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HMS Trent (1796)

HMS Trent was a fifth-rate sailing frigate of 36 guns, built for the Royal Navy and launched in February 1796. She carried a main battery of twenty-six 18-pounder (8.2-kilogram) long guns. She and her sister ship HMS Glenmore were constructed from pitch pine rather than oak.

Construction and armament
HMS Trent was one of four 36-gun, 18-pounder, Amazon-class frigates built for the Royal Navy, to a design by William Rule. Frigates of the period were three-masted, full-rigged ships that carried their main battery on a single, continuous gun deck. They were smaller and faster than ships of the line and primarily intended for raiding, reconnaissance and messaging. Since late 1778, those of 36 or 38 guns with a main armament of 18-pounder long guns, had become the standard in the Royal Navy and by 1793, when the French Revolutionary War began, it was not unusual for them to be close to 1000 tons burthen (bm). Trent and her sister ship were ordered on 24 January 1795 to be built from pitch pine rather than oak. The shortage of timber, and in particular oak, was a constant problem for the Royal Navy in the 18th and 19th centuries. Softwoods were easier to work and did not require as much seasoning so fir-built frigates could be produced quicker. They were not as strong however, and did not last as long as their oak-built counterparts. Work began in March at Woolwich Dockyard when Trents keel of was laid down. As built, her dimensions were along the gun deck with a beam of and a depth in hold of , making her 925 tons burthen (bm). Trent was a fifth rate, built to carry a main battery of twenty-six long guns on her gun deck, eight on the quarterdeck and two on the forecastle. She additionally carried eight carronades, six on the quarterdeck and two on the forecastle. Carronades were lighter so could be manoeuvred with fewer men, and had a faster rate of fire but had a much shorter range than the long gun. When fully manned, Amazon-class frigates had a complement of 264 but due to a perpetual shortage of seamen during periods of war, Trent averaged a crew of less than 248 throughout her career. ==Service==
Service
Trent was first commissioned in March 1796 for service in the North Sea, under Captain Edward Bowater, who later became Admiral, and father to Edward Bowater. Following her completion on 25 May, Trent was sent to the Great Yarmouth where she joined Admiral Adam Duncan's North Sea Fleet and in September, Trent came under the temporary command of acting captain John Gore. Captain Richard Bagot assumed command in October 1797, and in November, sailed Trent to the Leeward Islands. Bagot died in the June following and was replaced with Captain Robert Ottoway, on the Jamaica Station. Trent captured a small prize in July 1798 then in February 1799, while still in the West Indies, Trent and the sixth-rate frigate, , captured a 14-gun privateer, Penada. Trent, in company with the armed cutter, , was cruising off Puerto Rico on 30 March 1799, when several Spanish vessels were spotted in a bay near Cabo Rojo. The Spanish flotilla, comprising a merchant ship and three schooners, was riding at anchor in the shoal water, under the protection of a five-gun shore battery. Boats from Trent and Sparrow were sent in a cutting out expedition. Sparrow, being of shallower draught, was able to get close enough to provide covering fire, while marines and seamen were landed to deal with the shore guns. In the meantime, the remainder of the crews boarded and captured the Spanish ship and one of the schooners. Two other schooners were scuttled by their Spanish crews. More success followed in March 1800 when a Spanish privateer was captured by Trent. In October 1800, Captain Edward Hamilton was appointed to Trent in the English Channel and given command of a small squadron blockading the French ports of St Malo, Cherbourg and Le Havre. On 3 April 1801, Trent was anchored off the Ile de Brehat. At dawn, a French ship, a cutter and a lugger were seen sailing towards Paimpol. Hamilton immediately sent Trents boats in pursuit. Initially there was an attempt to escape and boats were dispatched from the shore which then joined the lugger in taking the ship in tow. When it became obvious that battle was inevitable, the ship was cut loose and the remaining French vessels retreated to within range of the shore batteries. The action ended when the French were driven onto the rocks and Trents crew boarded the drifting ship. She turned out to be an ex-British merchantman that had been taken as a prize. Trent, the 36-gun frigate and the 10-gun cutter , were off Jersey on 20 April, when a lugger was spotted. After a ten-hour chase the French privateer, which turned out to be the 10-gun Renard from St Malo, was captured near St Aubin's Bay. On 22 January 1802, Hamilton was court-martialled for cruelty, having had an elderly gunner tied in Trents rigging. After an hour-and-a-half, the man was cut down, having fainted from the extreme cold. Hamilton was dismissed by the Admiralty but was later reinstated. On 13 February 1803, Trent sailed for Jamaica once again, under a new captain, Charles Brisbane. Isaac Wooley and after, James Katon served as captains before Trent returned to home waters in June to be recommissioned under Commander Walter Grosset and fitted as a hospital ship at Plymouth. The work took until August. Trent was then dispatched to Cork where she served as flagship to successive commanders-in-chief on the Coast of Ireland Station. She was commissioned twice more, under Commander Thomas Young in 1811 and Commander G. Lampriere in 1813 but remained a hospital ship and flagship at Cork until 1815. ==Later service and fate==
Later service and fate
In November 1815, the Admiralty issued an order that Trent was to be laid up. She continued to serve at Cork as a receiving ship until February 1823, when she was taken to Haulbowline and broken up. == Notes ==
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