Harman Patil (Editor)

French corvette Republicaine (1795)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Republicaine

Captured
  
October 1795

Fate
  
Sold 1803

Acquired
  
1795 by requisition

Name
  
Republican

Acquired
  
by capture October 1795

The French corvette Républicaine (AKA Republican and Republique) was a merchant ship that the French Navy requisitioned in 1795 at Grenada. On 14 October 1795 Mermaid captured her in the Leeward Islands. The Royal Navy took Republicaine into service as HMS Republican, a lugger of 18 guns. It is not clear that Republican was ever commissioned. The Navy sold her at Grenada in 1803.

Contents

French service

On 5 September 1794, the ship Esther, Devonish, master, encountered Republicaine, which Devonish described as being armed with twenty 6-pounder guns and 18 swivel guns, and having a crew of 100-150 men. At 5p.m. a four-hour engagement commenced, that resumed the next morning, when after two-and-a-half hours Republicaine withdrew. Esther had one man fatally wounded, her mate, out of a crew of 18 men and three boys.

Capture

On 10 October 1795 Mermaid captured the 10-gun French brig Brutus off Grenada. Brutus had been in the company of a ship, which temporarily escaped. However, on 14 October Mermaid was able to find and capture the ship after a fight of half an hour that cost Mermaid one man killed and three men wounded. The French ship was the French corvette Républicaine, and she was armed with eighteen guns. She had some 250-260 men aboard at the start of the action, one of whom was a French general, with his staff, on his way to take command of Grenada. In the action, the French lost 20 men killed and some wounded. Zebra shared by agreement. The Royal Navy took Republicaine into service as HMS Republican.

References

French corvette Republicaine (1795) Wikipedia