 25 to 30 shillings a week, with their pay linked to their productivity, based on the ship length and the completion time for each part.

Thomas Burlace, a shipwright from Deptford in London lived here with his family from 1789 to 1820, paying £4 a year in rent. Here he is seen being greeted by his son Edward, who would later become a shipwright himself and marry a neighbour's daughter, Mary West.

There was a shortage of shipwrights, who until the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815 had to serve a seven-year apprenticeship, so they could enjoy almost continuous employment.

The stairs in these cottages are like climbing the north face of the Eiger, and reminded me of my Nan's cottage when I was a nipper.

The recreated Shipwright's Cottage illustrates the difference in living standards between skilled and unskilled workmen.

Although Burlace was a skilled craftsman, he fell on hard times towards the end of his life, with an injury in 1812 preventing him from working and he had to apply for poor relief from the Beaulieu Parish, who passed the claim onto Deptford, with a legal claim for that liability to be established before payments could be made.

Anne and Lucy Burlace upstairs in the main bedroom

Mrs Burlace ran a Dame School from the cottage with her daughter for a short time until the poor relief was paid, and Thomas would die in 1816, causing yet more issues for the poor relief to be paid to his widow, that saw Arabella dying in 1820 aged 82. 

Times were very hard for people back then, something easily overlooked in the comparatively luxurious lifestyles modern folks live today.


The Labourer's Cottage has been arranged to show the housing arrangements of James Bound and his family, showing the very cramped living conditions compared to those enjoyed by the Burlace's, however it could have been worse, with some of these small cottages accommodating one family down stairs and one upstairs in a typically four room cottage.

Mrs Elizabeth Bound prepares the family meal of pickled pork and vegetables while the
children play in this cramped dining/living room. Fresh meat was a luxury, but
the residents of Buckler's Hard were luckier than many because they had gardens to provide fresh fruit and vegetables.

When the shipyard needed extra labour, it called upon the inhabitants of Beaulieu Rails, on the north western edge of the estate bordering the New Forest.

The hours were long, from dawn to dusk in winter and from 6am to 6pm in the summer, with employment being as irregular as farm work was seasonal and shipyard work relied on there being ships to build.

James Bound a tenant and occasional farm labourer sits at the table as his two sons George and John play with wooden toys, probably made from chips from the ship yard 

Those who were unable to work for long periods became dependent on the Parish for their subsistence under the terms of the Poor Law, with a Poor Rate levied on wealthier inhabitants such as Henry Adams and Charles Pocock, who ran the the nearby ironworks, and owned a factory in Reading, to pay for food shelter and clothing and sometimes medical treatment; with the rate equating to in 1794, one shilling in the pound on property value, and Henry Adams paid £2 6s 5d as his contribution.

The kitchen, complete with the resident mouse on the nearest corner of the table.

Not many of the names of the hundreds of men who built the ships at Buckler's Hard are known today, and these recreations of the lives of some of them and their families that have been revealed serve as a wonderful tribute to their lives, lived in extraordinary times and in a time of such hardships for ordinary people, where one false step or careless act could see these people transported or worse for acts committed simply to survive. 

The Bound's daughter Jane tends to her baby brother Henry in one of the 
cottage's two bedrooms. She and her mother likely supplemented the family income
by working as domestic help at one of the local farms.


Buckler's Hard was not a typical village of the period, being a satellite of Beaulieu, 2.5 miles upstream, and with all the houses the property of the Lord of the Manor of Beaulieu, with even Henry Adams its most wealthiest inhabitant being a tenant and paying rent for the shipyard and associated properties.

The church, steward and parson were also at Beaulieu, putting the landlords of the two inns near the top of the social pecking order in the village.

The East Terrace was where the village inns, the centre of village life in Buckler's Hard, were to be found, with the original inn, 'The Ship' opened in 1752 at No.87, about halfway along this frontage of cottages in the one with the tall chimney, and with its replacement, appropriately named 'The New Inn' opened in the house on the right of picture in 1792. Note the blocked up window, probably a relic of the unpopular 'Window Tax'.

Unsubstantiated stories suggest the inn was a centre for smuggling under the landlord Joseph Wort,
and the reconstruction of the interior in its original location shows an evening in the 1790's with all the key characters depicted in it based on known Buckler's Hard residents from that time.


