HMS Jane was the North Carolina ship General Nash. In September–October 1780 General Nash operated as a privateer and captured several British merchant vessels. The British captured General Nash when they took St Eustatius on 14 February 1781. The Royal Navy took General Nash into service as HMS Jane. In 1782 the American privateer Tartar captured Jane.
History | |
---|---|
North Carolina | |
Name | General Nash |
Namesake | Francis Nash |
Owner | John Wright Stanly (or Stanley), |
Launched | 1777 |
Captured | 14 February 1781 |
Great Britain | |
Name | HMS Jane |
Acquired | 7 March 1781 by purchase of a prize |
Captured | February 1782 |
General characteristics | |
Tons burthen | 140 (bm) |
Sail plan | Sloop |
Complement | 80 (North Carolina privateer) |
Armament |
North Carolina ship
editIn September 1780 Captain Daniel Deshon and General Nash captured two brigs and brought them into the Cape Fear River. One brig was carrying rum and sugar from St Kitts; the other was from Scotland. Together, the brigs and their cargoes were worth £50,800.[4]
In October General Nash captured three British brigs and brought them into New Bern, North Carolina: Agie (or Aggie), Prince of Wales, and Kitty (or Kattie). Lloyd's List reported on 26 December 1780 that Aggy, Brown, master, from Clyde to Charleston, had been taken and sent into North Carolina. Her first and second mates escaped into Charleston.[5][Note 1] Kitty, Provand, master, sailing from Jamaica to London, was taken into "Newburn".[7]
Captain Deshon captured Kitty on 2 October.[1] He appealed the subsequent decision of the Court of Admiralty at Beaufort, South Carolina, on 28 October. On 5 April 1781 his appeal was (probably) affirmed.[8]
On 14 February the British captured Sint Eustatius. There they captured some 130 vessels. Among them were 14 vessels belonging to Stanly, General Nash's owner, loading at Oranjestad, Netherlands Antilles, and including General Nash.[9]
Royal Navy service
editThe Royal Navy purchased General Nash on 7 March 1781 and renamed her HMS Jane.[3] Lieutenant John Davall Burr, who had transferred from Pocahontas, commissioned her.[3]
The American 24-gun privateer Tartar captured Jane off the south coast of Haiti on 6 February 1782.[3] Jane had been sailing between St Kitts and Jamaica when she sprang the head of her mainmast. She anchored in the lee of the Île-à-Vache to effect repairs. When Burr sighted a strange vessel he made sail, but his pursuer quickly caught up. Jane fired a broadside but two of her guns came off their carriages, and another came loose from its securing bolts. Water was also coming in through Jane's gun ports. Unable to resist effectively, Burr struck.[2]
The subsequent court martial exonerated Burr for the loss of his ship. The court martial discovered that when Jane had been fitted out locally she had had to take whatever stores and equipment she could get. In particular, apparently her guns and their carriages were ancient and had been condemned.[2]
Notes
editCitations
edit- ^ a b Granville Hough: General Nash.[usurped]
- ^ a b c Hepper (1994), p. 67.
- ^ a b c d Winfield (2007), p. 319.
- ^ The American Revolution in North Carolina – Ocracoke Inlet, September 1780.
- ^ Lloyd's List №1227.
- ^ Lloyd's Register (1780), Seq.№A93.
- ^ Lloyd's List №1243.
- ^ Chandler and Davis (1888), p.21, #70.
- ^ Mary S. Hessel (1994) "Stanly, John Wright".
References
edit- Chandler, John, and Bancroft Davis (1888) The Committees of the Continental Congress Chosen to Hear and Determine Appeals from Courts of Admiralty, and the Court of Appeals in Cases of Capture, Established by that Body. (Banks & Brothers).
- Hepper, David J. (1994). British Warship Losses in the Age of Sail, 1650–1859. Rotherfield: Jean Boudriot. ISBN 0-948864-30-3.
- Winfield, Rif (2007). British Warships in the Age of Sail 1714–1792: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates. Seaforth. ISBN 978-1844157006.