Class overview | |
---|---|
Name: | Pallas class |
Operators: | Royal Navy |
Preceded by: | Perseverance class |
Succeeded by: | Artois class |
Completed: | 3 |
Lost: | Two |
General characteristics | |
Type: | Frigate |
Tons burthen: | 776 77⁄94 bm (as designed) |
Length: |
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Beam: | 36 ft 0 in (11.0 m) |
Depth of hold: | 12 ft 6 in (3.81 m) |
Sail plan: | Full-rigged ship |
Complement: | 257 (altered in 1796 to 254) |
Armament: |
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The Pallas-class frigates were a series of three frigates built to a 1791 design by John Henslow, which served in the Royal Navy during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars.
The trio were all dockyard-built in order to utilise spare shipbuilding capacity. The orders were originally assigned in December 1790 to the Royal Dockyards at Plymouth and Portsmouth, but in February 1791 the orders were transferred to Chatham and Woolwich Dockyards respectively. They were the first and only 32-gun Royal Navy frigates designed to be armed with the eighteen-pounder cannon on their upper deck, the main gun deck of a frigate.
Robert Gardiner, The Heavy Frigate, Conway Maritime Press, London 1994.
Rif Winfield, British Warships in the Age of Sail 1793-1817: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates. 2nd edition, Seaforth Publishing, 2008. .