翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Hired armed cutter Nile
・ Hired armed cutter Nimrod
・ Hired armed cutter Norfolk
・ Hired armed cutter Penelope
・ Hired armed cutter Princess Augusta
・ Hired armed cutter Queen Charlotte
・ Hired armed cutter Saint Vincent
・ Hired armed cutter Swan
・ Hired armed cutter Tartar
・ Hired armed cutter Telemachus
・ Hired armed lugger Aristocrat
・ Hired armed lugger Black Joke
・ Hired armed lugger Daphne
・ Hired armed lugger Duke of York
・ Hired armed lugger Lark
Hired armed lugger Nile
・ Hired armed lugger Royalist
・ Hired armed lugger Spider
・ Hired armed lugger Valiant
・ Hired armed schooner Lady Charlotte
・ Hired armed schooner Princess Charlotte
・ Hired armed schooner Sir Sidney Smith
・ Hired armed ship Charles
・ Hired armed ship Countess of Scarborough
・ Hired armed ship Harlequin
・ Hired armed ship Kitty
・ Hired armed ship Lady Warren
・ Hired armed ship London Packet
・ Hired armed ship Lord Eldon
・ Hired armed ship Pretty Lass


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Hired armed lugger Nile : ウィキペディア英語版
Hired armed lugger Nile
At least two vessels known as the hired armed lugger ''Nile'' served the Royal Navy during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. These may have been the same vessel on sequential contracts.
==The first lugger ''Nile''==

The first lugger ''Nile'' had a burthen of 176, and was armed with two 6-pounder guns and ten 12-pounder carronades. She served on a contract from 23 March 1799 to 21 November 1801.〔Winfield (2008), p.389.〕
From 1799 to 1800 ''Nile'' was under the command of Lieutenant Ricard Whitehead. On 12 January 1800 ''Nile'' was under the command of her master, Stephen Butcher (or Bucher), Lieutenant Whitehead being ill on shore, when she captured the French privateer lugger ''Moderé''. ''Modere'' was armed with four 4-pounder guns and had a crew of 42 men. She was only six hours out of Boulogne and hand not taken anything. As ''Nile'' was boarding her prize, came up. Captain Baker, of ''Nemesis'' took ''Moderé'' in charge and took her, as well as another captured privateer, the ''Renard'', and a recaptured brig, and took them into the Downs. Before leaving, Baker sent ''Nile'' to watch the port of Calais to try and intercept some other privateer luggers known to be out, and any captured British ships. ''Nile'' shared in the proceeds of ''Moderé'' and ''Renard'' with ''Nemesis'' the cutter ''Stag''.
On 6 February ''Nile'' brought into Deal two recaptured West Indiamen, one, the ''Elizabeth'' had sailed from Jamaica.〔''London Chronicle'', 6–8 February 1800, p.156.〕

At some point in early 1800, ''Nile'' and the hired armed cutter ''Earl Spencer'' recaptured the ''Molly'', which was in ballast. This was probably the ''Molley'', which had been sailing from Exeter to Newcastle when a French privateer had captured her. ''Molley'' came into Deal on 14 February.〔''London Chronicle'', 15–18 February 1800, p.165.〕
''Nile'' was among the many British vessels that shared in the proceeds of the capture of the French frigate ''Désirée'', which HMS ''Dart'', under Patrick Campbell, captured on 8 July in the Raid on Dunkirk. ''Nile'', under Butcher, performed a useful service by laying as a leading mark at Gravelines Hook. ''Nile'' then brought the news of the action into Dover the next day.〔''London Chronicle'', 8–10 July 1800, p.40.〕
While under Bucher's command, ''Nile'' captured the ''Marie''.
On 25 July 1800 ''Nemesis'' was part of a squadron that also included ''Terpsichore'', , , and ''Nile'', when it encountered the Danish frigate HDMS ''Freja'', which was escorting a convoy of two ships, two brigs and two galliots.〔 Baker hailed her and said that he would send a boat to board the convoy. The Danish captain refused, and said that if a boat approached he would fire on it. Baker sent a midshipman and four men in a boat, and the Danes fired several shots, which missed the boat, but one of which killed a man on ''Nemesis''. ''Nemesis'' then opened fire with her broadside. After an engagement of about 25 minutes, ''Freja'', much damaged, struck. She had suffered eight men killed and many wounded; both ''Nemesis'' and ''Arrow'' each suffered two men killed and several wounded.〔''London Chronicle'', 26–29 July 1800, p.104.〕 The British brought ''Freya'' and her convoy into the Downs on 6 March.〔''Naval Chronicle'', Vol. 4, p.157.〕 They later released her, and presumably the rest of the convoy. This incident led to strained relations with Denmark, and, in order to anticipate any hostile move from Copenhagen, the British government despatched Earl Whitworth in August on a special mission to Copenhagen. The Danes not being ready for war, his mission staved off hostilities for about a year. In 1807, after the second battle of Copenhagen, the British captured ''Freja'' and took her into the Royal Navy as HMS ''Freya''.
Much less momentously, on 27 October, ''Nemesis'' and ''Nile'' captured five fishing vessels.
On 1 November ''Nile'' captured the French privateer ''Renard'' off Folkestone. Lieutenant Whitehead was again sick on shore so ''Nile'' was under the command of Mr. Butcher. ''Renard'' was armed with two 3-pounder guns, and had a crew of 13 men under the command of Michael Bernard Hamelin. She had left Calais at 4pm the previous afternoon and when she was captured she was alongside a merchant ship.

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「Hired armed lugger Nile」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.