Musquito-class Floating Battery
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The ''Musquito'' class was a Royal Navy class of two 4-gun floating batteries built to a design by Admiral
Sir Sidney Smith Admiral Sir William Sidney Smith (21 June 176426 May 1840) was a British naval and intelligence officer. Serving in the American and French revolutionary wars and Napoleonic Wars, he rose to the rank of Admiral. Smith was known for his of ...
specifically to serve with his squadron in French coastal waters. Both were named and ordered under Admiralty Order 26 May 1794.


Design and construction

Smith had the two vessels built with tapered, flat-bottomed hulls, so that they could go into shallow waters. For stability he had them fitted with three Shank sliding or drop keels (actually removable centreboards). Two of the keels were parallel and forward and the third was aft. (The Shank keels were the invention of naval architect Captain John Schank.) Wells & Co. built both vessels at Deptford Dockyard in 1794 and launched them there that same year.


Deployment

''Musquito'' was based at the St Marcou islands and ''Sandfly'' was based at Jersey. After the loss of ''Musquito'', ''Sandfly'' moved to St Marcou.


Ships


''Musquito''

''Musquito'' was commissioned in May 1795 under Lieutenant William McCarthy. A gale blew her out of the anchorage at the St Marcou islands and wrecked her on the French coast on 20 June 1795, with the loss of five lives, including McCarthy.


''Sandfly''

participated in the Battle of the テ四es Saint-Marcouf in 1798. She was paid off in 1802 and broken up in 1803.


Citations


References

* * * {{Musquito class floating battery + + Ship classes of the Royal Navy