Det Store Bælt was constructed at Bodenhoffs Plads to a design by Henrik Gerner. She was the first of at least three frigates constructed for the navy at Andreas Bodenhoff's dockyard. The next were Friderichsværn (1783) and Hvide Ørn (1784).[3]Det Store Bælt was launched on 22 June 1782 and the construction was completed in August 1783.[4]
Store Bælt was 130 ft 9 in (39.85 m) long with a beam of 35 ft (11 m) and a draught of 14 ft 9 in (4.50 m). Her complement was 274 men. Her armament was 36 12-pounder guns.[5]
Career
Naval service
She was commissioned in the Royal Danish Navy and served for some years as the cadet training ship in the North and Baltic seas.[6][7][8] In 1785, she was under the command of Ole Andreas Kierulff (1742–1822).[9]
In 1793 she was patrolling in the North Sea under the command of A J Herbst,[10] and in 1795 and 1797 was part of a joint Danish/Swedish squadron enforcing neutrality and protecting trade.[11] In 1797, she was under the command of Hans Lindholm.
[12]
From her home port of Copenhagen Holsten completed three voyages to the East Indies:
1800–1801
1801–1803 under captain Jan Hendrick Helsding
1804–1805 also under captain Jan Hendrick Helsding.[2]
On 12 June 1805 Holstein, Helfding, master, was reported off Dover on her way from Bengal to Copenhagen.[13] It appears that it was on a fourth voyage that she met her fate.
Fate
A report in the Madras Courier dated 10 February 1807 stated that the Danish company's ship Holstein was sailing from Copenhagen to Serampore when she was dismasted off Ceylon. She sailed to Mauritius for repairs.[14] On reaching Mauritius (then known as Isle de France) Holsten was condemned as unseaworthy.[2]
The DAC replaced her, in December 1806, with the purchase from the French at Mauritius the recently captured East IndiamanWarren Hastings, which the Company then renamed Holsten.[2][Note 2]
Namesakes
At least two other ships have borne similar names"
^The original designs of the figurehead and ornamentation of the gallery are available at this reference by clicking "vis"
^CAVEAT: Differing sources report 1805, perhaps 1806, or 1807 as the year of demise. The first two editors here have concluded the true year is 1807 - see Talk page
(in Danish)T. A. Topsøe-Jensen og Emil Marquard (1935) "Officerer i den dansk-norske Søetat 1660-1814 og den danske Søetat 1814-1932“. Two volumes. Download hereArchived 13 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine.