HMS Saracen (1804)

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HMS Saracen (1804) was a Royal Navy Cruizer class brig-sloop built Perry, Green & Wells at Blackwall Yard and launched in 1804. She had a relatively short and uneventful career before she was broken up at Chatham in 1812.

Service

Saracen was commissioned in August 1804 under Cmdr. James Prevost for the Irish station. In May 1805 she was cruising the Channel.

By 3 January 1806 she was with Sir John Borlase Warren’s squadron at Saint Helena. Nine days later she sailed to Madeira to gain intelligence of Vice Admiral Leissègues's squadron. By 28 December she was back at Falmouth.

During the summer of 1807 Saracen was in the Rio Plata with Sir Home Popham’s forces. From there she brought home the naval and military dispatches after the surrender of the British forces by General Whitelocke on 5 July.

She sailed for the Mediterranean on 15 November and in 1808 was off Cadiz. On 13 March 1809, Cmdr. Buckland Stirling Bluett took command. (He had received his promotion to Commander in 1804 when as a Lieutenant in Saracen's sister ship, Scorpion, he had participated in the boat action under her captain, Cmdr. George Nicholas Hardinge, that captured the Dutch brig Atalante.) On 10 May Bluett sailed Saracen for Jamaica.

On 12 Oct 1810 Saracen took her one prize when she captured the French privateer Caroline off Cuba. She had one gun and a crew of 42 men and had not made any captures.

Fate

Saracen was broken up at Chatham in May 1812. On 14 July Bluett took command of another sister ship, Childers, then lying at Portsmouth.

Reference

  • Winfield, Rif (2008). British Warships in the Age of Sail 1793–1817: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates. Seaforth. ISBN 1861762461.