Upon her completion plans had initially been made to
commission Lively; in May
Captain Frederick Aylmer had taken the frigate under control in preparation for this, but the orders were cancelled.
Lively remained in ordinary for the duration of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815, after which she was put up for sale. This was agreed with John Small Sedger of
Rotherhithe on 22 July 1819; again the order for
Lively was cancelled, and she instead remained in ordinary.
Lively received a small repair at Chatham between July and September 1821, costing £8,026. Work was then undertaken for the frigate to finally enter active service. Fitting out began in December 1823 and was completed on 27 January 1824, with a further cost of £13,815. While this was underway
Lively was commissioned by Captain William Elliot in November 1823 for service on the
Lisbon Station. took refuge on
Lively during the
April Revolt|thumb While
Lively was on station turmoil grew in Portugal, and on 30 April 1824
Dom Miguel of Portugal began the
April Revolt in an attempt to oust his father,
John VI of Portugal. With troops under his command Miguel started arresting his enemies, one of whom was
Manuel Inácio Martins Pamplona Corte Real, 1st Count of Subserra. Looking to assist Subserra in escaping Miguel, the French and British ambassadors,
Jean-Guillaume, baron Hyde de Neuville and
Sir Edward Thornton, organised for him to go on board
Lively. Smuggled aboard from the French embassy on 1 May, Subserra stayed on
Lively as she cruised the
Tagus. When Miguel learned of this he rode to the
Fort of São Julião da Barra and had the fort fire sixteen times at what he believed was
Lively off Lisbon. This was actually a British
packet boat, and the cannon all missed. Fearing that John was also at risk of arrest by Miguel, de Neuville tried to organise for the French 80-gun
ship of the line Santi Pietri to take him from Lisbon.
Santi Pietri never arrived from
Cádiz and Thornton instead convinced John to board the 98-gun ship of the line
HMS Windsor Castle, which was already present with
Lively. This was done on 9 May; from
Windsor Castle John wrote to Miguel, stripping him of his command of the army and demanding that he come on board. Not being able to read or write well and misunderstanding the letter, Miguel did so and was arrested. Miguel was exiled from the country, going to
Brest, France. The Portuguese frigate
Pérola conveyed him there on 14 May, escorted by
Lively and the French
corvette Tibre.
Lively then returned to the Tagus, where John and his court visited the ship and participated in a grand fête on board. As part of the celebrations for his victory in the revolt, John appointed Elliot a
Knight Commander of the Order of the Tower and Sword and his officers, including
Royal Marine Major Thomas Adair, knights in the same order. Alongside awards to the officers, John also provided $500 to be distributed between the crews of
Windsor Castle and
Lively. Having continued to serve in the Tagus into 1825, she sailed to
New York as escort to several merchant ships, arriving on 9 June. She then sailed on to
Havana on 2 July.
Lively afterwards served off the coast of North America, where
Spanish attempts to reconquer Mexico were underway at
San Juan de Ulúa Castle in
Veracruz. Mexican forces captured the castle from the Spanish in November, and
Lively returned to Britain with despatches announcing the loss. She arrived at
Plymouth on 2 January 1826. with news of the
Katamanso War in 1826
Lively was next tasked with conveying
Major-General Sir Neil Campbell to his new post as
Governor of Sierra Leone. Departing from
Spithead on 20 July, Campbell arrived at Sierra Leone on 26 August and then had
Lively take him to
Cape Coast Castle. Reaching there on 22 September, Campbell learned that the
Ashanti Empire had attacked Cape Coast and been defeated in the
Katamanso War on 7 August.
Lively took up the despatches recounting the conflict and left the same day, returning to Portsmouth on 11 November.
Lively was
paid off at
Plymouth Dockyard on 4 December. She remained out of service until April 1831 when the frigate was converted to serve as a
receiving ship, still at Plymouth.
Lively continued in the role until 1860; on 28 April 1863 she was sold for £1,215 to be
broken up by J & E Marshall of Plymouth. ==Notes==