Aigle was built as
Saint-Malo as a privateer, and had a private career under
Jean Dalbarade. The French Navy purchased her from shipowner Clonard for 450,000 Livres. Adapting the privateer to Navy standard was not trivial: she came armed with 28 British
24-pounder long guns, which had to be rebored or replaced to fire the larger French 24-pounder cannonballs, the weight of the French pound being heavier than the British pound. Her hull was
coppered at Rochefort before she was commissioned in the Navy. In early 1782, Captain
Latouche assumed command of
Aigle, which, along with the frigate under Captain de Vallongue, ferried funds and equipment for the fleet of Admiral
Vaudreuil. The ship had a number of guests, among whom
Gontaut de Lauzun,
Vioménil,
Montmorency-Laval,
Chabannes,
Vauban, Melfort,
Talleyrand-Périgord,
Champcenetz,
Mac-Mahon, Fleury and American Major Porter.
Gloire was similarly crowded with guests. Latouche had requested permission to bring along fast merchantmen to carry luggage, but Minister Castries denied his request. Nevertheless, the 22-gun merchantman
Sophie, carrying Latouche's mistress, followed the division. Slower than the warships, she was in tow of
Aigle for most of the cruise, and at night Latouche had the division stop to spend the night with his mistress. Vallongue wrote a letter to Castrie to protest. The division stopped at the
Bay of Angra for three days, after which
Sophie detached from the division, around 5 August. On their way,
Aigle and
Gloire skirmished with the 74-gun
HMS Hector in the night
Action of 5 September 1782;
Hector was sailing to
Halifax, Nova Scotia, with a prize crew, under Captain John Bourchier, in a convoy under Rear-admiral
Graves.
Hector was saved from captured when the morning revealed the rest of the convoy and Latouche decided to retreat.
Capture Aigle and
Gloire captured off the
Delaware River on 12 September 1782. The following day, a small British squadron consisting of , , and the prize
Sophie, led by Captain G.K. Elphinston in , sighted the three vessels anchored in the
Delaware River off
Cape Henlopen Light. The British set out in chase, but the French were able to navigate the sandbanks with the help of
Racoons pilot, who agreed to help the French for a payment of 500
Louis d'or. Still,
Aigle ran aground, which enabled the British to capture her, and with her all of
Racoons crew.
Aigle had had on board some senior French officers, who escaped ashore, as did the now-wealthy pilot. Latouche had cut away her masts in an attempt to lighten her, and when that failed, had had holes bored in her hull. He remained with her and
struck her colours on 15 September. Despite the attempts to scuttle
Aigle, the British were able to refloat her and took her into service under her own name.
Gloire and
Racoon escaped. ==British career==