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词条 Protector (1779 frigate)
释义

  1. Career

     Massachusetts Navy  Royal Navy  Danish ownership  British ownership 

  2. Notes, Citations, and References

{{other ships|USS Protector|HMS Hussar}}{{Infobox ship image
Ship image=Ship caption=
}}{{Infobox ship career
Hide header=Ship country=MassachusettsShip flag=Ship class=Ship name=ProtectorShip namesake=Ship owner=Ship awarded=Ship builder=Ship homeport=Ship laid down=Ship launched=1779, Newburyport, MassachusettsShip christened=Ship acquired=Ship commissioned=Ship recommissioned=Ship decommissioned=Ship in service=Ship out of service=Ship renamed=Ship reclassified=Ship refit=Ship captured=5 May 1781Ship struck=Ship reinstated=Ship fate=Ship status=
}}{{Infobox ship career
Hide header=titleUnited Kingdom}}Ship flag=Ship class=Ship name=HMS HussarShip namesake=HussarShip ordered=Ship awarded=Ship builder=Ship laid down=Ship launched=Ship christened=Ship acquired=1781 by captureShip commissioned=Ship recommissioned=Ship decommissioned=Ship in service=Ship out of service=Ship renamed=Ship reclassified=Ship refit=Ship captured=Ship struck=Ship reinstated=Ship fate=Sold 1783Ship status=
}}{{Infobox ship career
Hide header=title Ship country=Denmark Ship flag= Ship name = Hussaren Ship namesake =[1]{{refn>Lloyd's Register gives her owner as the Danish East India Company (DEIC).[1] However, Danish records distinguish between vessels the DEIC owned or operated, and those that non-DEIC companies and individuals owned and operated. The Danish records unambiguously show de Coninck as owner.|group=Note}} Ship operator = Ship acquired = 1783 by purchase[3] Ship builder = Ship original cost = Ship laid down = Ship launched = Ship registered = Ship commissioned = Ship decommissioned = Ship in service = Ship out of service = Ship renamed = Ship struck = Ship reinstated = Ship honours = Ship honors = Ship captured = Ship fate = Sold c. 1787 Ship status = Ship notes =
}}{{Infobox ship career
Hide header=titleShip country=BritainShip flag=Ship name=HussarShip namesake=Ship owner=Ship acquired=1787 by purchaseShip laid down=Ship yard number=Ship launched=Ship fate=No longer listed by 1790Ship status=Ship notes=Lloyd's Register describes Hussar as a three-decker.
}}{{Infobox ship characteristics
Hide header=Header caption=Ship tons burthen=*HMS Hussar:586[4] (bm)
  • Hussar: 600 (bm)[2]
  • Hussaren: 200kmcl{{refn|kmcl stands for kommercelæsten, which represents a volumetric measure of capacity, much like burthen.[3]|group=Note}}
Ship displacement=Ship length=Ship beam=Ship draught=Ship hold depth=Ship propulsion=Ship speed=Ship range=Ship endurance=Ship test depth=Ship boats=Ship capacity=Ship complement=*Protector: 200
  • Hussaren:58[4]
Ship armament=*Protector:20–28 guns
  • HMS Hussar:
    • Upper deck:16 × 9-pounder guns
    • QD:4 × 6-pounder guns
Ship sail plan=ShipShip armor=Ship aircraft=Ship motto=Ship nickname=Ship honours=Ship notes=
}}

Protector was a frigate of the Massachusetts Navy, launched in 1779. She fought a notable single-ship action against a British privateer General Duff before the British Royal Navy captured her in 1781. The Royal Navy took her into service as the sixth-rate post ship HMS Hussar. Hussar too engaged in a notable action against the French 32-gun frigate Sybille. The Royal Navy sold Hussar in 1783 and a Dutch ship-owner operating from Copenhagen purchased her. She made one voyage to the East Indies for him before he sold her to British owners circa 1786. She leaves Lloyd's Register by 1790.

Career

Massachusetts Navy

Captain John Foster Williams received command of the new 20 or 28-gun frigate Protector in the spring of 1780 and took her to sea in June. In accordance with instructions from the Board of War, the new warship cruised in the vicinity of the Newfoundland Banks, on the lookout for British merchantmen. Her vigilance was rewarded early in June.

At 0700 on 9 June 1780, Protector spotted a strange ship bearing down on her, flying British colors. At 1100, Protector, also flying English colors, hailed the stranger and found her to be the 32-gun letter-of-marque Admiral Duff, bound for London from St. Kitts. When the enemy's identity had been ascertained, Protector hauled down British colors and ran up the Continental flag—opening fire almost simultaneously. The action ensued for the next hour and one-half, until Admiral Duff caught fire and exploded, leaving 55 survivors for Protector to rescue soon thereafter.

