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HMS ''Alacrity'' was a built by William Row at Newcastle and launched in 1806.〔Winfield (2008), p.296.〕 She served in the Baltic and was at the capture of Copenhagen in 1807. She captured a large privateer before herself falling victim to a French man-of-war in 1811 in an action in which her captain failed to distinguish himself. She then served in the French navy until she was broken up in 1822. ==British service and capture== ''Alacrity'' was commissioned in February 1807 under Commander William Croft for the Baltic Station.〔 On 22 August ''Alacrity'' and ''Sybille'' captured the Danish merchant vessel ''Elizabeth''. She was then at the siege of Copenhagen. In September, Commander Nisbit Palmer assumed command,〔 replacing Croft, who received promotion to post-captain in October. On 23 October ''Alacrity'' and ''Sybille'' captured the ''Bornembaum''. On 14 December ''Alacrity'' captured the French privateer ''Friedland'' in Home waters after a two-hour chase. ''Friedland'' was out of Dunkirk and armed with 14 guns. She was under the command of Francis Louis Beens who did not surrender until after he had lost one of his men killed. This was her second cruise and during the two days she had been out she had captured a Swedish galiot sailing from Stockholm to Plymouth with a cargo of iron and tar. On 10 September 1810, ''Alacrity'' captured the French privateer ''Trois Frères'', which had a crew of 73 men. Early in May 1811 ''Alacrity'' took possession of a Greek vessel and sent her into Malta. This entailed sending a prize crew consisting of ''Alacrity''s second lieutenant (Alexander Martin) and thirteen men.〔James (1837), Vol. 5, pp.365-9.〕 On 26 May 1811, ''Alacrity'' encountered the French brig-of-war ''Abeille'', of twenty 24-pounder carronades, off Bastia, Corsica. After an action that lasted about half an hour, during which ''Abeille'' outmaneuvered ''Alacrity'', ''Alacrity'' struck. French accounts give her casualties as 15 killed and 20 wounded, including her captain. British accounts give her casualties as four dead and 18 wounded, including four fatally.〔Hepper (1794), pp.136-7.〕 ''Abeille'' suffered seven dead and 15 wounded.〔 The fight might well have gone the other way. ''Alacrity'' had a broadside of 262 pounds vs. 240 pounds for ''Abeille''.〔 ''Alacrity'' had also suffered fewer casualties than ''Abeille''. However, Palmer retired to his cabin with a hand wound early in the action; once ''Alacrity'' had lost all her leadership with her officers dead, wounded or absent, this was enough to demoralize most of her crew.〔Gossett (1986), p.79.〕) For his role, the French promoted the French captain, Ange René Armand-Mackau, to the rank of ''lieutenant de vaisseau''. He was also inducted into the Legion of Honour.〔 Probably fortunately for Palmer, within a month of the battle he died of tetanus from his otherwise minor wound.〔 The court martial of the survivors on 30 May 1814 attributed the loss to the lack of leadership.〔 It acquitted all the survivors and commended the boatswain, James Flaxman, who had remained on deck though wounded and had attempted to rally the crew to ''Alacrity''s defence.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「HMS Alacrity (1806)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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