Copenhagen Blanche was commissioned under the command of
Captain Graham Hamond on 19 November 1800. After fitting out was completed in January the following year
Blanche joined the
Baltic Fleet at
Yarmouth in preparation to sail to
Copenhagen to harass Denmark, part of the Anti-British
Second League of Armed Neutrality. On 19 March
Blanche was sent ahead of the fleet to
Elsinore, landing the
member of parliament Nicholas Vansittart for a meeting with the British Minister to Denmark,
William Drummond, so that they could outline the
Foreign Secretary Lord Hawkesbury's ultimatum to the Danes. After two days negotiations failed and
Blanche took Drummond and his suite on board, returning to the fleet anchored in
Øresund on 22 March. Drummond and Vansittart explained that rather than acceding to the British terms, the Danes were strengthening their defences and planning to rebuff the British fleet. In preparation to make an attack on Copenhagen, on 27 March
Blanche escorted two of the fleet's
bomb ships to a position from which they would be able to bombard the fortress of
Kronborg. During the night of 1 April the frigate grounded off
Amager. The crew spent the night re-floating and rectifying the vessel, and received no sleep prior to the start of the
Battle of Copenhagen on 2 April. In engaging the Danish
line of battle Blanche was part of a flotilla of five frigates under the command of Captain
Edward Riou that were to act as a manoeuvrable reserve force. After beginning the battle by firing opportunistically in the gaps between the British
ships of the line, at 11:30 a.m. Riou took the flotilla to form an arc at the northern-most point of the British line. For this
Blanche was stationed between the 38-gun
HMS Amazon and 32-gun
HMS Alcmene. The frigates attacked the 64-gun ship of the line
Holsteen and
blockship Indfødsretten, while receiving heavy fire from the nearby
Trekroner Fort and 16-gun defence frigate
Hielperen. The frigates withdrew after two hours, having received heavy casualties in the victorious battle. In the engagement
Blanche received seven men killed and a further nine badly wounded, with damage to her hull and
rigging. In the wake of the battle the commander of the British fleet,
Admiral Sir Hyde Parker, agreed an armistice with the Danes that the
First Lord of the Admiralty, Admiral
Lord St Vincent, believed was too lenient, and he recalled Parker. On 5 May Parker left his
flagship and went on board
Blanche, reaching Yarmouth in the frigate on 13 May.
Channel Fleet Blanche spent the rest of the French Revolutionary Wars attached to Admiral
William Cornwallis'
Channel Fleet patrolling the
Bay of Biscay. Captain
Barrington Dacres took command of the frigate at the
Peace of Amiens in May 1802, serving as part of the Royal Escort to
George III at
Weymouth for much of the year, and patrolling off
Cornwall and
Devon combatting smugglers.
Blanche was
paid off on 22 September as part of a
refit that had begun at
Sheerness Dockyard in August. The naval historian Rif Winfield records Dacres as commanding
Blanche to this stage, but the biographer
William O'Byrne states that Hamond retained command until paying off. As the refit was approaching completion Captain
Zachary Mudge recommissioned the ship in October, having joined on 23 September, and
Blanche left the dockyard in January 1803.
West Indies With the Peace of Amiens having ended with the start of the Napoleonic Wars,
Blanche sailed to the
West Indies where she joined the
Blockade of Saint-Domingue towards the end of the year. On 3 November she discovered the French 4-gun
privateer cutter ''L'Albion
sheltering under the gun batteries of Monte Christi. Mudge sent four of Blanche
s boats with sixty-three men to cut out Albion
, but did so in broad daylight; before they could reach the French ship Blanche''s boats turned back, believing the task too dangerous. Mudge decided to attack
Albion again, this time during the night of 3–4 November. He sent the marine
Lieutenant Edward Nicolls out in a boat with thirteen men to make the attack, but soon realised this was not enough and sent Lieutenant
Warwick Lake with twenty-two men to reinforce and supersede Nicolls. The two boats approached
Albion, but Lake believed the French vessel to be in a different location and took his boat off in the wrong direction, leaving Nicolls to make the attack alone. Nicolls boarded
Albion and, despite being shot through the stomach, quickly captured the vessel, the British having killed five of the French crew. With gun batteries overlooking the scene of the battle, Nicolls had his men keep firing their muskets to make it seem as if the battle was still ongoing, so that the batteries would not fire on the newly taken ship. As Nicolls was just getting
Albion away from the shore Lake appeared in his boat and ordered the men to stop firing. "As a reward of his stupidity", the naval historian
William Laird Clowes says, the gun batteries then killed two of his men before
Albion sailed out of range. Mudge reported Lake rather than Nicolls as the victor of the battle, leading the contemporary naval historian
William James to suggest Lake was a favourite of the captain's, despite Clowes describing him as "a thoroughly worthless officer". Mudge's operations were not always so confused, and in a one-month period off San Domingo he captured or destroyed twenty-four vessels, halting much of the communication between the blockaded islands. In the morning after the capture of
Albion one of
Blanches boats attacked and captured a 1-gun privateer
schooner. About a day after this another of the frigate's boats, under the command of
Midshipman Edward Henry à Court, was on a mission to gather sand with eight men and five muskets on board, when they encountered a French schooner with over thirty soldiers. À Court chose to board the schooner despite his numerical disadvantage, and successfully captured the vessel when the soldiers were found to all be seasick. Under the orders of Captain
John Bligh the frigate then joined in an attempt to capture
Curacao. Bligh's force brought itself together off San Domingo on 15 January 1804, and reached
Bonaire on 30 January. They reached the capital of Curacao,
Willemstad, in the following day, and at 9:30 a.m. Bligh's demand for capitulation was refused. The main port of St Anne was heavily fortified, so Bligh landed a force of
Royal Marines elsewhere on the coast, leaving
Blanche and the 36-gun frigate
HMS Pique to guard St Anne. After initial success Bligh's invasion was dogged by sickness and high casualties from skirmishes, and on 25 February they reembarked having failed to take the island. Continuing off Curacao,
Blanche captured the French 14-gun privateer
La Gracieuse on 21 October and at some point in the year also took the Dutch 4-gun schooner
Nimrod. The ship captured two more French privateers in 1805; the 6-gun
Le Hansard on 5 April and the 14-gun schooner ''L'Amitie'' on 9 April. ==Loss==