HMS Pallas (1816)

1803 plan of the Apollo class
History
United Kingdom
NamePallas
NamesakeAthena
Ordered
  • 19 March 1811
  • 10 December 1813 (re-order)
Builder
Laid down
  • May 1811
  • May 1814 (re-order)
Launched13 April 1816
Completed27 April 1816
CommissionedAugust 1828
FateSold, 11 January 1862
General characteristics [1]
Class and typeFifth-rate Apollo-class frigate
Tons burthen9511394 (bm)
Length
  • 145 ft 5 in (44.3 m) (upper deck)
  • 122 ft 2+58 in (37.3 m) (keel)
Beam38 ft 3 in (11.7 m)
Draught
  • 10 ft 8 in (3.3 m) (forward)
  • 14 ft 5 in (4.4 m) (aft)
Depth of hold13 ft 3 in (4.0 m)
PropulsionSails
Complement264
Armament

HMS Pallas was a 36-gun fifth-rate Apollo-class frigate of the Royal Navy. Placed in ordinary when completed in 1816, Pallas was commissioned for the first time in 1828. Under Captain Adolphus FitzClarence the frigate spent time blockading the Azores before making trips to India and then Nova Scotia, conveying important passengers. The ship sailed to the Mediterranean in 1830 under the command of Captain Manley Hall Dixon, and returned early the following year with the survivors of the wreck of the Countess of Harcourt. Later in the year Pallas joined the West Indies Station, where she served until 1834 when she was paid off. In 1836 the frigate was converted into a coal hulk, in which role she served at Plymouth Dockyard until being sold in 1862.

  1. ^ Winfield (2008), p. 161.