HMS Utile was the mercantile Volunteer, launched at Newcastle-on-Tyne in 1803, that the Admiralty purchased for the Royal Navy. She had an undistinguished 10-year naval career before Admiralty sold her in 1814. She resumed the name Volunteer and after a voyage to Martinique she traded between London and Bordeaux. She was last listed in 1822.

History
United Kingdom
NameVolunteer
BuilderR & J Bulmer, South Shields[1]
Launched1803
FateSold June 1804
Royal Navy EnsignUnited Kingdom
NameHMS Utile
AcquiredJune 1804 by purchase
FateSold June 1814
United Kingdom
NameVolunteer
AcquiredBy purchase June 1814
FateLast listed in 1822
General characteristics [2]
Tons burthen340,[3] or 350[4] (bm)
Sail planShip-sloop
Complement70 (Royal Navy)
Armament
  • 1803:2 × 3-pounder guns[3]
  • Royal Navy:14 × 18-pounder carronades + 2 × 9-pounder chase guns
  • 1816:2 × 9-pounder guns

Career

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Mercantile Volunteer

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Volunteer appeared in the Register of Shipping in 1804 with Rudd, master, Bulmer & Co., owners, and trade Newcastle–London.[3]

Royal Navy

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The Navy purchased Volunteer in June 1804. She underwent fitting at Deptford in May–June, and then between 12 June and 4 August at Deptford Dockyard. Commander William Richardson commissioned her in June.[2]

Around 24 March 1805, as the East Indiaman Euphrates was coming into London at the end of her voyage, Utile pressed eight of her crew. Utile also lent her eight crew men to work Euphrates into dock.[5]

Utile was part of a fleet under Admiral Douglas when in the morning of 24 April a squadron under HMS Leda sighted twenty-six French vessels rounding Cap Gris Nez. The British captured seven schuyts, which were all of 25 to 28 tons burthen, and carried in all 117 soldiers and 43 seamen under the command of officers from the 51st. Infantry Regiment. The French convoy had been bound for Ambleteuse from Dunkirk. On the British side the only casualty was one man wounded. Utile was among the many vessels in the fleet that shared in the prize money for the capture.[6]

On 17 October Utile recaptured the transport Carr, for which she received salvage money.[7] Richardson died while Utile was cruising in the North Sea; the notice appeared on 1 march 1806.[8]

In 1807 Utile was in ordinary at Sheerness. Between March and September she was fitted to lay in Yarmouth Roads. Lieutenant Edward Blaquiere commissioned her in April 1808 to serve as a receiving ship. In 1810 Lieutenant William Gilchrist replaced Blaquiere. Then in 1813 Blanquiere returned, replacing Gilchrist.

Disposal: The Principal Officers and Commissioners of His Majesty's Navy offered "Utile, of 340 tons", lying at Deptford, for sale on 30 June 1814.[9] She sold there on that day for £2,560.[2]

Mercantile Volunteer

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Volunteer entered Lloyd's Register in 1815 with J. Ireland, master, Ireland & Co., owners, and trade London–Martinique. She had been almost rebuilt in 1814.[4] She then traded between London and Bordeaux.

Fate

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Volunteer was last listed in 1822.

Citations

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  1. ^ Tyne Built Ships: "V".
  2. ^ a b c Winfield (2008), p. 272.
  3. ^ a b c Register of Shipping (1804), Seq.№V204.
  4. ^ a b Lloyd's Register (1815), Seq.no.V282.
  5. ^ Mariner's Mirror, Vol. 60, p.91.
  6. ^ "No. 15946". The London Gazette. 16 August 1806. p. 1083.
  7. ^ "No. 15899". The London Gazette. 15 March 1806. p. 345.
  8. ^ Monthly Magazine, Vol. 21, p.193.
  9. ^ "No. 16910". The London Gazette. 21 June 1814. p. 1276.

References

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  • Winfield, Rif (2008). British Warships in the Age of Sail 1793–1817: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates. Seaforth Publishing. ISBN 978-1-86176-246-7.