The group playing cards include Richard Scanes, a former shipwright who lost a leg in accident during the launch of a ship, passing the time playing cards with farm labourer John Poore.


At the bar, landlord Joseph Wort is behind the bar selling ale brewed in Beaulieu by Westbrooks and standing next to him is Charles Pocock ironworks and factory owner, and friend of Henry Adams, whose daughter Lucy, he married in 1795.

He is discussing the iron trade with Richard Smith, one of two blacksmiths in Buckler's Hard.


Below, sitting at the table is Henry Gill, foreman of the shipyard, paying a sawyer, James Ward. Sawyers were usually paid by the day and had to find work in the woods when ship building was slack, although a few were permanently employed at the shipyard.


Elizabeth Wort, the landlord's daughter, helps her father out, a role she is likely to keep until she finds a suitable husband, and she can be seen talking with a travelling peddler, a purveyor of knick-knacks, pots and pans and luxury items taken from village to village carrying information and gossip on his travels.

On the wall can be seen an 'Act of Parliament' clock, so called because in the 18th century a charge was levied on every clock, known simply as the 'Clock Tax', so to encourage people to come into inns and other public places, large clocks like this one were put up for all to see.


Leaving what was the old village high street we continued on to where we came in passing the nicely arranged sign pointing us in the direction of the maritime museum


On the way to the museum we stopped to look at the SS Persia memorial recording the sinking of the P&O passenger ship by U-38 off Crete on the 30th December 1915 with the loss of 343 souls, on her way from London to India through the Mediterranean.


Among her passengers was John, 2nd Lord Montagu of Beaulieu, and his mistress and personal assistant, Eleanor Thornton, the inspiration for the famous Rolls-Royce mascot, 'Spirit of Ecstasy', for which she modelled, and sadly, she was one of the 343 people lost which included 119 passengers of whom 46 were women and 13 were children.


The sinking was highly controversial, as it was argued that it broke naval international law, which stated that merchant ships could be stopped and searched for contraband - but not sunk until passengers and crew had been put in a place of safety - for which lifeboats on the open sea were not considered sufficient.


Described in the British press, as a 'Piratical Attack', the German government issued denials, with the following report received from James W. Gerard, the US Ambassador in Berlin, stating 

'. . . the German Government has now heard from all the German submarines in the Mediterranean, and that none of them admits responsibility for the destruction of the Persia.'


The wreck of Persia was located off Crete in 2003 at a depth of 10,000 feet (3,000 m), and an attempt was made to salvage the treasure located in the bullion room. The salvage attempt met with limited success, retrieving artifacts and portions of the ship, and some jewels from the bullion room, some of which, including the door of the bullion room are part of a very impressive exhibition in the museum.

The recovered heavy duty door of the bullion room from the SS Persia

I took lots of pictures of the artefacts recovered but don't intend covering the exhibition in this post in any great depth (no pun intended) as the intention is to look at the 18th and early 19th century ship building activity and the warships that served in the Royal Navy that were built here.


At the entrance to the museum are a very nice pair of carronades, one of which was fired in 1967 to welcome back Sir Francis Chichester on his return up the Beaulieu River.



I came to Buckler's Hard very much with the intent on better understanding the ship building activity that happened here in the golden age of British naval history and the museum compliments the buildings and the location with some excellent models, artefacts and displays that really make that history a more vivid experience.


Having visited the recreated examples of the workers cottages it was great to see the examples of items discovered over the years capturing the period and related to the activities of the men employed in the yard that included the clay pipes, iron nails and bolts together with the remnants of bottles likely broken against the sides of ships during launchings.


The wax medallions seen below are of two victorious admirals of the era, immediately below, Richard, 1st Earl Howe (1726-1799), who won the victory at the Glorious First of June in 1794, and very appropriate given my own current project, 1st Viscount Adam Duncan, next below, victor at the Battle of Camperdown, October 11th 1797 with one of the ships under his command on that day and built at Buckler's Hard in 1791, being HMS Beaulieu.

Richard, 1st Earl Howe (1726-1799)

1st Viscount Adam Duncan (1731-1804)

A news bulleting from 1805 announcing the victory at Trafalgar.

Likely launch ceremony bottles



The museum has a very informative section covering the practicalities of ship construction at this time, from the selection of the best trees to be cut for a particular project to the design drawings and artwork produced to guide the shipwrights in the build and construction.




