HMS Snipe was a gun-brig and the first Royal Navy ship to bear the name Snipe. Her grounding in 1807 inspired the invention of the Manby Mortar, an important development in maritime lifesaving equipment.

History edit

HMS Snipe was a gun-brig of the Bloodhound class, designed by Sir John Henslow. Snipe and nine other similar vessels were ordered on 7 January 1801, the draught was approved three days later, and all were being built by the end of the month.[1] She was built by Balthazar and Edward Adams of Bucklers Hard and was launched on 2 May 1801.

1807 grounding edit

On the 18th of February 1807, HMS Snipe ran aground during a storm 50 yards (46 m) off shore at Gorleston, south of Great Yarmouth, with a total of 67 people drowned, including French prisoners of war, women and children. The wreck was witnessed by captain George William Manby.[2] Following this tragedy, Manby experimented with mortars, and so invented the Manby Mortar, (later used with the breeches buoy), that fired a thin rope from shore into the rigging of a ship in distress. A strong rope, attached to the thin one, could be pulled aboard the ship.[3]

Anholt edit

On 18 May 1809 the 64-gun third rate HMS Standard, under Captain Askew Paffard Hollis, the 36-gun frigate Owen Glendower, Avenger, Ranger, Rose, and Snipe captured the Danish island of Anholt. A party of seamen and marines under the command of Captain William Selby of Owen Glendower, with the assistance of Captain Edward Nicolls of the Standard's marines, landed. The Danish garrison of 170 men put up a sharp but ineffectual resistance that killed one marine and wounded two; the garrison then capitulated. The British took immediate possession of the island. Hollis stated that Anholt was important as a source of water to the Navy, and as a good anchorage for merchant vessels going to or coming from the Baltic.[4]

Later career edit

Snipe became a mooring lighter in 1815.[5] She was broken up in May 1846. A second Royal Navy ship bearing the name HMS Snipe was launched in 1828.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ British Warships in the Age of Sail 1793 1817: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates Rif Winfield 2014
  2. ^ "Captain George Manby". Archived from the original on 4 August 2017. Retrieved 3 August 2017.
  3. ^ Annex, in The Weathermen: Their Story, Gordon Tripp 2017
  4. ^ "No. 16260". The London Gazette. 23 May 1809. p. 736.
  5. ^ British Warships in the Age of Sail 1793 1817: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates Rif Winfield 2014