Girish Mahajan (Editor)

HMS Marlborough (1767)

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Name
  
HMS Marlborough

Builder
  
Deptford dockyard

Commissioned
  
January 1771

Launched
  
26 August 1767

Ordered
  
4 December 1760

Laid down
  
3 June 1763

Construction started
  
3 June 1763

Fate
  
Wrecked near Belle Île, 4 November 1800

HMS Marlborough was a 74-gun third rate ship of the line of the Royal Navy, launched on 26 August 1767 at Deptford. She was one of the Ramillies class built to update the Navy and replace ships lost following the Seven Years' War. She was first commissioned in 1771 under Captain Richard Bickerton as a guard ship for the Medway and saw active service in the American Revolutionary War and on the Glorious First of June.

On the evening of 3 November 1800 Marlborough was at sea in a storm off Brittany's Belle Île when strong winds drove her onto a partially submerged ledge of rocks. A substantial breach was opened in her hull and she began to batter against the rocks with each incoming wave. Her commander, Captain Thomas Sotheby, ordered the ship's guns and stores to be thrown overboard to lighten her, but she remained stuck fast.

The storm abated by the following morning, but the ship had settled on the rocks and was awash to her orlop deck as waves flowed in through the hull. A distress signal was raised and answered by HMS Captain which drew close to Marlborough and succeeded in taking off all 600 of her crew. No attempt was made to salvage the ship itself.

References

HMS Marlborough (1767) Wikipedia


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