HMS Jason attacking the French frigate Seine
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History | |
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France | |
Name: | Seine |
Builder: | Le Havre |
Laid down: | May 1793 |
Launched: | 19 December 1793 |
Completed: | By March 1794 |
Captured: | 30 June 1798, by the Royal Navy |
UK | |
Name: | HMS Seine |
Acquired: | 30 June 1798 |
Honours and awards: |
Naval General Service Medal with clasp "Seine 20 Augt. 1800" |
Fate: |
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General characteristics | |
Class and type: | 38-gun Seine-class fifth rate |
Tons burthen: | 1,145 87⁄94 (bm) |
Length: |
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Beam: | 40 ft 6 in (12.3 m) |
Depth of hold: | 12 ft 4 1⁄4 in (3.8 m) |
Sail plan: | Full-rigged ship |
Complement: | 284 |
Armament: |
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Seine was a 38-gun French Seine-class frigate that the Royal Navy captured in 1798 and commissioned as the fifth rate HMS Seine. On 20 August 1800, Seine captured the French ship Vengeance in a single ship action that would win for her crew the Naval General Service Medal. Seine's career ended in 1803 when she hit a sandbank near the Texel.
Seine was a 40-gun frigate built between May 1793 and March 1794 at Le Havre, having been launched on 19 December 1793.Seine's career with the French Navy lasted less than five years.
On 14 July 1794 she and Galathée captured the 16-gun sloop-of-war HMS Hound in the Atlantic. In late 1794, L'Hermitte's squadron sailed for Norway. It comprised the frigates Seine, under L'Hermitte, Galathée, under Labutte, and Républicaine, under Le Bozec.
The squadron found itself blocked by cold and damage in a Norwegian harbour during the entire winter of 1794-95, sustaining over 250 dead from illness out of a total complement of 880. In spring, Seine and Galathée returned to France, leaving Républicaine to care for the untransportable sick. They eventually were rescued by the corvette Subtile.
Seine then sailed for Île de France, where she joined the squadron under Sercey. She took part in the Action of 8 September 1796. In March 1798, she sailed from Île de France and was on her way to Lorient when she encountered a British frigate squadron in the Breton Passage on 30 June 1798.