English Channel used
Regulus as his
flagship during her first commission The American Revolutionary War ended in 1783, while
Regulus was still under construction. With the wartime necessity of using the obsolete ships as frontline warships now at an end, most ships of
Reguluss type were taken out of service. While lacking modern fighting capabilities, the design still provided a fast ship, and so the
Comptroller of the Navy,
Sir Charles Middleton, pressed them into service as troop ships.
Regulus spent five years
in ordinary at Portsmouth before receiving a
refit in June 1790. Nothing more was done to her until February 1793 when, with the
French Revolutionary Wars beginning, the ship was commissioned by
Commander James Hewett to serve as a troop ship.
Regulus joined the
Channel Fleet, briefly serving in March as
flagship to
Rear-Admiral John Macbride who commanded a squadron of frigates in
the Downs. Two months later Hewett was replaced in command by Commander
Edward Bowater, under whom
Regulus spent time serving on the
Halifax Station.
Captain George Oakes took command of the ship in January 1795, and on 7 February the ship shared with six other warships in the capture of the Dutch ship
Zuyderberg.
Jamaica Station Regulus sailed to join the
Jamaica Station in March the same year. The ship returned to Britain in May 1796 and spent the next three months in refit at
Plymouth Dockyard, costing £8,729. At this point Captain William Carthew replaced Oakes in command, sailing
Regulus to return to Jamaica on 23 October. She was armed
en flute throughout this period. The ship captured the Spanish 18-gun
corvette San Pio in the
Atlantic Ocean on 2 November whilst making her journey, having fired a
broadside into the Spanish vessel when she refused to identify herself. Having joined the Jamaica Station, on 6 April 1797 boats from
Regulus and the 36-gun frigate
HMS Magicienne raided Cape Roxo,
Hispaniola. The harbour there was a haven for French
privateers, and without taking any casualties the boats destroyed two
gun batteries and captured or burned a group of thirteen ships. Joined by the 18-gun
sloop HMS Fortune, on 22 April
Regulus and
Magicienne rounded the
Tiburon Peninsula into Carcasse Bay, where they discovered a French privateer sloop and four merchant
schooners. Hearing an alarm bell sound and believing it meant that the French were attacking the nearby British-held
Les Irois, the ships sailed into the bay. Being fired upon by a French gun battery near the shore,
Regulus and
Magicienne returned fire and forced the French to abandon their guns and flee inland. The squadron then captured the four merchant ships, laden with supplies for a siege. The British loss was four killed and ten wounded, all from one of
Magiciennes boats that had attempted to tow the privateer sloop away from the battery. Captain
George Eyre assumed command of
Regulus at some point after this engagement. Beginning a period of successful
prize taking, on 7 July 1798
Regulus captured the French 4-gun privateer
Pouline. Four days later the ship was patrolling off
Puerto Rico when she came across five ships in
Aguada Bay. They were anchored under the protection of several gun batteries. Eyre sent in
Reguluss boats under the command of two
lieutenants, supported by a schooner he had already captured, to attack the ships. As the boats went in Eyre found that the wind was so poor that neither
Regulus nor the schooner could sail in to support the assault. The boats made the attack despite this, and captured all five ships whilst under enemy fire. The lack of wind forced the crews to abandon two of their prizes, bringing the other three out of the bay at the cost of one man who was killed by
grapeshot. The vessels captured were a ship,
brig, and an armed schooner.
Regulus went on to capture the ship
La Rosa on 7 October. Serving alongside the 18-gun
brig-sloop HMS Swallow, on 13 January 1799
Regulus captured the Spanish brig
Carmini. In June the ship's boats captured a small privateer at
Riohacha.
Regulus returned to Britain in October, conveying
Vice-Admiral Richard Rodney Bligh.
Egypt and Hanover Regulus was fitted again as a troop ship at
Woolwich Dockyard. The work was started in December, with
Regulus paid off in January 1800 and the work completed in March. It cost £7,543 and included the addition of a
poop deck.
by Philip James de Loutherbourg. Regulus''s boats participated in the
Battle of Abukir Regulus was recommissioned by Commander Thomas Pressland in February; the ship then formed part of the transport fleet that sailed to the Mediterranean for the
Egypt Campaign in October. By January 1801 the force was rehearsing at
Marmaris for the amphibious invasion of
Abu Qir. The troops
Regulus carried were not used in the subsequent assault at the
Battle of Abukir on 8 March, but her boats were loaned to another troop ship. One
Regulus seaman was killed and another wounded during the successful attack.