In May 1781, Lloyd's List reported that the rebel frigates Dean and Protector had captured John, Ashburner, master, from Lancaster to St. Kitts, and a ship sailing from Glasgow to Jamaica with 900 barrels of beef and a quantity of dry goods, and had taken them into Martinique.[5]

In June, Lloyd's List reported that the American privateer Protector, of 28 guns and 179 men, had captured Sally, Townsend, master, which had been sailing from st Kitts to New York.[6]

Notification of these captures took some months to get to Britain. In the meantime, on 5 May 1781, {{HMS|Roebuck|1774|6}} and {{HMS|Medea|1778|6}} captured Protector off Sandy Hook. The Royal Navy took her into service as the sixth-rate HMS Hussar.[7]

Royal Navy

The Royal Navy commissioned Hussar under Captain Thomas McNamara Russell (or Thomas Macnamara Russell).

On 3 May 1782, Hussar Hussar captured the brig Boston Packet, which was carrying flour and rum.[8]

Hussar{{'}}s most famous engagement was the action with the French frigate Sybille.

{{main article|Action of 22 January 1783}}

In the action Hussar emerged victorious, having lost only two men killed and five or six wounded.[9] However, the actions of the French captain gave rise to controversy.

Hussar arrived at Deptford on 3 June 1783 and was paid off. The Royal Navy sold Hussar on 14 August 1783 for £1540, at Deptford.[10]

Danish ownership

Frédéric de Coninck, who was a Dutch trader with a fleet of 64 ships operating from Copenhagen, purchased her. At purchase, the ship was already fitted with a desalination plant which was ideal for the long voyages envisaged to the East Indies and the Danes made contemporary technical drawings of the distilling machine.[11][12]

Her captain was A. M'Intosh (or Mackingtosh, or MacIntosh), and her trade was initially London-Copenhagen.[2] In 1784-5 she sailed to Bengal and back to Denmark. When she sailed up the Hooghly to Calcutta the British East India Company suspected that she was American, even though she was flying Danish colours.[13] M'Intosh himself died in late 1785 as there is a call in the London Gazette of 3 January 1786 for claimants against his estate.[14]

Danish records show Hussaren as making only one voyage for De Connick.[15]{{refn|Lloyd's Register for 1786 still shows M'Intosh as master, and her trade as London-East Indies.[16] However, Lloyd's Register was only as accurate as shipowners bothered to keep it by informing Lloyd's. Stale information is common.|group=Note}}

British ownership

Lloyd's Register for 1787 shows a new master, R. Wilson, a new owner, and a new trade, Honduras-Bristol.[17]

Lloyd's Register did not publish in 1788, and the relevant pages are missing from the volume for 1789. Hussar is not listed in the volume for 1790.

Notes, Citations, and References

Notes
1. ^Lloyd's'>Register (1784), Seq. №H343.
2. ^Lloyd's Register (1783), Seq. №H494.
3. ^SKIBSMÅLINGEN I DANMARK 1632–1867.
4. ^Danske Center for Byhistorie: Hussaren.
5. ^Lloyd's List, №1263.
6. ^Lloyd's List №1280.
7. ^Winfield p.272
8. ^{{London Gazette|date=21 September 1782|issue=12333|page=1}}
9. ^{{London Gazette|date=15 April 1783|issue=12432|page=3}}
10. ^Winfield (2007), p.272.
11. ^Danish Naval Museum
12. ^This technical drawing can be accessed on line via this link then click Hussaren and then Vis
13. ^Bean (2001), p.35.
14. ^{{London Gazette|date=3 January 1786|issue=12714|page=7}}
15. ^Skibe hjemmehørende i København.
16. ^Lloyd's Register (1786), Seq. №H370.
17. ^Lloyd's Register (1787), Seq. №H364.
Citations{{reflist|30em}}References
  • Bean, Susan S. (2001) Yankee India: American commercial and cultural encounters with India in the age of sail, 1784–1860. (Peabody Essex Museum).
  • {{cite book |first=Rif|last=Winfield|title=British Warships in the Age of Sail 1714–1792: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates|publisher=Seaforth|year=2007|isbn=978-1844157006}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Protector (1779 frigate)}}

8 : 1779 ships|Massachusetts in the American Revolution|History of the United States Navy|Captured ships|Post ships of the Royal Navy|Age of Sail merchant ships|Merchant ships of Denmark|Merchant ships of the United Kingdom

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