In 1693 French private parties acquired
Entreprenante at Brest and commissioned her as a privateer of 44 guns. HMS
Ruby captured
Entreprenante on 7 April 1694. The Royal Navy purchased
Entreprenante on 27 March 1695 and commissioned her as the
fifth-rate Ruby Prize on 15 April 1695 under the command of Captain Thomas Elkins.
Ruby Prize was among the vessels that sailed with Admiral
Russell on 27 February 1696 from
the Downs. The next day she was with him on the coast of France. At the time she had 156 men aboard. She was next mentioned in an order of 2 March 1696 that ordered the named vessels to sail to the
Nore and there to turn over their crews to man the "great ships' fitting out there. In 1696
Ruby Prize was listed as a storeship at the
Nore. In 1696 Captain Samuel Vincent replaced Elkins, and within the year Captain John Herne replaced Vincent. The Royal Navy sold
Ruby Prize on 24 May 1698 for £501. Apparently it required an Act of Parliament to authorize her to have the "Freedom of trading as an English-built ship". ==Merchantman==