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HMS Cherub (1806)
Career (United Kingdom) Royal Navy Ensign
Name: HMS Cherub
Builder: Dover
Launched: 1806
Fate: Sold, 1820
General characteristics
Class & type: Cormorant-class sloop
Armament: 18 guns

HMS Cherub was an 18-gun Royal Navy Cormorant-class sloop built in Dover in 1806.

West Indies and Pacific service[]

Cherub was stationed in the West Indies and took part in the capture of Guadeloupe in 1810 and remained on the Leeward Islands station until 1812. That year she returned to England with a convoy for a refit. In December 1812, she sailed for the Pacific Ocean. In 1813, she joined with HMS Phoebe and HMS Racoon and in company they sailed to the Galapagos Islands. Then Racoon was detached to attack American fur traders on the Columbia River while Phoebe and Cherub searched for the American frigate, USS Essex which had been attacking the British whaling fleet in the Pacific.

Capture of the Essex[]

On 8 February 1814, the Phoebe and Cherub found the Essex at Valparaiso. They waited off the port for Essex to come out. On the afternoon of 28 March, the Essex sailed but she lost her main topmast and anchored near the shore. Pheobe and Cherub also anchored and opened fire. The British were armed with long cannons which were more effective at a longer range than the American armament of carronades. As the British anchored out of effective range of the American carronades, the battle was very one-sided and lasted for an hour until the American captain struck his colours with 23 dead and 42 wounded on board. On the British ships only five were killed. Phoebe and Cherub also captured the Essex's tender, Essex Junior, which they then used as a cartel to transport their prisoners to New York.

On 19 June 1814, Cherub recaptured the Sir Andrew Hammond near the Sandwich Islands. Sir Andrew Hammond was a whaler that Porter had captured and left at Nuka Hiva, together with other captured vessels, including the Greenwich and the privateer Seringnapatam, the whole being under the command of Lieutenant John M. Gamble USMC. When Gamble made preparations to leave the island, many of his party mutinied. Gamble and seven men (four unfit for duty) escaped and sailed the Sir Andrew Hammond 2500 miles before they had the misfortune to meet up with Cherub.[1][Note 1]

Fate[]

Cherub was eventually sold out of the service in 1820.

Footnotes[]

Notes
  1. A first-class share of the salvage money was worth £72 13s 5d; a sixth-class share, that of an ordinary seaman, was worth 16s 6d. Cherub shared the money with Phoebe by prior agreement.[2]
Citations
  1. Mooney (1976), Vol. 6, p.517.
  2. "No. 17313". 13 December 1817. https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/17313/page/ 

References[]

  • Mooney, James L. (1976) Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, V. 6: Historical Sketches, R Through S, Appendices, Submarine Chasers, Eagle-Class Patrol Craft. (Government Printing Office).
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