Durham went on to enjoy considerable success during his brief stint in command during the early months of the
French Revolutionary Wars. On 13 February 1793, he captured the privateer
cutter Affrique (or
Afrique), of
Le Havre.
Affrique was a small vessel of only 22 tons (bm). She carried six
swivel guns, twelve stand of small arms, fifty pistols, and 25 swords, all for a crew of 21 men. The capture of
Affrique was the first capture of a vessel flying
La tricolore. For this feat
Lloyd's of London gave him a piece of plate worth 100
guineas, their first such award of the war. In the following month
Spitfire captured the privateer
St Jean and burnt the merchant vessel
Marguerite. On 27 April,
Spitfire fell in with two French armed brigs, one of 16 guns and the other of 12.
Spitfire and the brigs exchanged fire for half an hour under the fort at Cherbourg, which contributed her fire to the encounter. The brigs fled into the harbour and
Spitfire let them go rather than risk grounding. Despite the cannonading that she had been subject to,
Spitfire suffered no damage or casualties.
Spitfire recaptured the
galiot Two Brothers in May. Durham was promoted to
post captain on the
frigate on 24 June, and Commander James Cook replaced him on
Spitfire. Cook's death by drowning in January 1794 necessitated the assigning of Commander John Clements to command
Spitfire. Commander Amherst Morris succeeded Clements in October. In 1796 Commander
Michael Seymour replaced Morris.
Commander Michael Seymour Seymour would spend the next four years as
Spitfires commander and, like Durham before him, enjoyed considerable success in actions against small French raiders. He captured at least nine privateers and small vessels of the
French Navy. In September and October
Spitfire captured a number of merchant vessels, one being particularly valuable. On 2 September, she captured the Danish ship
Sobestern. On 15 September
Spitfire captured
Concordia. Thirteen days later,
Spitfire captured the Danish brig
Apollo. Then on 4 October
Spitfire captured
Argos, and two days later
Jacoba.
Spitfire was active off the English and Irish coasts during the
French attempt to invade Ireland in early 1797 and on 12 January 1797, about 30 leagues west of
Ushant, she captured
Allègre (or
Allegrer), one of the expedition's storeships.
Allègre was a brig of 200 tons (bm), and was carrying ammunition and entrenching tools. Seymour followed this success by capturing the privateer
cutter Bons Amis, of six guns and 32 men, off the
Eddystone on 2 April 1797, and after a five-hour chase. She had been out three days and had not made any captures.
Bons Amis was the former
Friends Endeavour, of
Fowey. Next, Seymour captured the privateer brig
Aimable Manette in the Channel on 1 May 1797, after an eight-hour chase. She was armed with 14 guns and had a crew of 69 men. She was a new vessel, half coppered, and beautiful. She had been out 13 days, and not only had she not taken anything, the evening before she had encountered an outward-bound English yellow-sided ship armed with sixteen 9-pounder guns. The engagement had cost
Aimable Manette 15 men killed and wounded and forced her to sheer-off. Then
Spitfire captured the privateer schooner
Trompeuse, of Morlaix, later that month.
Trompeuse was armed with six guns and had a crew of 40 men.
Trompeuse had been out five days and had taken two Prussian vessels from
Embden, one sailing to Liverpool and the other to Oporto.
Spitfire had also been in sight when
HMS Unite recaptured a brig.
Spitfire also recaptured the
Rodney and Hannah. In July,
Spitfire captured the ship
Sally. Seymour and
Spitfire took the French privateer schooner
Incroyable 13 leagues SW off
the Lizard on 15 September. She was armed with three 6-pounder guns and had a crew of 31 men. She was 14 days out of
Saint Malo but had captured nothing. During the first half of 1798
Spitfire also captured the smuggling lugger
Argus. At the end of 1798, on 27 December,
Spitfire recaptured
Sybille, of Dartmouth, while in the Channel. The French privateer schooner
Vigilant had captured
Sybille on 25 December while
Sybille was carrying bullocks and sheep to
Guernsey for the troops there. She then had a narrow escape from
Vigilant off Start Point while returning to Plymouth. One week later
Spitfire captured the 14-gun transport , of 400 tons (bm), in the
Bay of Biscay.
