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French ship Pompée (1791)

Achille
Scale model of Achille, sister ship of HMS Pompee (1793), on display at the Musée de la Marine in Paris.
History
French Navy Ensign France
Name: Pompée
Namesake: Pompey
Builder: Toulon shipyard
Laid down: January 1790
Launched: 28 May 1791
Commissioned: February 1793
Captured: 29 August 1793
United Kingdom
Name: HMS Pompee
Acquired: 29 August 1793
Reclassified: Prison hulk in Portsmouth in 1816
Fate: Broken up in January 1817
General characteristics
Class and type: Téméraire-class ship of the line
Tons burthen: 1,901894 (bm)
Length:
  • 182 ft 2 in (55.52 m) (gundeck)
  • 148 ft 7 34 in (45.307 m) (keel)
Beam: 49 ft 0 12 in (14.948 m)
Depth of hold: 21 ft 10 12 in (6.668 m)
Sail plan: Full rigged ship
Complement: 640
Armament: French service:
British service:
  • Lower deck: 30 × 32-pounder guns
  • Upper deck: 30 × 18-pounder guns
  • QD: 12 × 32-pounder carronades
  • Fc: 4 × 32-pounder carronades
  • Roundhouse: 8 ×18-pounder carronades

HMS Pompee was a 74-gun ship of the line of the British Royal Navy. Built as Pompée, a Téméraire class ship of the French Navy, she was handed over to the British during the Siege of Toulon (September-December 1793) a few months after being completed, and spent the entirety of her active career with the Royal Navy until she was broken up in 1817.

During the Siege of Toulon, Captain Poulain, her commanding officer, joined the British. Pompee fled Toulon when the city fell to the French Republicans and sailed to Britain under the temporary command of Lieutenant John Davie. She arrived at Portsmouth on 3 May 1794, and was registered on the navy list under an Admiralty order dated 29 October 1794.

She commissioned as HMS Pompee under her first commander, Captain Charles Edmund Nugent, in May 1795 and entered service with the Channel Fleet after a period of refitting. From August 1795 she was under Captain James Vashon, and she was later one of the ships involved in the Spithead mutiny in 1797.

Leviathan, Pompee, Anson, Melpomene, and Childers shared in the proceeds of the capture on 10 September of the Tordenshiold.

Under Captain Charles Stirling, she fought at the Battle of Algeciras Bay in 1801. In 1807 the ship, under the command of Captain Richard Dacres served in the Mediterranean squadron under Rear-Admiral Sir Sydney Smith, as part of the Vice-Admiral Duckworth's Dardanelles Operation and later the Alexandria expedition of 1807.


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