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・ HMS Harvester
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・ HMS Harwich (1695)
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・ HMS Hasty (1894)
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HMS Havannah (1811)
・ HMS Havant (H32)
・ HMS Havelock
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・ HMS Haversham (M2635)
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HMS Havannah (1811) : ウィキペディア英語版
HMS Havannah (1811)

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HMS ''Havannah'' was a Royal Navy 36-gun fifth-rate frigate. She was launched in 1811 and was one of twenty-seven ''Apollo''-class frigates. She was cut down to a 24-gun sixth rate in 1845, converted to a training ship in 1860 and sold for breaking in 1905.
==War service==

''Havannah''s first captain was George Cadogan, who commissioned her into the Channel Fleet. ''Havannah'' was rapidly involved in operations against French coastal shipping off the Channel Islands.
On 6 September 1811, the boats of ''Havannah'', under the command of her first lieutenant William Hamley, landed a party that spiked the three 12-pounder guns of a battery on the south-west side of the Penmarks. They then brought out several coasting vessels that had taken refuge under the guns, all without taking any losses.
*Schooner ''Aimable Fanny'', laden with wine and brandy, and several chasse marees:
*''St. Jean'', laden with salt;
*''Petit Jean Baptiste'', laden with wine and brandy;
*''Buonaparte'', laden with wine and brandy;
*''Voltigeur'', laden with wine and brandy; and
*lastly, one of unknown name, laden with wine and brandy, dismantled and set on fire but later extinguished.
On 25 December ''Havannah'' sailed for the Mediterranean.〔
〕 In 1812, Cadogan took ''Havannah'' to join the squadron operating in the Adriatic from the island of Lissa. On 24 April 1812 , and ''Havannah'' landed Lieutenant-colonel George Duncan Robertson, his staff and a garrison at Port St. George on Lissa.〔Pocock (1977), p.184.〕 The British had defeated a French naval force on 13 March at the Battle of Lissa and wanted to establish a base there with Robertson as its first Governor.
In early 1813 ''Havannah'' was detached to the Northern Italian coast where she a five-month campaign on the shipping and shore facilities of Vasto and its environs. On 6 January 1813 ''Havannah''s boats cut out Gunboat No. 8, armed with one long 24-pounder gun. She had a crew of 35 men under the command of M. Joseph Floreus, Enseigne de Vaisseau. Despite meeting a superior force and coming under small arms fire from the shore, the boats, under Lieutenant Hamley, captured the gunboat and three merchant vessels, their original target, as well. The British had one man killed and two men wounded in the operation. In May 1821, prize money for the gunboat, the three merchant vessels ''St Antonio No. 1'', ''St Antonio No. 2'' and ''St Antonio No. 3'' was awarded, as well as prize money for two other vessels taken that day, the ''Madona del Rosario'' and the settee ''Euphemia''. On 14 January ''Havannah'' and captured two small trabacolos.〔
Three weeks later, on 7 February, ''Havannah'' destroyed four gunboats at Manfredonia. In numerous actions, she seized dozens of ships and destroyed coastal batteries. For instance, on 22 March 1813 the ship's boats captured one ''trabaccolo'', armed with three 9-pounder guns and destroyed another, at Vasto. Then on 26 March, her boats brought out five armed trabacolos and five feluccas laden with salt that had been run up on the beach near the town of Fortore. In both actions the enemy lost at least one man killed, while the British had only two men wounded in all. In May 1821 prize money for ten trabaccolos, one parenza, five feluccas, and their cargoes, captured between 22 March and 5 May, was paid.〔
On 18 July, while off Manfredonia, ''Havannah'', with the sloop , attacked a small convoy and captured or destroyed all the vessels. They captured one Neapolitan gunboat armed with one 18-pounder gun, and burnt another. They also destroyed a pinnace armed with one 6-pounder gun. Lastly, they captured two trabaccolos armed with three guns each and laden with salt, and destroyed two others of the same strength and cargo.
In November 1813, ''Havannah'' was attached to Thomas Fremantle's squadron that blockaded and besieged Trieste. She was then detached to take the port of Zara with the assistance of (or ''Weazle''). Cadogan used the ships' guns to establish batteries armed with two 32-pounder carronades, eight 18-pounder guns and seven long 12-pounder guns. He then attacked the city and captured it with the aid of some Austrian troops. In all, they captured 110 guns and 18 howitzers, 350 men, 100 dismounted guns and 12 gunboats. Cadogan was later instructed to hand over all prizes and spoils of war to the Austrians. (This order cost the crews of ''Havannah'' and ''Weazle'' an estimated £300,000 in prize money.) The Emperor of Austria, however, awarded Lieutenant Hamley the Imperial Austrian Order of Leopold for his services at Zara.
On 9 December ''Havannah'' and ''Weazel'' destroyed 17 gunboats.
In 1814 ''Havannah'' came under the command of Captain James Black (acting.〔 On 6 February 1814, ''Apollo'' and ''Havannah'' were anchored outside Brindisi while the French frigate ''Uranie'' was inside the port, on fire. had chased her into the port some weeks earlier while awaiting the officials of the port, which belonged to the Kingdom of Naples, to respond to the presence of the French vessel. When ''Apollo'' appeared on the scene and made signs of being about to enter the port, ''Uranie''s captain removed the powder from his ship and set her on fire.
On 15 April 1814, days before the end of the war, ''Havannah'', under the command of (temporary) Captain Edward Sibly, captured the French privateer schooner ''Grande Isabelle'' off Corfu, together with the schooner's prize. The schooner carried four guns and 64 men and had sailed from Corfu on 9 April, before capturing a vessel sailing from Trieste to Messina.
Captain Gawen Hamilton recommissioned ''Havannah'' in April 1814 at Portsmouth.〔 On 19 July 1815, ''Havannah'' was in company with , , , and ''Ferret'' when they captured the French vessels ''Fortune'', ''Papillon'', ''Marie Graty'', ''Marie Victorine'', ''Cannoniere'', and ''Printemis''. One was a naval brig of 12 guns and one a cutter of ten guns; two were schooners and three were chasse marees.〔''Lloyd's List'', No.4990,() - accessed 2 February 2014.〕

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