Henry Adams drawings for the figureheads for Greyhound, Vigilant, Brilliant and bottom right, Triton.

Plan for Termagant (1796); Bittern (1796); Cyane (1796); Plover (1796)



The models below of the yard and the construction process help display more vividly than drawings the labour intensive activity involved together with the organising of the yard and its stocks of timber, in an era without heavy machinery to assist the process, and with the whole venture a private concern under Adams and his sons, looking to win orders from the Navy and turn a profit from each project.
 








No matter what the era or subject be in Roman towns, villas and military sites, to here at an 18th century shipyard, the human aspect of the place is only enhanced with a name of a particular individual associated with the place, and below, the gravestone of Michael Silver who worked on the ship most famously associated with Buckler's Hard has cemented his place in posterity.



The museum is home to some impressive models of ships built here with the first one pictured here reminding me that I must find a better model of this ship for my Camperdown collection going forward.

HMS Beaulieu (1791) 40-gun, fifth-rate.
This 1:48 scale model made by A.W Curtis.


Built as a speculative project by Henry Adams, and bought by The Admiralty in 1790 for £12,397, she was launched in 1791 and with a crew of 280, saw service in the West Indies, being present at the capture of Martinique in 1794, later in 1797 she took part in the Battle of Camperdown.

I covered her history in more detail in a recent post, see link below.

JJ's Wargames - All at Sea, Battle of Camperdown Project

HMS Kennington (1756) 20-gun, sixth-rate, later Gibraltar Class
Launched in 1756, the Kennington saw service in the Seven Years War in both North America and Europe, and after previous failed attempts, in 1758 took part in the successful capture of Louisbourg in Canada, a major French fortress and supply base, that saw the French squadron in the harbour destroyed.

Engraving made by Canot after a painting by Richard Paton. Burning of the French ship Prudent (74 guns) and capture Bienfaisant (64 guns), during the siege of Louisbourg in 1758.

Her general characteristics were:
Tons burthen 437 45/94 tons (bm)
Length of gundeck 107 feet, 8 inches
Beam 30 feet, 6 3/4 inches
Depth of hold 9 feet, 8 inches


Her armament consisted of:
Gundeck: 20 x 9-pounder long guns.


She then moved to the Mediterranean, where under Captain Robert Barker she captured several French prize ships.


Following repairs in the 1760's, Kennington served in the West Indies, before being broken up at Sheerness in 1774.


HMS Euryalus (1803), 36 guns, fifth-rate
The 36-gun Apollo-class frigate that saw service in the Battle of Trafalgar and the War of 1812.

HMS Euryalus by Geoff Hunt.

Her first action occurred on the 2nd and 3rd of October 1804 when, captained by Henry Blackwood, she participated in an attack on French vessels off Boulogne pier.

Plan and key. The Attack on Boulogne Oct 1804 - E.D. Lewis
'A SE View of the Town and Harbour of Boulogne with the Encampments on the Heights. Showing also the situation of the French and English Squadrons as taken at anchor by E. D. Lewis H.M.S. Tartarus off Boulogne'. The flagship, centre bottom is identified as the 'Monarch', 74, Admiral Lord Keith, then in charge of the anti-invasion blockade.

The raid differed from the conventional tactics of naval assaults of the period by utilizing a wide range of new equipment produced by the American inventor Robert Fulton, with the backing of the Admiralty, but despite its ambitious aims the assault produced little material damage to the French fleet anchored in the harbour, but did perhaps contribute to a growing sense of defeatism amongst the French as to their chances of crossing the English Channel

Captain Sir Henry Blackwood

Blackwood was well known to Nelson with their friendship confirmed after the action with the 80-gun French ship Guillaume Tell, one of the survivors of the Battle of the Nile and which attempted to escape the blockade of Malta but was spotted and tracked by Blackwood in the 36-gun frigate Penelope, who assisted in the capture of her with some well directed stern rakes before support came up in the form of HMS Lion 64-guns and HMS Foudroyant 80-guns and after a gallant resistance the Frenchman struck.

