Harman Patil (Editor)

HMS Aid (1809)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
HMS Aid

Fate
  
Sold 19 March 1853

Tons burthen
  
313  ⁄94 (bm)

Launched
  
4 April 1809

Laid down
  
July 1808

Class and type
  
Aid-class storeship

Construction started
  
July 1808

Length
  
27 m

Renamed
  
HMS Adventure, 24 May 1821

HMS Aid was a Royal Navy transport ship launched in 1809 at Kings Lynn. She was the name ship of a six-vessel class of transports and storeships, the only vessels built as such during the Napoleonic Wars.

She was converted to a survey ship between December 1816 and March 1817 at Sheerness. Commander William Henry Smyth commissioned her in January 1817.

On 14 September 1817, while under Smyth's command, she was at Lebida (Leptis Magna), together with HMS Weymouth. There they loaded columns, marbles, and other antiquities to bring back to England.

Aid renamed HMS Adventure in 1821.

As HMS Adventure the ship was deployed for 5 years between 1826 and 1830 in a survey of Patagonia, under the command of Captain Phillip King. The ship was accompanied by HMS Beagle. The ship was sold in 1853.

References

HMS Aid (1809) Wikipedia