Regulus continued to participate in Egyptian operations, with Pressland for several months commanding all of the Greek vessels in use by the fleet. The ship returned to Britain in 1802. Commander Nicholas Kempe was in temporary control of
Regulus between February and July, before ceding command back to Pressland. With the
Napoleonic Wars having begun, the ship was refitted at
Chatham Dockyard between December 1803, when Pressland left
Regulus for a final time, and April 1804. Her armament was changed in June, being replaced by twenty 24-pounder
carronades on the lower deck alongside two 12-pounder guns, with twenty-four 18-pounders on the upper deck. There were four 6-pounders on the quarterdeck and two more on the forecastle. Having been recommissioned under Captain Charles Boys, on 15 September
Regulus was one of eight ships that were present at the capture of
Flora de Lisboa off the coast of
Le Havre. She then shared with seven other vessels in the capture of the Spanish ship
Purissima Conception on 6 October. On 10 December 1805
Regulus formed part of the escort to the troop ships taking men to join the
Hanover Expedition. Hit by a severe
gale,
Regulus and the majority of the fleet aborted the journey and returned to the Downs. Several troop ships were wrecked off the French and Dutch coasts in the following days. On 22 December the ships left the Downs for another attempt at Hanover, but continued to suffer in the poor weather conditions. Having reached
Den Helder on 24 December, the troop ship
Helder was wrecked there with 600 soldiers on board.
Regulus sent in her boats to attempt a rescue, but was unable to complete this before the entire force was captured by the Dutch on land.
Regulus continued to serve in the
North Sea and
English Channel until 1807 when she was transferred to the
Channel Islands. Boys left
Regulus in May the same year, after which the ship was placed in ordinary at Chatham. In May 1808 she was converted into a provisions depot, armed with eighteen 9-pounders on her upper deck and four 6-pounders on the quarterdeck. From August
Regulus went under a large repair, being converted back into a troop ship. Work was completed in June 1810 with the ship recommissioned by Commander John Hudson, who was replaced by Commander John Tailour in November. Under Tailour
Regulus conveyed troops to
Lisbon in 1811 and in the
Mediterranean Sea in 1813, recapturing the brig
Fly on 11 September that year. Tailour was promoted out of the ship on 26 October and replaced in November by Commander
Robert Ramsay.
North America by John James Halls. Regulus'' served under
George Cockburn during the
War of 1812 After initially serving in the North Sea under Ramsay, on 7 April 1814
Regulus sailed to North America to participate in the
War of 1812. Conveying a
battalion of Royal Marines, the ship first travelled to
Bermuda, arriving on 9 June. After several weeks spent acclimatising on the island,
Regulus formed part of a convoy that took the marines to join the command of Rear-Admiral
George Cockburn, employed in attacks in
Chesapeake Bay. The ships reached Cockburn on 15 July. Commander John Curran possibly took temporary command of the ship for part of the year. Under Ramsay, the ship's boats participated in several operations, including on 22 August when he commanded a division of boats under Cockburn which, travelling up the
Patuxent River, forced the
Chesapeake Bay Flotilla to destroy itself. Working to support the
British Army advance towards
Washington, D.C., the next day Ramsay took his boats up the Patuxent to
Upper Marlboro, Maryland. From there he provided supplies to the army, and on 12 September commanded a division of seamen in the defeat at the
Battle of Baltimore.
Regulus continued operations in the Chesapeake, evacuating two marine battalions from
Tangier Island on 11 December. Cockburn left the Chesapeake with most of his force on 14 December, sailing for
Amelia Island to complete a diversionary attack for the
Gulf Campaign.
Regulus was left behind as part of a small squadron under Captain
Robert Barrie, which followed Cockburn some days later. On 10 January 1815 the squadron reached
Cumberland Island, separated from Amelia Island by
Cumberland Sound. With the plan to move in land and attack
St. Marys, Georgia, the force looked to secure the route along
St. Marys River. On 13 January Barrie, commanding a force of 700 seamen and marines, attacked and captured the foremost American defensive position, Fort Peter, in the
Battle of Fort Peter. On the following day the British advanced up river to St. Marys which, undefended, was taken. A further advance then re-captured the
East Indiaman Countess of Harcourt. On 22 January Fort Peter was
slighted and the British moved back out to sea, garrisoning Cumberland Island. Ramsay then commanded a force, made up of
Regulus, the 12-gun
gun-brig HMS Manly, and the 16-gun schooner
HMS Canso, which on 30 January peacefully captured the island of
St. Simons, Georgia, and
Fort Frederica. Ramsay continued on St. Simons for some time, seizing goods and recruiting slaves from the plantations. Cockburn kept his force at Cumberland Island, planning an attack on
Savannah, Georgia, before on 25 February news arrived that the war had ended. In March a party of Americans, including the politician
Thomas Spalding, who was a resident of nearby
Sapelo Island, came to Cockburn demanding the return of their slaves. Cockburn agreed to return only those who had been freed after the ratification of the
Treaty of Ghent on 17 February. Spalding and Thomas M. Newell were allowed to address a crowd of several hundred ex-slaves stood on the deck of
Regulus, pleading for their return. Only thirteen did so, with the ships taking the rest to Bermuda and then on to
Halifax, Nova Scotia. , where
Regulus was serving when the
War of 1812 ended Promoted on 9 April, Ramsay was replaced in
Regulus by Commander George Truscott. On 6 August 1815, she was moored in Murray's Anchorage alongside and , and rode out a destructive gale that hit Bermuda. With the War of 1812 and Napoleonic Wars over,
Regulus returned to Portsmouth on 3 October 1815. She was
broken up at
Sheerness Dockyard in March 1816. ==Notes and citations==