Hussar was
commissioned by Captain
Lord Garlies in November 1799, for service in the
English Channel and off the coast of Ireland as part of the
Cork Station.
Hussar was in company with the 38-gun frigate
HMS Loire and 16-gun
schooner HMS Milbrook on 17 May 1800 when the three ships recaptured the British merchant ship
Princess Charlotte and captured the French schooner
La Francoise.
Hussar subsequently sailed to
Madeira, returning from there on 9 July. The frigate continued to serve off Ireland, escorting a convoy of ships from west India in to England on 31 October. On 9 November a large
gale hit the south coast of England, and many ships in the area were driven out to sea by it and badly damaged. Among these casualties was
Hussar, which lost all
topmasts and the
mizzenmast in the gale, and received considerable hull damage, including the loss of the
rudder.
Hussar was brought into
Portsmouth with a
hoy rigged behind as a temporary rudder. The ship was docked for repairs, which were completed on 28 November. Having returned to sea,
Hussar continued operating with convoys, escorting the
East India Company ships
Carnatic,
Henry Addington,
Nottingham, and
Ocean on the first leg of their journey to
Calcutta on 8 January 1801. Then on 2 March the frigate captured the French 4-gun
privateer Le General Bessieres in the
Atlantic Ocean. The French warship had been attempting to sail from
Bordeaux to
Santo Domingo.
Hussar then recaptured the British merchant ship
James on 12 April. Later on in the same month Garlies was replaced in command of
Hussar by Captain John Giffard, but he in turn gave command over to Captain
William Brown soon afterwards. Brown also served in
Hussar only briefly, with Captain
John Ommanney soon taking over from him on a temporary basis, with the frigate continuing to serve in the English Channel. On 22 May the 54-gun
fourth-rate HMS Madras attempted to enter Portsmouth, but grounded on
Bembridge Ledge.
Hussar joined with the 24-gun
post ship HMS Eurydice and together they pulled
Madras off without damaging the ship.
Hussar received a
refit at
Plymouth Dockyard between May and November 1802, and was recommissioned in June by Captain Philip Wilkinson, who had joined the ship in May. The frigate was sent to serve in the
North Sea and English Channel. On 10 January 1803 the frigate's gunnery storeroom caught fire while anchored near
Sheerness. The fire was close to the ship's
magazine and while it did not reach it, some other combustible matter did explode. In reaction to this
Hussars crew ran onto the quarterdeck, from where one small boat was hanging off the rear of the ship. Too many people attempted to board the boat to escape the explosion, causing the
davit to break and all in the boat to be thrown into the water. Two
master's mates, a
midshipman, fourteen seamen, and a woman were drowned. No more explosions on
Hussar occurred and Wilkinson was able to stop the fire from spreading or from doing serious damage to the frigate. When the
Napoleonic Wars began in May 1803,
Hussar was based at
Spithead, and was quickly sent out into the
Bay of Biscay. On 23 June
Hussar was sailing in sight of the British privateer
Trimmer when the latter captured the French
brig La Flore, for which
Hussar shared in the
prize money of. The frigate then underwent a refit at Plymouth, in which new masts and
rigging were put in place, that was completed on 29 October. The ship briefly returned on 17 November to repair damage received in a large storm while
cruising.
Hussar continued on station after this, and in the winter was sent to join a squadron serving off the coast of Spain at
Ferrol. On 6 February 1804
Hussar was ordered to sail back to England from
Ares Bay carrying the dispatches of Captain
Sir Edward Pellew, the commander of the squadron. While doing so the frigate was also to make contact with the
Channel Fleet which was stationed off
Cape Finisterre. In the course of this errand
Hussar was
wrecked off the coast of
Île de Sein in the late evening of 8 February. The crew were not harmed and they landed on the island, taking it over from the fishermen who lived there. In the morning of 10 February Wilkinson sent a party out to burn
Hussar, the wreck of which was still intact. Upon the completion of this task Wilkinson set sail in his
barge, with the rest of the crew in thirteen commandeered fishing boats, intending to sail for England. The fishing boats, however, were found to be in very poor condition and they were all forced to sail into
Brest to avoid being lost at sea as the weather worsened. There they surrendered themselves to the French fleet present in port. Wilkinson's barge, which had been leading the fishing boats before being lost in the rain, was not affected by these problems, and he reached the 36-gun frigate
HMS Sirius which took him in, arriving at Portsmouth on 28 February. The rest of
Hussars crew were incarcerated as
prisoners of war for ten years. Two members of the crew, Midshipman
Henry Ashworth and Master's Mate
Donat Henchy O'Brien, succeeded in escaping from the prison of
Bitche Citadel in November 1808 by stealing a boat and making their way to
Trieste, from where they and another naval officer were picked up by a raiding party from the 32-gun frigate
HMS Amphion. ==Prizes==