- HMS Victory (1737)
:"For the
museum ship atPortsmouth on which Admiral Nelson was killed during theBattle of Trafalgar , see HMS "Victory".HMS "Victory" was a 100-gun
first-rate ship of the line of theRoyal Navy , built to the dimensions of the 1733 proposals of the1719 Establishment atPortsmouth Dockyard , and launched on23 February 1737 .Construction
A small number of the
timber s used in the construction of "Victory" were taken from the remains of the previous HMS|Victory|1695|6, which had caught fire and been burnt to the waterline in February 1721 whilst having weed burned from her bottom (in a process called 'breaming '). Officially a rebuild of the previous vessel, the new "Victory" was launched in 1737 and became theflagship of theChannel Fleet under Sir John Norris in 1741. She was the last British First Rate to be armed entirely withbrass cannon .Fact|date=August 2008Loss of "Victory"
She was wrecked with the loss of her entire crew whilst returning to
England as the flagship of Admiral SirJohn Balchen after relieving SirCharles Hardy , who had been blockaded in theTagus estuary . As the fleet reached theEnglish Channel on3 October 1744 it was scattered by a largestorm . At around 15:30 on4 October the ships accompanying "Victory" lost sight of her near to theChannel Islands . She is believed to have been wrecked the following day on Black Rock just off theCasquets , with the loss of her entire complement.Frigates were dispatched across the
English Channel to search for the missing battleship, last seen wallowing on the horizon on4 October . Eventually, Captain Thomas Grenville of HMS "Falkland" landed atGuernsey in the Channel Islands to provision and there heard from locals that wreckage and part of a topmast had washed up on the island's shores. Further investigation proved that the wreckage had indeed come from the "Victory", which was believed to have run into theCasquets , a group of rocks nearby. Other wreckage was washed up onJersey andAlderney , whose inhabitants had heard distress guns the night before the wreck but were unable to provide aid in the severe storm. Of the 1,150 sailors aboard "Victory", no trace was ever discovered.Her wreck has not yet been located.
Notes
References
*Colledge
*Lavery, Brian (2003) "The Ship of the Line - Volume 1: The development of the battlefleet 1650-1850." Conway Maritime Press. ISBN 0-85177-252-8.
* cite web
title = The Life of Sir John Balchen
work = The Lives of British Admirals, 1787
url = http://www.manfamily.org/PDFs/life%20of%20john%20balchen.pdf
accessdate = 2007-11-09
* [http://www.twogreens.co.uk/wakeup/ships/6victory.htm How many ships named "Victory"?] Wake up to Nelson. Retrieved1 August 2008 .
* [http://www.balchin-family.org.uk/family_history/people/admiral/search_casquets.html The Search for The "Victory".] The Balchin Family Society. Retrieved1 August 2008 .
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