释义 |
- Capture
- HMS, and loss
- Notes, citations, and references
{{other ships|HMS Elizabeth}}{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2017}}{{Use British English|date=April 2017}}{{Infobox ship imageShip image= | Ship caption= }}{{Infobox ship career | Hide header= | Ship country=UK | Ship flag= | Ship name=HMS Elizabeth | Ship ordered= | Ship builder= | Ship laid down= | Ship acquired=1805 by capture | Ship launched= | Ship commissioned= | Ship decommissioned= | Ship in service= | Ship out of service= | Ship renamed= | Ship struck= | Ship reinstated= | Ship honours= | Ship captured= | Ship fate=Foundered c.September 1807 | Ship status= | Ship notes= }}{{Infobox ship characteristics | Hide header= | Header caption=[1] | Ship class= | Ship type= | Ship tonnage=110 (bm) | Ship length= | Ship beam= | Ship draught= | Ship hold depth= | Ship sail plan=Cutter (or schooner) | Ship propulsion= | Ship complement=55[1] | Ship armament= 10 guns | Ship notes= }} | HMS Elizabeth was a Spanish dispatch cutter named Elizabet that HMS Bacchante captured off Havana in 1805. The British Royal Navy took her into service under her existing name. She disappeared in 1807, believed foundered without a trace. CaptureOn 3 April 1805, Bacchante captured the Spanish naval cutter or schooner Elizabeth of ten guns and 47 men under the command of Don Josef Fer Fexegron. Elizabeth had been carrying dispatches from the Spanish governor of Pensacola, but had thrown these overboard before her capture.[2]{{refn|Head money for Isabella, alias Elizabeth, was paid in January 1821. A first-class share was worth £76 18s 5¼d; a fifth-class share, that of a seaman, was worth 7s 1¼d.[3]|group=Note}} HMS, and lossThe Royal Navy commissioned Elizabeth in 1806 under Lieutenant John Sedley.[4] She disappeared c.September 1807 without a trace, presumed to have foundered with all hands.[5] Notes, citations, and referencesNotes1. ^Gilly (1864), p.377. 2. ^{{London Gazette|issue=15815|pages=772–773|date=11 June 1805}} 3. ^{{London Gazette|date=3 February 1821|issue=17676|page=296}} 4. ^1 Winfield (2008), p.366. 5. ^Hepper (1994), p.120.
Citations{{reflist|30em}}References- {{cite book|title=La Marine du Consulat et du Premier Empire: Nomenclature des Navires Français de 1800 A 1815|last=Demerliac|first=Alain|year=2004|publisher=Éditions Ancre|isbn=2-903179-30-1|language=French}}
- Gilly, William O.S. (1864) Narratives of Shipwrecks of the Royal Navy Between 1793 and 1857 Compiled Principally from Official Documents in the Admiralty. (Longman, Green).
- {{cite book|last=Hepper|first=David J.|authorlink=|year=1994|title=British Warship Losses in the Age of Sail, 1650-1859|publisher=Jean Boudriot|location=Rotherfield|isbn= 0-948864-30-3}}
- {{cite book |first=Rif|last=Winfield|title=British Warships in the Age of Sail 1793–1817: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates|publisher=Seaforth|year=2008|isbn=1-86176-246-1}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Elizabeth (1805 cutter)}} 4 : 1805 ships|Captured ships|Cutters of the Royal Navy|Maritime incidents in 1807 |