Captain Henry Trollope with the mortally wounded Marine Captain Henry Ludlow Strangeways on the deck of HMS Glatton
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History | |
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British East India Company | |
Name | Glatton |
Owner | Richard Neave[1] |
Builder | Wells & Co. of Blackwell |
Launched | 29 November 1792 |
Fate | Sold to the Royal Navy in 1795 |
Great Britain | |
Name | HMS Glatton |
Acquired | 1795, from the EIC |
Commissioned | April 1795 |
Honours and awards | Naval General Service Medal with clasp "Copenhagen 1801"[2] |
Fate | Sunk as breakwater, 1830 |
General characteristics [3] | |
Tons burthen | 1221,[4] or 125621⁄94[1] (bm) |
Sail plan | Full-rigged ship |
Complement | East Indiaman: 125.[4] Royal Navy: 343 |
Armament |
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HMS Glatton was a 56-gun fourth rate of the Royal Navy. Wells & Co. of Blackwell launched her on 29 November 1792 for the British East India Company (EIC) as the East Indiaman Glatton. The Royal Navy bought her in 1795 and converted her into a warship. Glatton was unusual in that for a time she was the only ship-of-the-line that the Royal Navy had armed exclusively with carronades. (Eventually she returned to a more conventional armament of guns and carronades.) She served in the North Sea and the Baltic, and as a transport for convicts to Australia. She then returned to naval service in the Mediterranean. After the end of the Napoleonic Wars the Admiralty converted her to a water depot at Sheerness. In 1830 the Admiralty converted Glatton to a breakwater and sank her at Harwich.
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