The Capture of the ‘Guillaume Tell’, 30 March 1800 - Thomas Luny
The picture details the capture of the ‘Guillaume Tell’, and in a choppy sea she is shown on the left of the painting, with her last mast, the mizzen, falling forward over the starboard side, her ensign from the peak trailing in the water. Masking the ‘Guillaume Tell’s’ bow with her stern and gun smoke is the ‘Foudroyant’. She has also lost her mizzen mast and there are shot holes in her sails. On the left and slightly further off is the ‘Penelope’ facing into the stern of the ‘Guillaume Tell’ while on the right of the picture is the Lion with her mizzen topmast gone and some of her guns not run out as they had been dismounted. 

Nelson wrote from Palermo (5th of April 1800) to Blackwood himself: 

'Is there a sympathy which ties men together in the bonds of friendship without having a personal knowledge of each other? If so (and I believe it was so to you), I was your friend and acquaintance before I saw you. Your conduct and character on the late glorious occasion stamps your fame beyond the reach of envy. It was like yourself; it was like the Penelope. Thanks; and say everything kind for me to your brave officers and men'.

The two men met in the summer of 1805 in London and Blackwood accompanied Nelson to the Admiralty to be confirmed commander of the British fleet off Cadiz, and he was offered a line-of-battle ship, but preferred to remain in Euryalus, believing that he would have more opportunity of distinction, convinced that Villeneuve would not venture out from Cadiz with Nelson and his fleet on station.


In 1805 Blackwood and Euryalus led a squadron of four other frigates in watching Cádiz to report the movements of the combined French and Spanish fleets anchored there and when the combined fleet sailed from Cádiz on the 20th of October, shadowed through the night by Euryalus and the others that reported its position to the Royal Navy fleet on the horizon.


With battle imminent the following morning, Captain Blackwood suggested that Admiral Nelson transfer from Victory to the faster Euryalus, the better to observe and control the engagement but Nelson declined the offer. 

Euryalus and the schooner Pickle 'stand off' in our Trafalgar refight 2023
JJ's Wargames - The Battle of Trafalgar 2023

Euryalus stood off with the other light ships of the British fleet until the late afternoon when she took the badly damaged Royal Sovereign in tow and turned her to engage the French ship Formidable.


Following the death of Admiral Nelson, Vice-Admiral Collingwood transferred his flag from Royal Sovereign to Euryalus and she became the British fleet's flagship for the next ten days.

At the Battle of Trafalgar, after the explosion of the French ship Achille, survivors including a Frenchwoman named Jeannette were pulled from the water by British sailors, some of which were taken to Euryalus.

After the battle Euryalus took on survivors from the French ship-of-the-line Achille, as well as the captured French Admiral Pierre de Villeneuve, and Blackwood also received the surrender of the Spanish ship Santa Ana, after two raking broadsides to the stern by Royal Sovereign and Belleisle had caused her to strike her colours.

My interpretation of Euryalus which I built back in 2020
JJ's Wargames - All at Sea, HMS Euryalus

Euryalus again took Royal Sovereign in tow but the two ships collided during a sudden squall, badly damaging the frigate's masts and rigging. Once repairs were completed, Euryalus went into Cádiz Harbour to allow Blackwood to negotiate an exchange of prisoners and the repatriation of French and Spanish wounded. 

The French Admiral on Board the Euryalus, print, Thomas Rowlandson

On the 31st of October, Euryalus set sail for England with Admiral Villeneuve as a prisoner.

In April 1796, Captain Nelson and HMS Agamemnon were operating in the Gulf of Genoa with the small squadron depicted in this beautiful print. ‘Agamemnon’ is shown leading ‘Meleager’ 32, ‘Blanche’ 32, ‘Diadem’ 64 and the now-famous 16-gun brig-sloop ‘Speedy’ - Geoff Hunt

Below is another fine model of the 64-gun Agamemnon together with a piece of her original copper recovered from her wreck site in the mouth of the River Plate.








As well recounting the story of the work carried out in Bucklers Hard, and the ships they constructed there is a very interesting display of items recounting the lives of the men that sailed on those ships from the admirals and captains to the men, women and ships boys that crewed them.

Scene on the messdeck

A rather dapper looking 'Jolly Jack Tar' so named after the tarpaulin hat and tarred pigtail often sported for parade best or rowing the captain ashore, with a more slop look for working aboard ship likely day to day.


The brave resourceful patriotic character of popular melodrama, Jack is depicted wearing his dark cloth tied around his neck, the darker the better to show less dirt. 

