French ship Belle Poule (1765)
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File:Belle-Poule-10 lbp2.jpg Fight of HMS Arethusa and the Belle Poule | |
Career (France) | French Navy Ensign |
---|---|
Name: | Belle Poule |
Namesake: | Paule de Viguier, baronne de Fonterville |
Builder: | Bordeaux shipyard |
Laid down: | March 1765 |
Launched: | 18 November 1766 |
Commissioned: | early 1767 |
Decommissioned: | 1801 |
Out of service: | 1801 |
Captured: | by the British, 16 July 1780 |
Career (UK) | |
Name: | HMS Belle Poule |
Acquired: | 16 July 1780 |
Out of service: | 1798 |
Fate: | Broken up in 1801 |
General characteristics | |
Class and type: | Dédaigneuse class frigate |
Displacement: |
650 tonnes (empty) |
Length: | 43 metres |
Beam: | 11.2 metres |
Draught: | 4.9 metres |
Complement: | 8 officers + 260 men |
Armament: |
30 guns:
|
Armour: | Timber |
The Belle Poule was a French frigate of the Dédaigneuse class, designed and built by Léon-Michel Guignace, famous for her duel with the English frigate HMS Arethusa on 17 June 1778, which began the French involvement in the American War of Independence.
1768 - 1778
The Belle Poule was built from March 1765 to early 1767 in Bordeaux.
She served in two campaigns in the West Indies, where due to her good sailing performance she was selected for the first French attempt at covering her hull with copper to resist marine growths.
From 1772 to 1776, she was sent on hydrographic missions, during which the young La Pérouse came to the attention of his superiors.
On the 12 December 1776, she left India to return to Brest. At the time, France was not yet engaged in the American War of Independence, but there had been numerous incidents involving French and British ships. Indeed, on the 27 April 1777, the Belle Poule was chased by a British ship of the line, which she easily evaded to reach Brest.
1778 - 1801
In January 1778, the Belle Poule was selected to ferry Benjamin Franklin back to America. On 7 January, the English ships of the line HMS Hector and HMS Courageous (1761) stopped her and demanded to inspect her. In spite of the overwhelming superiority of the British forces, her captain, Charles de Bernard de Marigny, answered:
“ | I am the Belle Poule, frigate of the King of France; I sail from sea and I sail to sea. Vessels of the King, my master, never allow inspections | ” |
The English offered apologies and let the frigate sail through. However, opposing winds prevented the ship from crossing the Atlantic, and after 36 days, the Belle Poule had to return to Brest. Franklin later sailed to America aboard the Sensible.
When war broke out, the Belle Poule was sent on a reconnaissance mission, along with the 26-gun frigate Licorne, the corvette Hirondelle and the smaller Coureur, to locate the squadron of Admiral Keppel. They encountered the British squadron, which chased them. HMS Arethusa caught up with the French, and a furious battle ensued. Arethusa had to break off the fight, having lost her main mast. The British captured the smaller French ships, but the two frigates escaped the numerous ships of the line pursuing them. Belle Poule lost 30 killed, among which her captain, commandant de La Clocheterie. The battle was so famous that ladies of the high society invented the hairstyle "Belle Poule", with a ship on the top of the head.
Between September and October 1778, Belle Poule teamed up with French ship Vengeur and captured 5 privateers.
In 1779, the Belle Poule served as coast guard and convoy escort. During the night of 14 - 15 July 1780, the 64-gun ship of the line HMS Nonsuch chased her off Île d'Yeu. After several hours of battle Belle Poule, her commanding officer Chevalier Kergariou having been killed, struck her colours.
She was commissioned in February 1781 into the English Royal Navy, retaining her name. She served for the next 21 months under Captain Philip Patton. The Royal Navy put her into reserve at Chatham in November 1782, and briefly used her as a receiving ship from 1796 before they sold her for breaking up in 1801.
| French ship Belle Poule (1765)
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