HMS Triton was a 28-gun sailing frigate built for the Royal Navy and designed by Thomas Slade, a modified version of his Mermaid class. She was ordered on 25 December during the Falklands Crisis of 1770, a conflict that was resolved the following January, before work on her had begun.[1]
Slade’s original Mermaid class was designed in 1760 as a diminutive version of the captured French ship, Abénaquise. Three were built, smaller in size and carrying fewer guns, of a smaller calibre than the prize on which they were based.[1] When the design was resurrected for the second batch, it was presented with a slightly longer keel[a][1] and instead of the more common three equal-sized rectangular windows that comprised the quarter gallery lights, the central section was enlarged and sported a rounded top.[4]Triton and her sister ships, HMS Greyhound and Boreas were also given an increased sheer fore and aft, raising the bowsprit in the process and necessitating other minor alterations to the topside.[5] Slade included a separate framing plan with his design; a new idea at the time.[6]
Triton was a sixth rate, built to carry a main battery of twenty-four 9-pounder (4.1-kilogram) long guns on her upper deck, four 3 pounders (1.4 kilograms) on the quarterdeck and twelve 1⁄2 pounder (0.23 kilograms) swivel guns.[1] In August 1779, an Admiralty order added six 18-pounder (8.2-kilogram) carronades; four on the quarterdeck and two on the forecastle.[b] A further order in the February following called for the 3-pounder guns to be upgraded to 6 pounders (2.7 kilograms).[c][1]
The new Mermaid class were not great sailers in general but performed well to windward, making 10 -11 knots when close-hauled in a topgallant gale.[d] The fastest speed recorded was of 12 knots when running before the wind.[12]
Service
Following her launch on 1 October 1773, she was taken to Portsmouth Dockyard for full fitting out, a process that took two years. She was first commissioned in August 1775 under Captain Skeffington Lutwidge, prior to her completion (fitting out) in November 1775. In March 1776, she made her first trans-Atlantic voyage, initially to North America to take part in the American Revolutionary War. From 1777, Triton was stationed in the St Lawrence River where she remained for the next two years, capturing the privateer "Pompey" on 13 June 1778.[1] Some of her crew also took part in operations on Lake Champlain during that time.[13]
From February to April 1779 she was fitted with a copper bottom at Chatham Docks. She was fitted with six extra heavy guns in August. Returning to America she captured the American privateer "Gates" in September 1779.[1]
Eight days later, on 16 January, Triton was at the Battle of Cape St Vincent.[1][15] Rodney had been warned that a Spanish squadron was in the area and had already had his ships cleared for action when he passed the Cape.[16] The enemy were spotted at 13:00 to the south-east and the British ships raced to cut them off from the shoreline on the leeward side.[17]HMS Bedford, DefenceEdgarResolution engaged first at around 16:00 and a running battle continued into the night.[18] By the time the fighting had stopped at 02:00 seven Spanish ships had been captured or destroyed and the remainder driven off.[19]
The British fleet arrived at Gibraltar on 19 January and shortly after, Triton, along with HMS Invincible, Marlborough and Defence, was dispatched with supplies to Minorca.[14] After spending two days at Port Mahon the squadron left to rejoin Rodney, arriving on 14 February with dispatches from the island’s governor, James Murray, and news that no enemy ships had been encountered on either leg of the journey. Rodney had by this time repaired his ships and having been ordered to the Leeward Islands Station on completion of the Gibraltar mission, set sail with his fleet on 18 February.[20]
After spending some time in the Leeward Islands, Triton returned home in May. By June however, she was back in the West Indies under a new captain, John McLaurin, who took the ship to Tobago in May 1781 and was present on 12 April 1782 at the Battle of the Saintes where Rodney's ships-of-the-line defeated a French fleet under the Comte de Grasse, forcing the French and Spanish to abandon a planned invasion of Jamaica.[1] Afterwards she was berthed at St Kitts. The ship paid off in October and in March 1783 was taken to Limehouse Docks in London for 'major repairs' which took until August 1784.[1]
In April 1794 Captain Scory Barker took command and on 8 March 1795, Triton made on one final trip to Jamaica before returning to England with a convoy in August. She was paid off in November and broken up at Deptford in January 1796.[1]
Notes
^The original Mermaid class was designed to have a keel length of 102 ft 8+1⁄8 in (31.296 m); the modified Mermaids, 103 ft 4+3⁄4 in (31.515 m);[2][3]8+5⁄8 in (220 mm) longer.
^Carronades were lighter so could be manoeuvred with fewer men, and had a faster rate of fire but had a much shorter range than the long gun.[7]
^The gun-rating of a vessel was the number of long guns it was designed to carry and did not always match its actual armament. Before 1817, carronades were not counted at all unless they were direct replacements for long guns.[8][9]
Beatson, Robert (1804). Naval and Military Memoirs of Great Britain: From the Year 1727 to 1783, Volume V. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. OCLC123536052.
Clowes, William Laird (1996) [1900]. The Royal Navy, A History from the Earliest Times to 1900, Volume III. London: Chatham Publishing. ISBN1-86176-012-4.
Davies, David (1996). Fighting Ships. Fulham Palace Road, London.: Constable and Robinson Limited. ISBN1-84119-469-7.
Falconer, William; Burney, William (1830). A New and Universal Dictionary of the Marine; being a copious explanation of the technical terms and phrases usually employed in the construction, equipment, machinery, movements, and military, as well as naval operations of ships: with such parts of astronomy and navigation as will be found useful to practical navigators. London: T. Cadell and W. Davies. OCLC1752876.
Robert Gardiner, The First Frigates, Conway Maritime Press, London 1992. ISBN0-85177-601-9.
A Committee of the Council, ed. (2022) [1885]. Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society. Vol. XI. London: Edward Stanfod. ISBN9780282699567.