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French ship La Bienvenue (1788)

History
French Navy Ensign (1790-1794)France
Name: La Royalist, La Bienvenue
Builder: Gouet and Deros
Launched: 7 May 1788
Renamed: October 1792, January 1793
Captured: 20 March 1794
Royal Navy Ensign (1707 - 1800)Great Britain
Name: HMS Undaunted
Renamed: 30 March 1795
Fate: Sold
General characteristics As built
Class and type: 20-gun flûte
Tons burthen: 699 tons bm
Length: 42.2 m (138 ft)
Beam: 10.1 m (33 ft)
Depth: 4.9 m (16 ft)
Sail plan: Full-rigged ship
Armament: 20 X 8 pounders (livre de Paris)
General characteristics British service
Class and type: 28-gun sixth-rate frigate
Complement: 195

La Bienvenue was a 20-gun French warship launched at Le Havre in 1788 that made several changes in ownership and name during military conflict with the British. She briefly became La Royalist in October 1792 before reverting to her original name in January the following year. She was serving as a prison ship at Martinique when she was captured by the British in 1794.

La Bienvenue was a 20-gun French flûte designed by Pierre-Alexandre-Laurent Forfait and built by the renowned French ship builders Gouet and Deros. She was constructed in the port of Le Havre on the north coast of France between November 1787 and June 1788, and launched on 7 May 1788. She was 699 tons burthen and her French measurements, as built were; 130 ft (length) x 31 ft (beam) x 15 ft 7in (depth). This equates to the modern metric dimensions of 42.2 m (138 ft) x 10.1 m (33 ft) x 4.9 m (16 ft). Initially La Bienvenue was armed with 20 x 8 pounders (livre de Paris)

After setting sail from Mauritius for France in December 1791, La Bienvenue was seized by her crew, handed over to the British and renamed. She was retaken by the French Royalist forces on 4 October 1792 at St Kitts and was renamed Royaliste; her original name was restored in January 1793. She served as a prison ship at Martinique from July that year until she was recaptured by the British.

On 5 February 1794, a British fleet under Sir John Jervis and escorting 7,000 troops under Sir Charles Grey, arrived at the island of Martinique. In spite of the strong opposition from the occupying forces and difficult terrain, the island was substantially under British control by 28 February, save for two forts covering the town of Fort Royal. A siege was conducted by both British Army and Royal Navy forces, supported by gunfire from Jervis' fleet which was now occupying the harbour. On 20 March, British Grenadiers and Light Infantry took the town while British sailors attacked and occupied the coastal fort. The landward fort surrendered a few days later. It was on 17 March 1794, during the occupation of the harbour and just prior to the landings, that La Bienvenue was taken.


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