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HMS Siren (1745)

History
Name: HMS Siren
Namesake: Siren
Ordered: 27 August 1744
Builder: Thomas Snelgrove, Limehouse
Laid down: September 1744
Launched: 3 September 1745
Commissioned: November 1745
Decommissioned: December 1763
Fate: Sold, 26 January 1764
General characteristics
Type: 20-gun sixth-rate (1741 Establishment)
Tons burthen: 498 3694 tons bm
Length:
  • 112 ft 2 in (34.19 m) (gundeck)
  • 93 ft 3 in (28.42 m) (keel)
Beam: 32 ft 1 in (9.78 m)
Depth of hold: 11 ft (3.4 m)
Complement: 140
Armament: 20 × 6-pounder guns

HMS Siren (most often referred to as Syren in contemporary records) was a sixth-rate post ship of the British Royal Navy, in commission between 1745 and 1763, seeing action during the War of the Austrian Succession and the Seven Years' War.

Siren was built at Limehouse by Thomas Snelgrove at a cost of £4,606.10.0d, and completed fitting out at Deptford Dockyard on 16 November 1745 at a cost of £3,721.15.11d. The ship was then commissioned under the command of John Stringer and stationed in the Thames Approaches and the Downs.

In December 1746 Captain Stringer was removed from the ship, and the Hon. John Byron took command. Stringer was dismissed from the Navy by court martial in January 1747. Siren then served as part of Admiral George Anson's fleet in 1747.

Matthew King was appointed to her in October 1747, and in August 1748, she sailed for the East Indies. Captain King died there in June 1749, and command was assumed by William Mantell. Siren remained in the East Indies until 1751. She returned to England, and was paid off in July 1752 and surveyed. In July 1754 she commenced "middling repairs", completed at a cost of £5,457.10.3d, before she recommissioned under the command Charles Proby in October 1754. On 18 December she sailed as part of Admiral Augustus Keppel's North American squadron during the French and Indian War. She was stationed off South Carolina when finally ordered home in July 1756.

On 23 October 1756, under the command of Thomas Collingwood, she sailed for the Mediterranean Sea, where she was engaged in escorting English merchant shipping.


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