• HMS Netley was originally the French privateer brig Déterminé, which the Royal Navy captured in 1807 and took into service. She was lost at sea on the...
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  • 1809. HMS Netley (1807) was the French privateer brig Déterminée, which HMS Venus captured in 1807. The British took her into service as HMS Netley; she...
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  • HMS Netley was the American schooner Nimrod, launched at Baltimore in 1803 or 1804. The Royal Navy seized her in 1807, purchased her in 1808, and renamed...
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  • Thumbnail for French frigate Thétis (1788)
    Sylphe captured HMS Netley. The French sold Netley and she became the privateer Duquesne. Less than nine months later, on 23 September 1807, HMS Blonde captured...
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  • HMS Netley was launched in 1798 with an experimental design. During the French Revolutionary Wars she spent some years on the Oporto station, where she...
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  • privateer in 1806. HMS Unique was HMS Netley, captured by the French in 1806, and used by them as the 21-gun privateer Duquesne. In 1807 HMS Blonde captured...
    881 bytes (148 words) - 13:24, 27 October 2021
  • Thumbnail for HMS Pickle (1800)
    HMS Pickle was a topsail schooner of the Royal Navy. She was originally a civilian vessel named Sting, of six guns, that Lord Hugh Seymour purchased to...
    22 KB (2,977 words) - 16:43, 14 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for French corvette Sylphe (1804)
    Sylphe captured HMS Netley. The French sold Netley and she became the privateer Duquesne. Less than nine months later, on 23 September 1807, HMS Blonde captured...
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  • HMS Tang was a Royal Navy Ballahoo-class schooner of four 12-pounder carronades and a crew of 20. The prime contractor for the vessel was Goodrich & Co...
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  • Thumbnail for Bursledon
    the Bursledon Windmill. Nearby villages include Swanwick, Hamble-le-Rice, Netley and Sarisbury Green. The village has close ties to the sea. The Elephant...
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  • HMS Jaseur was originally the French Navy brig Jaseur that the Royal Navy captured in 1807 and took into service under the same name. She participated...
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  • Thumbnail for Samuel Bentham
    design, HMS Dart and HMS Arrow, two schooners of the same design, HMS Eling and two HMS Redbridge, and two one-off designs, HMS Milbrook and HMS Netley. Milbrook...
    13 KB (1,447 words) - 12:20, 23 September 2024
  • that the British Royal Navy captured in 1807 and took into service as HMS Netley. She was broken up in 1814. HMS Nimrod (1812) was launched in 1812 and...
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  • HMS Volador was an ex-Spanish prize that the Royal Navy acquired in 1807 in the West Indies. Commander Francis George Dickens commissioned her. Lloyd's...
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  • Thumbnail for HMS Astraea (1781)
    HMS Astraea (or Astrea) was a 32-gun fifth rate Active-class frigate of the Royal Navy. Fabian at E. Cowes launched her in 1781, and she saw action in...
    21 KB (2,633 words) - 21:57, 15 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for HMS Venus (1758)
    British took her into service as Netley. Venus was paid-off and put into Ordinary in July 1807 at Woolwich. On 14 July 1807 she was renamed Heroine after...
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  • HMS Maria was a gun-brig the Royal Navy purchased in 1807 and commissioned at Antigua in 1808. On 29 September 1808 the French Navy corvette French corvette Department...
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  • Navy captured her in 1807 at the Danish surrender after the Battle of Copenhagen. The Royal Navy commissioned her in 1808 as HMS Dolphinen but she was...
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  • Thumbnail for Pierre-Charles Villeneuve
    British merchant vessels escorted by the frigate HMS Barbadoes and the sloop or schooner HMS Netley. The two British warships managed to escape, but Villeneuve's...
    11 KB (1,202 words) - 19:43, 24 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Lord Nelson (East Indiaman)
    Diamond Harbour on 12 November, Saugor on 26 December, Madras on 10 January 1807 and Bombay 19 February. Lord Nelson left Bombay for Britain on 27 February...
    19 KB (2,343 words) - 16:58, 7 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for French frigate Minerve (1794)
    armed brig Louisa captured Mouche. On 15 May 1800, Minerve and the schooner Netley captured the French privateer cutter Vengeance. Vengeance was armed with...
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  • HMS Leda, launched in 1800, was the lead ship of a successful class of forty-seven British Royal Navy 38-gun sailing frigates. Leda's design was based...
    19 KB (2,515 words) - 04:34, 4 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Nadezhda (1802 Russian ship)
    returning West Indiaman from a returning Guineaman. During the period 1793 to 1807, war, rather than maritime hazards or resistance by the captives, was the...
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  • and is not mentioned after 1807. Égyptienne (1798 ship), a privateer based in Bordeaux. His Majesty's schooner HMS Netley captured the first French ship...
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  • HMS Eclair was a French Navy schooner launched in 1799 and captured in 1801. The British took her into service under her French name and armed her with...
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  • Thumbnail for HMS Bermuda (1805)
    HMS Bermuda was an 18-gun sloop of the Royal Navy. Bermuda was built in Bermuda of Bermuda cedar in 1805, as the lead ship of her class. The Bermudas...
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  • Thumbnail for HMS Eling (1798)
    the six vessels, smaller even than the other two schooners, Milbrook and Netley. The design featured a large-breadth to length ratio with structural bulkheads...
    8 KB (1,001 words) - 04:23, 11 May 2024
  • commissioned under Captain John Broughton for the North Sea. In mid-1807 Meleager accompanied HMS Shannon above 80 degrees latitude in a mission to protect the...
    8 KB (843 words) - 14:31, 11 May 2024
  • HMS Carrier was a cutter of 10 guns, the ex-mercantile Frisk, which the Royal Navy purchased in 1805. She captured two privateers, with one action earning...
    11 KB (1,251 words) - 14:42, 22 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for HMS Julia (1806)
    appointed to replace Watt. At the time Julia was in the Leeward Islands. After Netley capsized on 10 July, Julia rescued the nine survivors. Watt still commanded...
    9 KB (1,076 words) - 00:41, 29 September 2024