American Revolutionary War was
Assurances first commanding officer|thumb
Assurance was
commissioned by
Captain James Cumming in April 1780, while the ship was still being completed. She sailed on 27 October to join the
North America Station. There, the ship captured the American
privateer brig Duke of Leinster on 23 May 1781, and two days later took the
schooner Fanny. Subsequently serving alongside the 24-gun frigate
HMS Charlestown and 24-gun
post-ship HMS Amphitrite, on 7 June the three ships came across the 16-gun
ship-sloop HMS Atalanta in
Boston Bay.
Atalanta had been captured by an American frigate on 28 May and her
prize crew was attempting to sail her into
Boston. The British ships re-took
Atalanta and sent her to
Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Assurance continued an active month by capturing the American 10-gun privateer
Rattlesnake on 17 June. During this period she also re-took the merchant brig
Neptune; Cumming placed a prize crew on board the vessel and sent it to
Martinique, but on 24 June she encountered the American privateer
Young Cromwell and was captured again, the ten members of
Assurances crew becoming prisoners of war. Patrolling to the west of Halifax, on 20 September the ship then took the American privateer
sloop Greyhound. Again in Boston Bay on 12 October,
Assurance re-captured the merchant
brigantine Poole as her prize crew sailed her towards the port, having captured her off
Lisbon. She then re-captured the merchant sloop
Europia, which had been captured by an American
letter of marque the day before, on 20 October. Also in late October,
Assurance re-captured the merchant schooner
Ann after an eight-hour chase; she had been captured by an American privateer while attempting to sail in to New York. Cumming was replaced by Captain William Swiney towards the end of the year. The ship continued on the North America Station, serving off
New York under the orders of
Rear-Admiral Robert Digby. During this period
Assurance captured three other ships; the brig
Adventure, schooner
Salisbury, and sloop
Phoenix. Returning to New York in April, Digby promoted Williams to
commander and gave him command of the 20-gun ship
HMS Rhinoceros.
Assurance continued serving in North America until the end of the war, returning to Britain to be
paid off in February 1784.
Troop ship was captured by
Assurance on 17 June 1781|thumb Laid up at
Sheerness Dockyard,
Assurance was repaired between March and October 1785 at a cost of £8,578, but was not immediately put back into service. She was finally recommissioned in February 1791 under the command of Commander John Shortland. Intended for use as a
troop ship, she underwent conversion at
Chatham Dockyard which was completed in April. This work cost a further £2,692. Any change in armament at this stage is not recorded, but as troop ships
Roebuck-class ships had a crew complement of 155. While
Assurance was undergoing this work and preparing for service her second lieutenant, Lieutenant
Jahleel Brenton, was sent ashore at
Rochester, Kent, to search for several deserters from the ship. There the locals came under the misapprehension that Brenton was there to
press them into
Assurance and a mob formed, after which Brenton and four
midshipmen with him were arrested. The mayor had the five officers committed to the local jail; as they were escorted through Rochester the mob attacked them, knocking Brenton to the ground and stealing most of his clothes. The officers were released the following morning, and Brenton reported the event to the
Admiralty which then prosecuted the mayor. Brenton was released from service in
Assurance in order that he could stay in Britain for the trial, which subsequently condemned the mayor to pay a penalty of £750. In the meantime
Assurance had sailed for Halifax, having embarked soldiers and stores on board on 11 May. She returned to Britain later in the year, being paid off again in December.
French Revolutionary Wars Assurance saw no further service until the
French Revolutionary Wars began. In April 1793 the ship was recommissioned by Captain
Velters Cornewall Berkeley. Two months later her armament underwent a refit, with the ship now carrying twenty-two 24-pounder
carronades on the lower deck and twenty 12-pounder long guns on the upper deck, accompanied by four more carronades on the quarterdeck and two on the forecastle. This restored her to service as a frigate. Berkeley sailed
Assurance to serve in the
Mediterranean Sea in February 1794, but stayed there only briefly, moving to the
West Indies Station to join
Vice-Admiral Sir John Jervis' fleet. Jervis was undertaking a campaign to capture enemy-held islands, and in March
Assurance joined the fleet as in undertook the
invasion of Martinique. On 17 March boats from the ship joined with boats from the rest of the fleet to attack French shipping anchored in
Fort Royal Bay, which resulted in the capture of the French 32-gun frigate
Bienvenue, which was one of only two enemy warships based at Martinique. For this action surviving members of
Assurances crew were eligible for the "17 Mar. Boat Service 1794"
clasp to the
Naval General Service Medal, which was issued in 1849. With British soldiers having fought through the island, Martinique surrendered on 22 March. The fleet sailed on to
St Lucia on 31 March, arriving the following day. Landings were again made, and the island's governor surrendered on 4 April. Having spent several days at Martinique rejuvenating his force, Jervis set out to
invade Guadeloupe on 8 April. Landings were again successfully made with
Grande-Terre captured on 12 April.
Assurance arrived at the island after this, and
Basse-Terre fell to the British on 20 April. The
marine contingent of
Assurance formed part of a naval battalion that fought on Grande-Terre; two of her marines were killed, with a further three wounded including the
lieutenant of marines. The expedition departed the island after installing a British governor. in which
Assurance participated|thumb Staying in the West Indies after the campaign,
Assurance underwent a series of changes in command. Lieutenant
Charles Ogle was appointed
acting captain of
Assurance in May, departing when he received promotion to commander later in the same month. When resistance flared up again on Guadeloupe,
Assurance was part of the force that returned to support fresh landings by the army on 19 June, with the ship again running supplies ashore. Fighting was still ongoing on 5 October when
Assurance, stationed at
Petit-Bourg, was fired upon by several French
gunboats at
Pointe-à-Pitre. One cannonball smashed through her cabins, killing the convalescent
Major Robert Irving, the army's deputy
quartermaster general. Naval historian Rif Winfield reports that Commander Wyndham Bryer assumed command in December, but historians David Syrett and R. L. DiNardo state that Bryer died on 23 October. The British, outnumbered and badly understrength on Guadeloupe, evacuated the island on 10 December. Captain Charles Sawyer joined
Assurance in April 1795, and it was under his command that the ship returned to Britain, being paid off at Sheerness in September the same year.
Transport Board Laid up at Chatham, in February 1796
Assurance began conversion work to become a troop ship again. This cost £7,008 and was completed in July, prior to which on 8 June the ship was transferred to serve under the auspices of the
Transport Board. In her new capacity
Assurance was re-armed, with sixteen 9-pounder long guns on her upper deck, four 6-pounders on the quarterdeck, and a further two on the forecastle. Recommissioned in July under the command of Lieutenant John Norris,
Assurance sailed to the Mediterranean Sea one month later. Norris was replaced by Commander Ranceford Tookey on 6 December, and sometime subsequent to this the ship returned to the West Indies. In August 1798 she formed part of a large convoy travelling from Martinique back to Britain. The convoy went through a large storm on 23 August, during which the 16-gun store ship
HMS Etrusco was dismasted. The ship had already been in bad repair with rotten timbers causing several leaks, and she was now forced to sail under a
jury rig, struggling to keep up with the convoy. On 25 August the commander of
Etrusco received permission to abandon his ship as unseaworthy, and the crew was taken on board by
Assurance and the 14-gun sloop
HMS Beaver before
Etrusco was
scuttled.
Assurance arrived in Britain in October, and in March the following year was fitted as a
receiving ship at
Woolwich Dockyard for £1,695. The ship remained at Woolwich,
in ordinary, until she was
broken up there in March 1815. ==Notes and citations==