HMS Roebuck (1774)

Roebuck with Phoenix, Tartar and three smaller vessels passing forts Washington and Lee on the Hudson River
History
Great Britain
NameHMS Roebuck
Ordered30 November 1769
Cost£18,911.0.6d
Laid downOctober 1770
Launched24 April 1774
Completed4 August 1775
FateBroken up 1811
General characteristics
Class and typeFifth-rate
Tons burthen879 2694 (bm)
Length
  • 140 feet (42.7 m) (gundeck)
  • 115 feet 9 inches (35.3 m) (keel)
Beam37 feet 9+12 inches (11.5 m)
Depth of hold16 feet 4 inches (5 m)
PropulsionSails
Sail planFully-rigged ship
Complement280–300
Armament

HMS Roebuck was a fifth-rate ship of the Royal Navy which served in the American and French Revolutionary Wars. Designed in 1769 by Sir Thomas Slade to operate in the shallower waters of North America, she joined Lord Howe's squadron towards the end of 1775 and took part in operations against New York the following year. She engaged the American gun batteries at Red Hook during the Battle of Long Island in August 1776, and forced a passage up the Hudson River in October. On 25 August 1777, Roebuck escorted troopships to Turkey Point, Maryland, where an army was landed for an assault on Philadelphia. She was again called upon to accompany troopships in December 1779, this time for an attack on Charleston. When the ships-of-the-line, which were too large to enter the harbour, were sent back to New York, Admiral Marriot Arbuthnot made Roebuck his flagship. She was, therefore, at the front of the attack, leading the British squadron across the shoal to engage Fort Moultrie and the American ships beyond.

After the American Revolutionary War ended in October 1783, Roebuck underwent repairs at Sheerness and was refitted as a hospital ship. She served in this capacity during the French Revolutionary war and was with the British fleet under Vice-Admiral Sir John Jervis that captured Martinique, Guadeloupe and St Lucia in 1794. Recommissioned as a troopship in July 1799, during the War of the Second Coalition, Roebuck joined the Anglo-Russian invasion of Holland and was part of the fleet, under the command of Vice-Admiral Sir Andrew Mitchell, to which the Dutch surrendered in the Vlieter Incident. Following the Treaty of Amiens in March 1802, Roebuck was paid off and laid up in ordinary at Woolwich Dockyard. When the War of the Third Coalition broke out in May 1803, she was brought back into service as a guardship at Leith, flying the flags of Vice-Admiral Richard Rodney Bligh and then Rear-Admiral James Vashon under whom she later transferred to Great Yarmouth. In March 1806, she became a receiving ship and in 1810 the flagship of Lord Gardner. Roebuck was broken up at Sheerness in July 1811.


© MMXXIII Rich X Search. We shall prevail. All rights reserved. Rich X Search