Wildings crew consisted of seamen from three French ships of the line and she had been taking firewood for the French Navy from
Aber Wrac'h to
Brest under the escort of
Levrette, a gun vessel from which she had parted company.
Wilding had been a British ship in the West Indies trade before the French had captured her. (This money may have been prize money for
Concordia.) On 31 March 1799,
Spitfire took the privateer brig
Résolue of
St. Malo, 14 leagues off
Scilly during a violent gale. She was armed with fourteen 6 and 8-pounder guns, and had a crew of 65 men. She was a new vessel, out two days from Saint Malo on her first cruise, and had made no captures. Her owners also owned
Hirondelle, which the ill-fated had captured in a notable fight. On 12 April, orders arrived at Plymouth for to take on board 183 French prisoners from and
Spitfire for onward conveyance to Portsmouth. On 9 May
Spitfire brought a smuggling lugger called
Providence into Plymouth. The lugger had a cargo of 90
ankers of spirits and 26 bales of tobacco. Later that month came upon seven enemy vessels which made to engage her, but then turned away when she sailed towards them in "a spirited style".
Arethusa captured one, an armed ship, which was carrying sundries from
Saint-Domingue.
Spitfire took the prize into Plymouth on the 23rd while
Arethusa sailed off in search of the other six. On 28 June
Jupiter, Monk, master, arrived at Plymouth. She had been sailing from Surinam to Copenhagen with sugar and coffee, supposedly Dutch property, when
Spitfire detained her. In September,
Spitfire convoyed the linen fleet from Belfast to
The Downs. On 3 November, she brought into Plymouth the Guernsey smuggling lugger
Endeavour, with her cargo of 299 ankers of spirits and 23 bales of tobacco.
Spitfire and the cutter captured the brig
Gute Hoffnung. In December 1799
Spitfire captured the Danish ship
Twilling Riget. On 22 January 1800
Spitfire came in from
Kinsale to Plymouth with a Danish vessel,
Havel Rerli, with a cargo of spices and the like, from
Batavia. The cargo was worth £150,000 and supposed to be Dutch property. Five more vessels were reported to be following. On 16 April 1800, a French privateer in the Channel plundered the American vessel
A. B. C. two hours before
Spitfire boarded her. When
A.B.C. reported the privateer, Seymour left
A.B.C. to make her own way into Plymouth and set off in pursuit.
A.B.C. arrived at Plymouth on 19 April. Early in the morning of 17 April 1800,
Spitfire was nine leagues south of the
Bolt Head when she sighted a brig. She gave chase, a chase that a Guernsey privateer and joined until by noon
Spitfire had left them behind and out of sight. Then
Telegraph, from under
Alderney, came up and fired a broadside at the quarry, but then too fell behind. At 2p.m.
Spitfire finally captured the privateer about four leagues from Cape Levy on the French coast. The privateer was
Heureuse Societé of Pleinpont, of 14 guns and 64 men. She was a new vessel that had been out only three days and had made no captures.
Spitfire later shared the prize money with
Telegraph.
Spitfire brought
Heureuse Societé into Plymouth on 20 April. Her three captures were two Newfoundland brigs and a Portuguese schooner,
Nostra Senora del Carno, De Casta Pinto, master. The privateer had cut out the schooner at St. Michael's (probably
St Michael's Mount), where the schooner was loading. The British privateer
Tartar, of Guernsey, recaptured the schooner. In May
Spitfire sailed through a severe gale on the 16th to arrive safely in
Guernsey. The gale had set several vessels, including
Telegraph on their sides, but none were lost.
Spitfire returned to Plymouth on 14 July from a cruise off the
Île de Batz. She then sailed to cruise against smugglers and captured the lugger
Three Friends, with 150 ankers of spirits.
Three Friends had landed part of her cargo at
Polperro.
Spitfire took several boats that were endeavouring to escape, in the process killing one smuggler. She brought
Three Friends into Plymouth on 4 August. On 11 August Seymour received a promotion to
post-captain.
Commander Robert Keen Seymour's replacement on
Spitfire was Commander Robert Keen, who spent the next four years on the Irish station. On 13 December 1800
Spitfire, , , and cutter
Swift (2) shared in the recapture of
Defiance. On 25 December,
Spitfire and
Renard captured the Danish
galiot Palmboom. That month
Spitfire also captured
Vrouw Elizabeth.
