Harman Patil (Editor)

HMS Queen Charlotte (1810)

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Name
  
HMS Queen Charlotte

Laid down
  
October 1805

Fate
  
Sold, 12 January 1892

Launched
  
17 July 1810

Ordered
  
9 July 1801

Commissioned
  
January 1813

Construction started
  
October 1805

Builder
  
Deptford Dockyard

HMS Queen Charlotte (1810) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Class and type
  
104-gun first-rate ship of the line

HMS Queen Charlotte was a 104-gun first-rate ship of the line of the Royal Navy, launched on 17 July 1810 at Deptford. She was built to the lines of Sir Edward Hunt's Royal George as a replacement for the first HMS Queen Charlotte, which had been lost in an accidental fire on 17 March 1800.

Contents

Anti-slave trade activity

She was sent Sierra Leone where she became engaged in the suppression of the slave trade. Following her seizure of the French ship Le Lois, a ship engaged in the slave trade, the Vice Admiralty Court declared the French ship and its cargo forfeit. However when this was taken to appeal at the High Court of Admiralty, the judge William Scott overturned the judgement, saying that the way Le Lois had been stopped and boarded was illegal as "No nation can exercise a right of visitation and search on the common and unappropriated parts of the sea, save only on the belligerent claim." He accepted that this would constitute a serious impediment to the suppression of the slave trade, but argued that this should be remedied through international treaties rather than Naval officers exceeding what they were permitted to do.

She was Lord Exmouth's flagship during the Bombardment of Algiers in 1816.

On 17 September 1817, Linnet, a tender to Queen Charlotte, seized a smuggled cargo of tobacco. The officers and crew of Queen Charlotte shared in the prize money.

Fate

Queen Charlotte was converted to serve as a training ship in 1859 and renamed HMS Excellent. She was eventually sold out of the service to be broken up in 1892.

References

HMS Queen Charlotte (1810) Wikipedia