Amazon was first
commissioned in July 1795 for service in the
English Channel. Launched on 4 July, under Captain
Robert Carthew Reynolds, she joined
Sir Edward Pellew's frigate
squadron, watching the port of
Brest for any attempt by the French fleet to put to sea. On 20 March 1796,
Amazon and Pellew's ship, the 44-gun , pursued three French
corvettes in the
Bay of Biscay. Two escaped into the
Loire at
Saint-Nazaire, the third was dismasted and beached at the mouth of the river. Here she was protected by the shore batteries and her crew were later able to get her off. She was the 26-gun
Volage.
Amazon had four of her crew wounded in the affair. In his report, written on 9 April, Pellew revealed that his squadron had also captured seven enemy
brigs and two
chasse-marees. were cruising off
Ushant, late in the afternoon of 13 April, when a ship was seen to windward. Pellew ordered
Révolutionnaire to sail an intercepting course while the rest of the squadron gave chase.
Révolutionnaire eventually cut off the quarry, which turned out to be the French 32-gun frigate,
Unité, and after a brief exchange of fire, forced her to surrender.
Indefatigable, being the best sailer, was first to engage, after a chase, lasting 15 hours. When
Amazon and
Concorde caught up, the French ship surrendered. She was taken into Plymouth where
Indefatigable and
Amazon, having been damaged in the engagement, underwent repairs. Two French navy corvettes were sighted about eight
leagues off Ushant while
Indefatigable,
Amazon,
Concorde,
Revolutionaire, and the 36-gun , were cruising on 12 June. After a 24-hour chase, the squadron succeeded in capturing both. One was
Blonde, of ten guns and 95 men, and the other was
Trois Couleurs, of ten guns and 75 men. They were provisioned for a six-week cruise, and two days out of Brest but had captured nothing.
Amazon shared the
prize money with the rest of the squadron. The prize money notice referred to "La Blonde, alias Le Betsey".
Amazon,
Phoebe,
Revolutionaire and
Indefatigable, intercepted and detained five Spanish ships in September. The same ships made three more captures at the beginning of October. On 11 December,
Amazon was despatched to England with news that seven French
ships of the line had arrived in Brest, while
Phoebe was sent to apprise Vice-Admiral
John Colpoys. The ships were part of the preparation for an
invasion of Ireland, a joint plot between the
French Directory and the
Society of United Irishmen to establish a
republic in the country. The French fleet left harbour, evading the British blockading fleet, and sailed for
Bantry Bay. However, storms scattered them and most returned to France having accomplished very little. Early in January,
Amazon and
Indefatigable captured a French
packet ship,
Sangossee. Normally, frigates would not engage a ship of the line as they would be severely outgunned. However, there was a heavy sea and the French ship could not open her lower deck gunports for fear of flooding. This reduced her
broadside considerably. Pellew was ahead of
Amazon when he first attacked the ''Droits de l'Homme
. An hour-and-a-half later Amazon'' came up and poured a broadside into the Frenchman's quarter. At 04:00 on 14 January, land was suddenly sighted ahead and the frigates broke off the attack and headed in opposite directions.
Amazon, going north, and more severely damaged, was unable to
wear and ran aground at
Audierne Bay,
Isle Bas. Three crew had been killed during the battle and six more drowned, but the rest were able to reach shore. There the French captured them. The heavy seas pounding her on the beach destroyed
Amazon; the ''Droits de l'Homme'', badly damaged in the battle, was also wrecked, with heavy casualties. The
court martial on 29 September 1797, routinely held by the Navy after the loss of any vessel, honourably acquitted Reynolds and his officers of negligence in the loss of the ship. == Notes ==