Name HMS Magnet Fate Broken up 1817 Length 26 m | Acquired 1812 by capture Tons burthen 358 ⁄94 (bm) | |
Renamed HMS Attentive (c.1814?) Beam 28 feet 4 inches (8.6 m) |
Hms magnet 1812 top 11 facts
HMS Magnet was the American brig Magnet, that HMS Ringdove captured in 1812. HMS Magnet served during the War of 1812 as a prison ship at Halifax, Nova Scotia. The Royal Navy eventually renamed her Attentive, possibly in 1814 when the Navy acquired Sir Sydney Smith, which it renamed Magnet. Then as Attentive she served as a store ship, still apparently on the Halifax station, before she sailed to Britain in 1816. She was broken up in January 1817.
The records on this vessel are sparse, and somewhat contradictory. Winfield states that she was a privateer, but the most comprehensive list of American privateers, that of Emmons, does not list a privateer named Magnet. The records of the Halifax Vice admiralty court for the War of 1812 do list a Magnet. She was a ship of 172 tons (bm), T. Drew, master, that Ringdove captured on 18 July 1812 as Magnet was sailing from Belfast to New York. She was carrying passengers and a small amount of linens. The records state that Magnet was "Taken into possession for the use of the King's service." However, the tonnage of Magnet is not consistent with that of HMS Attentive. Curiously, the same Vice admiralty records show that Atalanta captured the Marquis de Somerlous on 10 July 1812. Marquis de Somerlous was a ship of 359 tons (bm), the only one of that burthen on the Vice admiralty's records. Under the command of T. Moriarty, master, she had been sailing from Civitavecchia to Salem, Massachusetts, with a cargo of brandy, wines, silks, and dry goods when Atalanta captured her. Her name as given in a London Gazette list of British captures was Marquis Somnielos.
Newspaper accounts of Attentive's service exist: