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- References
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2017}}{{Use British English|date=August 2017}}Nine ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Falmouth, after the town of Falmouth: - {{HMS|Falmouth|1652}} was a 30-gun ship, formerly the Dutch Rotterdam. She was captured in 1652 and sold in 1658.
- {{HMS|Falmouth|1693}} was a 58-gun fourth rate launched in 1693 and captured by French privateers in the Mediterranean in 1704.
- {{HMS|Falmouth|1708}} was a 50-gun fourth rate launched in 1708. She was reconstructed in 1729 and broken up in 1747.
- {{HMS|Falmouth|1752}} was a 50-gun fourth rate launched in 1752. She was beached and abandoned at Batavia on 16 January 1765 after suffering serious battle damage off Manila.
- {{HMS|Falmouth|1807}} was a schooner launched in 1807. She was used as a dockyard vessel until 1824 when she was converted to a mortar vessel. She reverted to a dockyard lighter in 1846 and was renamed YC1. She was renamed YC46 in 1870, reverting to Falmouth in 1870, and was sold in 1883.
- {{HMS|Falmouth|1814}} was a 22-gun sixth rate launched in 1814 and sold in 1825.
- HMS Falmouth was to have been a wooden screw sloop, ordered from Deptford Dockyard in 1860 and cancelled in the same year.
- HMS Falmouth was to have been a wood screw corvette laid down in 1861 at Chatham Dockyard and cancelled in 1863.
- {{HMS|Falmouth|1910}} was a Town-class cruiser launched in 1910 and sunk in 1916.
- {{HMS|Falmouth|L34}} was a {{sclass-|Shoreham|sloop|0}} sloop launched in 1932. She was renamed {{HMS|Calliope|shore establishment|6}} in January 1952 and was reassigned as a drill ship. She was broken up in 1968.
- {{HMS|Falmouth|F113}} was a {{sclass-|Rothesay|frigate|0}} anti-submarine frigate launched in 1959. She was used as a training ship at Harwich from 1984 until 1988, when she was sold for scrapping.
References{{Shipindex}}{{Italic title prefixed|3}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Falmouth, Hms}} 1 : Royal Navy ship names |