The
Maidstone class of two 32-gun
fifth-rate frigates was built in 1795 during the
French Revolutionary Wars for the
Royal Navy. They copied the pattern of the
Alcmene class, which had been designed by the
Surveyor of the Navy,
Sir John Henslow, two years earlier. This class was in turn an improved version of Henslow's 1790 design of the
Pallas-class frigate, his first for a 32-gun vessel. The class is sometimes considered to be a modified version of the
Alcmene class rather than a separate one. While the
Alcmene class was built of
oak, the
Maidstone class used
pitch pine. Pitch pine-built ships were lighter than their oak counterparts and thus required more
ballast and rolled more at sea. This made the handling of heavy weaponry like
18-pounder long guns more dangerous. The
Admiralty questioned whether pitch pine ships should be equipped with heavy armaments because of this, worrying about the structural integrity of the ships. The
Maidstone class had been planned to hold 18-pounders, but because of these fears the armament was changed to smaller
12-pounder long guns. The naval historian Robert Gardiner notes that other ships built of pitch pine did not have their armament changed, and suggests that the relatively small size of the
Maidstone-class ships also played a part in their rearmament. The Admiralty considered such 12-pounder frigates obsolete, and the
Maidstone class, along with the unique frigate
HMS Triton, was the last class to be built with 12-pounders until the start of the
Napoleonic Wars. As well as this, the
Maidstone class differed to the
Alcmene class in several ways. These included the addition of solid barricades on the
quarterdeck, providing protection on the
broadside for the guns placed there, and a square (rather than rounded)
stern. The class was moderately fast, ranging from to depending on the weather, and was especially well-handled in strong winds. The sides of the ships were relatively high for 12-pounder frigates, as they had been designed for larger 18-pounders, and this provided the ships with "unprecedented
freeboard" according to Gardiner. ==Construction==