Profile plan of Trent
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History | |
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Great Britain | |
Name | HMS Trent |
Ordered | 24 January 1795 |
Builder | John Tovery, Woolwich |
Cost | £25,915 |
Laid down | March 1795 |
Launched | 24 February 1796 |
Completed | 25 May 1796 |
Commissioned | March 1796 |
General characteristics | |
Type | Fifth-rate frigate |
Tons burthen | 925 87/94 bm |
Length |
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Beam | 38 ft 2 in (11.63 m) |
Depth of hold | 13 ft 6 in (4.11 m) |
Propulsion | Sails |
Complement | 264 |
Armament | 36 guns |
HMS Trent was a fifth-rate sailing frigate of 36 guns, built for the Royal Navy and launched in February 1796. She carried a main battery of twenty-six 18-pounder (8.2-kilogram) long guns. She and her sister ship HMS Glenmore were constructed from pitch pine rather than oak.
First commissioned in March 1796 for service in the North Sea, Trent was briefly involved in the fleet mutinies of 1797 but returned to duty when Admiral Adam Duncan's flagship came alongside and threatened to open fire. When Duncan sailed to meet the Dutch fleet, Trent was one of only four loyal ships that went with him, and kept the enemy in port by making signals to a fleet that did not exist. In November, Trent sailed for the Leeward Islands where, on 30 March 1799, she and the armed cutter, HMS Sparrow, captured a Spanish ship and a schooner in a cutting out expedition off Puerto Rico. Two other schooners were scuttled by their Spanish crews during the battle. In October 1800, while serving in the English Channel, Trent's crew took part in another boat action when they boarded a cutter and a lugger off the Ile de Brehat.
Trent spent her last years of active service, in the West Indies. She returned home in June 1803, to be fitted as a hospital ship. Stationed at Cork, she served as flagship to the Commanders-in-chief on the Coast of Ireland Station. In November 1815, she was converted to a receiving ship. She remained at Cork until February 1823, when she was taken to Haulbowline and broken up.