Suffisante and
Spitfire shared the proceeds of the recapture of the brig
Honduras Packet.
Honduras Packet (or
Honduras Planter), of eight guns and 16 men under the command of Captain J. Goodwin, had been sailing from London to
New Providence. A French privateer, of fourteen guns and 125 men, captured her after an action of one hour and a quarter.
Spitfire recaptured her on 18 February 1801, off
Abervrac and she arrived at Plymouth four days later.
Spitfire arrived the next day. During 20 to 21 March, a hurricane blew in the Channel. Even so,
Spitfire,
Suffisante, and
Renard arrived safely in
Jersey.
Spitfire and
Renard shared in the proceeds of the capture on 25 April, of
Prince Frederick van Prussia. On 26 May,
Spitfire and captured a French brig of unknown name carrying a cargo of rye. In July, a court martial on board in the
Hamoaze tried
Spitfires purser, Mr. Banfield, for disobeying Keen's orders. The charge was fully proven, however several naval officers testified to Banfield's excellent character; the board reinstated him as purser but ordered him
mulcted of a year's pay. On 11 July,
Spitfire captured
Commerce. Then in August
Spitfire captured
St. Esprit and a sloop of unknown name, as well as a
chasse maree carrying "310
Burr Stones". Lastly, on 2 September, she captured
Betsey. Towards the end of September
Spitfire detained the American merchantman
Robust, on passage from Baltimore to Amsterdam, off the
Eddystone. Kean put a mate and six men on board as a prize crew and sent her to Plymouth. On the way, while three men were aloft trimming the sails, two in the hold stowing the cable tier, one at the helm, and the prize-master having breakfast, the Americans, armed with pistols, seized the steersman and the prize master. The Americans threatened to shoot the men aloft and below if the prize crew did not give up the ship. The Americans put the prize crew into a boat, and after a long pull the seven men reached
Salcombe.
Robust resumed her voyage, reaching Amsterdam. On 3 October,
Spitfire brought
Anna, Gildea, master, bound for Philadelphia from Amsterdam, into Plymouth.
Anna, was carrying supposed Dutch property. Then on 12 November,
Spitfire arrived at Plymouth where an order was in effect that as vessels came in their crews were to be paid off and their sails furled. On 17 January 1802
Spitfire and were ordered to fit-out and victual for foreign service,
Spitfire for the West Indies and
Weazel for the Mediterranean. It was assumed that they would carry with them copies of the definitive peace treaty. On 21 January a messenger came by express from the Admiralty to Plymouth with orders for a fast sloop to be ready to sail at a moment's notice with dispatches for the Straits.
Weazle and
Spitfire went out into the Sound, still very rough from a gale the previous night, to await orders. The dispatches arrived in the morning three days later and
Weazle sailed immediately.
Spitfires orders, however, did not come.
Spitfire had to wait for orders until 6 February. The next morning she, , and two gun-brigs sailed for the
St. Georges Channel to intercept smugglers. In early 1802,
Spitfire recaptured the brig
Lowestoffe. On 19 March 1803 Admiral Lord
Keith hoisted his pennant aboard as commander in chief of the fleet. Admiral
Dacres, second in command of the fleet and port admiral, shifted his flag to
Spitfire. On 9 April Keen again recommissioned
Spitfire in the
Hamoaze. Before she could sail, however, she had to have her bottom examined. By 4 May she was completely rigged and fitted for sea, but lacked a full crew. War with France resumed on 22 May. On 2 March
Spitfire escorted a convoy that was leaving Waterford for Newfoundland. That same night two vessels from the convoy,
Ranger and
Mary Ann, separated in the night in a heavy squall. Four days later the French privateer
General Aujereau, of Bayonne, and of 16 guns and 120 men, captured them about 120 miles west of
Cape Clear. The privateer plundered
Ranger and then released her; she returned to Waterford on the 10th. The privateer sent
Mary Ann into France or Spain.
Spitfire was paid off and laid up in ordinary at Sheerness on 30 August 1804, and she remained out of commission through 1805. ==Napoleonic Wars==