Trisha Shetty (Editor)

French ship Jean Bart (1786)

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Name
  
Jean Bart

Builder
  
Bayonne

Commissioned
  
1793 as a privateer

Namesake
  
Jean Bart

Launched
  
1786

Displacement
  
499,000 kg

Acquired
  
Requisitioned in January 1794 in Nantes

Jean Bart was a merchant vessel built at Bayonne in 1786. Her owners commissioned her at Nantes in 1793 as a privateer. The French Navy requisitioned her in January 1794 and classed her as a corvette and listed her as Jean Bart No. 2 to distinguish her from the corvette French corvette Jean Bart (1793). The Navy intended to rename her Imposant in May 1795, but the Royal Navy captured her first.

On 15 April 1795, a naval squadron under Sir John Borlase Warren gave chase to Jean Bart, described in the report of the capture as being a ship-corvette of 26 guns and 187 men. The actual captor, off the Île de Ré, was HMS Artois.

The Royal Navy took Jean Bart into service as the post ship HMS Laurel. Between July and 8 December 1797 the Royal Navy had Laurel fitted a Portsmouth. She had been flush-decked, but received a small forecastle, quarterdeck, and extra platforms. She was commissioned under Captain Robert Rolles, who sailed her for the coast of Africa and then the Leeward Islands. In May 1796 Laurel participated in the capture of Santa Lucia under Rear Admiral SirHugh Cloberry Christian and General Ralph Abercrombie., and shared in the prize money for the capture.

Laurel was sold in 1797 at Jamaica.

References

French ship Jean Bart (1786) Wikipedia