That said the navy took cleanliness and hygiene extremely serious aboard ship with most captains organising a regular roster of ship cleaning and washing and airing of bedding and clothes along with appropriate foodstuffs to ward off disease and reduced crew efficiency, with naval surgery setting the standards of the day in modern advancements in medical healthcare, which should make any Brit proud to be called a 'Limey' .

A fully rigged model of Illustrious 74-guns sits alongside a half section model showing many of the activities that took place on board, including sail repair and canon drill among others.

The first 74-gun ship-of-the-line to be built at Buckler's Hard was the Illustrious, launched on the 7th of July 1789, with Adams delaying the launch in the hope that King George III and Queen Charlotte, staying nearby at Lyndhurst would attend.

They only made it as far as Beaulieu on the day, but undaunted Adams fitted a single cannon on board and fired off a 21-gun salute in their honour.


Illustrious had an unlucky career in the Mediterranean, first seeing action at the siege of Toulon in 1793 under Admiral Samuel Hood, then serving under Vice-Admiral Hotham, she was dismasted at the Battle of Genoa when she and HMS Courageux 74-guns became embroiled in a 600 yard exchange of broadsides with the Victoire and Tonnant, both 80-guns and in the exchange of fire the Illustrious lost her fore topmast and saw her mainmast tumbling backwards to bring down the mizzen and smash up the poop deck. 


She also received a great number of shot in her hull, and sustained damage to the bowsprit and what was left of the foremast, whilst suffering ninety casualties in the process. Her consort, the Courageux, fared little better, losing both her main and mizzen masts, and fifty casualties.

Lord Hotham's Action, March 14th 1795 - Painted by T. Whitcombe, Engraved by T. Sutherland. 

After the battle, the 32-gun frigate Meleager was towing Illustrious when she broke free of her tow. Then the accidental firing of a lower deck gun damaged the ship so that she took on water. She attempted to anchor in Valence Bay (between Spezia and Leghorn) to ride out the bad weather that had descended upon her but her cables broke, and she struck on rocks and had to be abandoned. The 32-gun frigate Lowestoffe and the brig Tarleton took off her stores, and all her crew were saved, following which her hull was then set on fire.


One of the greatest admirals in British naval history would have to be Admiral George Brydges Rodney, whose victories during the American War of Independence against the Spanish at the Battle of Cape St Vincent on the 16th of January 1780 and particularly the Battle of the Saintes 9th - 12th April 1782, that would change British fleet naval tactics from 1793 onwards, and significantly contributed to Britain's final negotiating position at the end of that war in managing to secure her hold on many of her territories outside of her North American Colonies.

Admiral George Brydges Rodney, 1st Baron Rodney

So it was a real thrill to see the item below, which although was not with him at the Saintes, likely played a key role in his other naval actions, and one could only wish to be able to see what this telescope has gazed upon in its past service.


Discipline and punishment in this era was harsh, in civilian life as much as in military and naval service, with people likely to be hanged for what today would be considered trivial breaches of law.


The Royal Navy used the lash to enforce discipline on ships with the cat, as seen above, with captains authorised to issue punishments up to twenty-four lashes and supposed to refer punishments of greater severity to an officer of flag-rank for adjudication, although most flag officers seemed to have ignored this guidance, but generally ships captains refrained from exceeding the maximum twenty-four limit.

JJ's Wargames - The Black Ship & Mutiny on the Spanish Main - Dudley Pope & Angus Konstam

Of course there were the odd exceptions and particularly brutal commanders stood out among their peers and the very worst ones could suffer extreme consequences when crews rose up against them as happened on the frigate Hermione; a crew that had suffered terribly under their former commander, Captain Philip Wilkinson who flogged thirteen of his crew over ten months to October 1795, with 408 lashes administered between them and with two men receiving 72 lashes in one punishment, this then followed by a psychopath in the form of Captain Hugh Pigot who ran his ship with a rule of terror and indiscriminate rule that would end with the most bloody mutiny in the history of the Royal Navy, link above. 

With small fixed telescope for observing a star and small moveable mirrors attached to a
scale the sextant could read angles up to 120 degrees as opposed to just 90 degrees with the old
quadrant, making it a more accurate instrument.

