On 28 August 1793, Admiral
Lord Hood of the
Royal Navy and Admiral
Juan de Lángara of the
Spanish Navy, committed a force of 13,000 British, Spanish,
Neapolitan and
Piedmontese troops to the French royalists' cause at
Toulon. The next day, the royalists handed over a number of their vessels to the British.
Puissant was under the command of Mon. Ferrand. After her hand-over to British control she spent several weeks laying opposite and firing on a shore battery of 24-pounders at the head of La Seine in Toulon harbor. She then sailed to Portsmouth, arriving there on 3 May 1794. The British government awarded Ferrand a pension of £200 per annum for his services. In February and March 1796,
Puissant was fitted as a receiving ship (at a cost of £10,044) and was commissioned in April, under Commander David Hotchkiss. From March 1798, she was under the command of Lieutenant R. Allen, in March 1799, under Lieutenant J. Baker, and then between October 1799 and 1801, under Commander William Syme. In 1803, Lieutenant James Bowen recommissioned her as a receiving ship. Later that year she became a sheer hulk. Captain Robert Hall assumed command in 1809. Later that same year James Nehemiah Taylor, surgeon of HMS
Jamaica, was held prisoner on board
Puissant while awaiting execution for the crime of
buggery. The sentence was carried out shortly before 11 o’clock on 30 December 1809, on board HMS
Jamaica. Commander James Irwin replaced Captain Hall in April 1810, who moved to HMS
Royal William. Captain
Charles William Paterson succeeded Irwin in 1811, and remained in command until 12 August 1812. In September 1812, Captain
Benjamin William Page became captain of
Puissant and she served as the flagship for Admiral Sir
Richard Bickerton. She was paid off (decommissioned) in October 1815, and sold on 11 July 1816, for £2,250 to be
broken up. ==Prize-money==