Girish Mahajan (Editor)

HMS Tartar (1756)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Tartar

Ordered
  
12 June 1755

Construction started
  
4 July 1755

Designer
  
Thomas Slade

Operator
  
Royal Navy

Laid down
  
4 July 1755

Launched
  
3 April 1756

Builder
  
John Randall's yard, Nelson Dock, Rotherhithe

Completed
  
2 May 1756 at Deptford Dockyard

Hms tartar 1756 top 6 facts


HMS Tartar was a 28-gun sixth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy. The ship was designed by Sir Thomas Slade and based on the Lyme of 1748, "with such alterations as may tend to the better stowing of men and carrying for guns."

Contents

The ship was first commissioned in March 1756 under Captain John Lockhart, and earned a reputation as a fast sailer during service in the English Channel. She made many captures of French ships during the Seven Years' War, including 4 in 1756 and 7 the following year. During the peace that followed, the ship sailed to Barbados carrying a timekeeper built by John Harrison, as a part of a series of experiments used to determine longitude at sea. She also served in the American Revolutionary War, capturing the Spanish Santa Margarita of 28 guns off Cape Finisterre on 11 November 1779.

She went on to see further service during the French Revolutionary War. On 14 December the French frigate Minerve captured off the island of Ivica the collier Hannibal, which was sailing from Liverpool to Naples. However, eleven days later, Tartar recaptured the Hannibal off Toulon and sent her into Corsica.

Fate

HMS Tartar was eventually wrecked off Saint-Domingue on 1 April 1797.

References

HMS Tartar (1756) Wikipedia