While a knowledge of mathematics, astronomy, and maritime instrument technology had advanced considerably by the early nineteenth century, mariners still faced great difficulties.

For navigation on a long voyage, the typical mariner of the time might include among his tools a compass, charts, a pair of dividers, an instrument to take sights on stars and planets, a sandglass, a logline, a lead line, a chronometer, a Gunter's scale and a traverse board, two of which are seen here.
  
Gunter's Quadrant was the forerunner to slide rules and could be used for measuring the altitude of the sun or stars by means of a plumb-bob, but as these quadrants were made for a certain latitude, they were of more use to the astronomer than the seaman.

For the age of sail enthusiast and indeed anyone with an interest in naval history, any item directly related to 'the immortal memory' Lord Horatio Nelson or his famous Trafalgar flagship HMS Victory is of interest for its uniqueness in being part of the history and aura that surrounds Britain's greatest admiral. 

My picture from 2016 of a reconstruction of Lord Nelson based on the latest research into his appearance and showing him in the last few weeks of his life before the Battle of Trafalgar at the age of 47 on display at the Portsmouth Historic Dockyard 
JJ's Wargames - Portsmouth Historic Dockyard

The museum has some interesting items associated with the great man and his famous ship, that follow a time line of his life from infancy, love life, comrades in the service who served with him and his death in the moment of victory.





This is the only known image of Nelson in civilian dress painted on ivory from an original by the German painter Heinrich Friedrich Fuger, when both Nelson and Emma Hamilton sat for Fuger in Vienna after their arrival from Naples in 1800, following the victory at the Battle of the Nile in 1798. 



Captain Thomas Masterman Hardy
Nelson's friend and flag-captain at Trafalgar


The Death of Nelson, 21 October 1805 - Arthur William Devis



My interpretation of HMS Victory, flying 'England Expects'.




Of course on a day out like this, with the weather we enjoyed, Carolyn and I couldn't head home without exploring the Beaulieu River once more and Buckler's Hard provides everything from its maritime history to its local natural history and after a short walk along the river path we soon discovered a nearby bird hide close to the bank and were soon entertained by a few more of the locals.


At this time of year most bird species here in the UK are busy rearing young fledglings and are looking very fine still, in their best plumage, and so it was not a surprise to see a family of Moorhens, Gallinula chloropus, out on the sheltered pond in front of the hide with these youngsters very entertaining and getting used to their surroundings.


The Siskin, pictured below, is a small, lively finch, smaller than a Greenfinch. It has a distinctly forked tail and a narrow bill. The male has a streaky yellow-green body and a black crown and bib. There are yellow patches in the wings and tail. It's a resident breeder from southern England to northern Scotland, but is most numerous in Scotland and Wales. Many breeding birds are residents but in winter, birds also arrive here from Europe.

A male Siskin, Carduelis spinus, here among the waterside trees and flooded woodland, their favourite habitat

Blue Tits, Parus caeruleus, below, along with the Robin are up there among Britain's favourite birds and I remember the days when full cream milk with silver foil tops on the bottles was delivered to homes and schools in the UK, and usually these nimble chaps had pecked their way through the foil to get at the cream near the top of each bottle.

Blue Tits, Parus caeruleus, demonstrating their nimbleness working around the bird feeder to get at the best bits.

The Chaffinch is a common and widespread small passerine bird in the finch family and the male seen below is brightly coloured with a blue-grey cap and rust-red underparts.

Chaffinch (Fringilla coelebs)

Another fledgling out exploring the territory was a young Robin, Erithacus rubecula, belowand like the parents having no distinguishing characteristics between the sexes making it problematic identifying males from females, but fortunately Robins know the difference.

Fledgling Robin, Erithacus rubecula, without its distinctive red breast at this age

Where you find Blue Tits you will often find Great Tits, and the example below was soon attracted in by all the activity around the bird feeders.

Great Tit, Parus major

A great way to end a glorious day in the sunshine, followed by a pleasant pub-supper on the way home.

If you are interested in the age of sail and naval history, I would highly recommend making a visit to Buckler's Hard where you can really immerse yourself in the construction of some of the most famous wooden sailing ships of their time.


Next up, I have some new additions to the ship collection to showcase, with another large French 40-gun frigate and a surprise British type that won a certain captain his knighthood when it was first encountered.

More anon 
JJ