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HMS Nimble

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Several vessels of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Nimble.

  • HMS Nimble (1778) was a 12-gun cutter that was wrecked in 1781 with the loss of 28 men.
  • HMS Nimble (1781) was a purchased 12-gun cutter that ran aground in 1808 in Stangate Creek in the Medway and was then sold.
  • HMS Nimble (1811) was a Nimble-class 10-gun cutter commissioned under Lieutenant John Reynolds in 1812 that was wrecked on a sunken rock a half-dozen miles from the Sälö Beacon, Sweden, during a violent storm in the Kattegat on 6 October 1812. Apparently, insufficient allowance had been made for the strong currents.
  • HMS Nimble (1813) was a purchased 12-gun cutter that was sold in 1816.
  • HMS Nimble whose crew dislodged the Logan Rock whilst stationed off Land's End in April 1824.
  • HMS Nimble (1826) was a 5-gun schooner employed off Cuba in the suppression of the slave trade until she was wrecked on 4 November 1834.
  • HMS Nimble (1860) was a gunvessel of 5 guns that had a relatively uneventful career before she became a drill ship for the Royal Naval Reserve in 1890 and was disposed of in 1906.
  • HMS Nimble (W 123) was a rescue tug launched in 1942 and sold in 1968.
  • There was a revenue cutter Nimble, of Deal, that the French captured and that became the French privateer Dunqerquois. The hired armed cutter Princess Augusta destroyed her on 5 March 1808.

    References

    HMS Nimble Wikipedia


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