HMS Garland (1798)
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HMS ''Garland'' was a
schooner A schooner () is a type of sailing vessel defined by its rig: fore-and-aft rigged on all of two or more masts and, in the case of a two-masted schooner, the foremast generally being shorter than the mainmast. A common variant, the topsail schoon ...
that the Royal Navy purchased in the West Indies in 1798 to act as a tender to , the flagship of the Commander-in-Chief on the Leeward Islands station. ''Garland'' captured a privateer of greater force than herself, as well as two small prizes. She was sold in March 1803, during the
Peace of Amiens The Treaty of Amiens (french: la paix d'Amiens, ) temporarily ended hostilities between France and the United Kingdom at the end of the War of the Second Coalition. It marked the end of the French Revolutionary Wars; after a short peace it se ...
.


Career

''Garland''s commander was Mr. Francis Banks, masters mate. In April 1796 ''Garland'' captured the French privateer ''Jeune Nantaize'' near Dominica. ''Garland'' was armed with six guns, and had a crew of 18. ''Jeune Nantaize'' was armed with four guns, and had a complement of 39 men. The 39 men included a detachment of 13 soldiers from the French garrison at Roseau, and ten volunteer seamen from merchant ships there, all sent by Dominica's governor. Capturing the privateer cost ''Garland'' one man killed and two wounded. Banks received a commission as a lieutenant and in August an appointment to command ''Garland'', an appointment he still held in 1799. On 9 April 1800, the tenders and ''Garland'' recaptured the schooner ''Hero''. ''Hero'' had a crew of seven men and was 136 tons ( bm). She was out of Guadeloupe, sailing from Pointe Petre to Saint Bartholomew with a load of cordwood. A week later, ''Pickle'' and ''Garland'' captured the Dutch schooner ''Maria''. ''Maria'' had a crew of 19 men, armed with small arms, and was of 35 tons (bm) burthen. She was from Curaçao, sailing from Curaçao to Guadeloupe with a cargo of dry goods. On 15 January 1801, while the 20-gun
post-ship Post ship was a designation used in the Royal Navy during the second half of the 18th century and the Napoleonic Wars to describe a ship of the sixth rate (see rating system of the Royal Navy) that was smaller than a frigate (in practice, carr ...
, 18-gun ship-sloops and , and schooner ''Garland'' (tender to ''Daphne''), were at an anchor in the harbour of the Saintes, they observed a convoy of French coasters, escorted by an armed schooner, sailing towards Vieux-Fort, Guadeloupe. At midnight ''Garland'', accompanied by two boats from each of the three ships, under the command of Lieutenants Kenneth Mackenzie of ''Daphne'', and commander of ''Garland'', and Francis Peachey, of ''Cyane'', attempted to capture or destroy the convoy. The vessels, however, except one, succeeded in getting under the guns of Basse-terre. One vessel, which had anchored near Vieux-Fort, they boarded and brought off under a heavy but apparently harmless cannonade.James (1837), Vol. 3, p.133-4. Two days later, in the afternoon, the British observed the French schooner ''Éclair'', of four long 4-pounders, twenty 1½ pounder brass swivels, and 45 men, the escort of the convoy in question, put into Trois-Rivières, and anchor under the protection of one principal battery and two smaller flanking ones. Mackenzie and Peachey volunteered to attempt cutting her out. For this purpose Mackenzie, with 25 seamen and marines, went on board ''Garland''. The next day, 18 January, which was as early as the breeze would permit, '' Garland'' ran alongside ''Éclair'' and Mackenzie and Peachey, with 30 men, boarded and carried the French schooner in the face of the batteries. ''Garland'' had two men killed and three wounded. The French had one man killed and two drowned, and nine men wounded, including the ''lieutenant de vaissau'' commanding ''Eclair''. Although ''Éclair'' carried only four guns, she was pierced for 12 and was large enough to carry them. She was on her way to Pointe Petre to complete her armament of twelve 6-pounders and 20 brass swivels. The British took her into service and armed her with twelve 12-pounder
carronade A carronade is a short, smoothbore, cast-iron cannon which was used by the Royal Navy. It was first produced by the Carron Company, an ironworks in Falkirk, Scotland, and was used from the mid-18th century to the mid-19th century. Its main func ...
s. Mackenzie became ''Eclair's'' first British commander.


Fate

The Navy sold ''Garland'' in March 1803.''Naval Chronicle'', Vol. 11, p.506.


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* * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Garland (1798) 1790s ships Schooners of the Royal Navy