HMS Fowey (1749)
Lord Dunmore fleeing to HMS Fowey (1907 illustration)
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History | |
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Great Britain | |
Name | HMS Fowey |
Owner | Royal Navy |
Builder | Janvrin, Lepe[1] |
In service | 1749 |
Fate | Sunk in action October 10, 1781[1] |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | 6th rate frigate[1] |
Tons burthen | 513 bm[1] |
Length | 113 ft 6 in (34.6 m)[1] |
Beam | 32 ft (9.8 m)[1] |
Propulsion | Sail (three masts, ship rig) |
Sail plan | Full-rigged ship |
Armament | 24 cannons[1] |
HMS Fowey was a sixth-rate warship of the Royal Navy. Built in 1749,[2] the ship was sunk in action with the French during the Siege of Yorktown in 1781.[1] Mark Robinson was appointed to the Fowey, a 6th Rate of 24 guns, on the 13th June 1767, at Sheerness, and sailed via Spithead, to Plymouth, and thence to Madeira in September, and on to the East Coast of the American colonies, arriving at Charleston in 28 October 1767, relieving the Sardoine. “Pennsylvania Gazetter December 1767 Nov. 6. Captain Mark Robinson, of his Majesty ship Fowey, of 28 guns, who arrived here last week from Great Britain, is commanding officer, or Commodore of all his Majesty’s ships from Virginia to Cape Florida, including the Bahama Islands. Commodore Hood, stationed at Halifax, commands as far south as New York, and, it is said, a third Commodore will be stationed at Virginia.” The itinerary of the Fowey, with Mark Robinson in command was Charleston in 1768, Rebellion Roads (July 1768), Charleston, Sandy Hook, Louisburg (October 1768, Halifax, Charleston (January 1769) Cape Fear Charleston, Fort Royal (June 1769), Charleston, Halifax, Charleston, leaving the Fowey on the 31st January 1771. (ADM 36/ 7374) Mark Robinson believed that the small coasting vessels engaged in a great deal of smuggling, and he asked the Admiralty to buy a tender to examine creeks and islets (15 November 1767 ADM1/2388). He was put straight by the Merchants of South Carolina on the matter of intra-colony trade, after the Sardoine and Captain Hawker affair, and was asked not to stop interior trade. He seems to have heeded that advice, as there is no record that he seized any coasting vessels while he was in South Carolina. On the 29th April 1770 Sir William Draper embarked in the Fowey, to visit Governor Tryon at the Cape Fear. Mark Robinson on the Fowey is also stated as having arrived in Charles Town 8 October 1770, from Virginia and sailed for Virginia again on the 29 January 1771. Whilst he was on this coast he had the satisfaction of preserving Charleston from the effects of an alarming conflagration, a service for which the Merchants of South Carolina expressed their gratitude by a public vote of thanks, dated the 14th January 1771. He sailed from Charleston on the 22 (29) January 1771. Her Captain on 1 January 1775 is listed as Cpt. Geo Montagu.[3] The ship is noted as having received Lord Dunmore, the governor of the Colony of Virginia, when he fled the colony for safety after the Gunpowder Incident during the beginning of the American Revolution, marking the last departure of a Royal Governor from the colony, effectively ending British rule in Virginia. The National Park Service has identified it as a probable candidate for a wreck located off Yorktown, Virginia, in the York River.[4]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h "HMS Fowey (+1781)". Wrecksite.eu. Retrieved 28 May 2022.
HMS FOWEY; 6th Rate; 24 cannons; 513 bm; 113.5x32 ft; Built in 1749 by Janvrin, Lepe. Sunk in 1781 in action with the French in the Chesapeake.
- ^ Billington, Phil (2008). The Guide to Fabulous Fowey. Worcester, UK: Polperro Heritage Press. p. 24. ISBN 978-09553648-5-3.
- ^ "Naval Documents of The American Revolution Volume 1 AMERICAN THEATRE: Dec. 1, 1774–Sept. 2, 1775 EUROPEAN THEATRE: Dec. 6, 1774–Aug. 9, 1775" (PDF). United States government Printing Office. Retrieved 9 December 2021 – via American Naval Records Society.
- ^ "State Submerged Research Law: Virginia". National Park Service. Retrieved 8 March 2014.