HMS Pallas (1804)

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Career (United Kingdom) Royal Navy Ensign
Name: HMS Pallas
Builder: Plymouth Dockyard
Launched: 17 November 1804
Fate: Wrecked in the Firth of Forth on 18 December 1810
General characteristics
Class and type: 32-gun fifth rate Thames-class frigate
Tons burthen: 657 long tons (668 t)
Length: 127 ft (39 m) (overall)
107 ft 4 in (32.72 m) (keel)
Beam: 34 ft 6 in (10.52 m)
Depth of hold: 11 ft 9 in (3.58 m)
Complement: 220
Armament:
  • Upper deck: 26 x 12pdrs
  • Quarter deck: 8 x 24pdr carronades
  • Forecastle: 4 x 24pdr carronades

HMS Pallas was a 32-gun fifth rate Thames-class frigate of the Royal Navy, launched in 1804 at Plymouth.

History

Pallas was one of the seven Thames class frigates ordered for the fleet in early 1804. Her keel was laid at Plymouth Dockyard in June 1804 and she was launched on the afternoon of 17 November the same year along with her sister-ship HMS Circe.[1] Pallas entered service in January 1805, under the command of Lord Cochrane and proceeded to cruise in the vicinity of the Azores. Here, Pallas captured three Spanish merchant ships and a Spanish 14-gun privateer.[2] Cochrane was given orders to cruise off the Normandy coast in 1806. During the evening of 5 April 1806, Cochrane sailed the Pallas into the Gironde estuary and captured the French 14-gun corvette Tapageuse, and drove ashore and wrecked three other corvettes.[3]

In 1807, command passed to George Miller. Later that year she passed onto George Cadogan and took part in the evacuation of the British army from Walcheren. In 1808, George Francis Seymour took command and operated in the English Channel as part of the Channel Fleet. In 1810, she was ordered to the North Sea and was given a cruise off the coast of Norway where she captured four Danish privateer cutters.

Fate

Pallas was under the command of Captain G.P. Monke when she was wrecked in the Firth of Forth near Dunbar on the night of 18 December 1810. The pilot mistook the light on a lime kiln at Broxmouth for that kept burning on the Isle of May,[4] and the light on the island for that on the Bell Rock. Dunbar Lifeboat saved 45 men from HMS Pallas in two trips and, in attempting a third, was ‘upset and drowned nearly all’.[5] Pallas lost 11 men in the sinking.[4]

Pallas had been in company with Nymphe, which also wrecked that night, though without loss of life. Nymphe wrecked on a rock called the Devil's Ark near Skethard on Tor Ness Dunbar.[4]

References

  1. Cordingly (2008), pp. 83–84.
  2. Cordingly (2008), pp. 89–90.
  3. Cordingly (2008), pp. 97–99|.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Gossett (1986), p.77.
  5. Dunbar Lifeboat Station Website, History Section.