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HMS Confiance (1814)

History
Royal Navy Ensign
Name: HMS Confiance
Builder: Ile aux Noix Naval Shipyards, Quebec, Canada
Launched: 25 August 1814
Fate: Captured at the Battle of Plattsburgh , 11 September 1814
Name: USS Confiance
Acquired: 11 September 1814
Fate: Abandoned and sunk, 1820
General characteristics
Type: Fifth-rate frigate
Tons burthen: 831 bm
Length: 147 ft 5 in (44.93 m)
Beam: 37 ft 2 in (11.33 m)
Depth of hold: 7 ft (2.1 m)
Propulsion: Sail
Armament:
  • British service: 30 × 24-pounder guns + 6 × 32-pounder carronades + 1 × 24-pounder gun (on pivot mount)
  • As captured: 27 x 24-pounder guns

HMS Confiance was a 36-gun fifth-rate frigate that served in the Royal Navy on Lake Champlain during the War of 1812. Confiance served as Captain George Downie's flagship at the Battle of Plattsburgh, on 11 September 1814. Surrendered to the American Squadron following a nearly 2½ hour battle, she was eventually taken to Whitehall, New York where she was taken into the U.S. Navy and placed in ordinary. The vessel was formally abandoned by the Navy in 1820 and after being partially salvaged, was allowed to sink at her moorings. As a danger to navigation, the sunken hulk was destroyed with dynamite charges during dredging operations on the channel in 1873.

The frigate was constructed at the Ile aux Noix Naval Shipyards and launched on 25 August 1814. To this day Confiance remains the largest warship ever to sail on Lake Champlain. The British built Confiance in answer to the American commander Thomas Macdonough's ambitious shipbuilding program, itself designed to thwart British advances into Vermont and New York State via the lake. The formidable vessel was described as having "the gun-deck of a heavy frigate, with thirty long twenty-fours upon it. She also had a spacious top gallant forecastle, and a poop that came no further forward than the mizzen mast. On the first were a long twenty-four on a circle, and four heavy carronades; two heavy carronades were mounted on the poop."

Captain George Downie was appointed to command soon after the vessel was launched, replacing Captain Peter Fisher, who in turn had superseded Commander Daniel Pring. As a fifth-rate ship, Confiance required a post rank captain in command, and only the distant Admiralty could promote Pring to Post Captain. Like Macdonough, Downie had difficulty obtaining men and materials from Commodore James Lucas Yeo on Lake Ontario, and Macdonough had intercepted several spars and other materials sold to Britain by unpatriotic Vermonters. Downie could promise to complete Confiance only on 15 September; and even then, her crew would not have been exercised.


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