HMS Tapageur (1779)

HMS Tapageur was the privateer cutter Tapageur, launched in 1778 or 1779, possibly at Dunkirk,. The British captured her in 1779, and she wrecked a year later.

Career
The British warships Apollo, HMS Porcupine (1777), and HMS Milford (1759) captured on 15 March 1779. A report in the Mercure has Tapaguer, of Saint-Malo, succumbing to the arrival of three British warships after having held off a British privateer of 20 guns for four-and-a-half hours.

Tapageur was commissioned into the Royal Navy in May under the command of Lieutenant Lord Charles FitzGerald. She then spent the summer in Admiral Hardy's fleet in the Channel. In late 1779 she was at Portsmouth, attached to Admiral Rodney's fleet, which was preparing to take troops to Gibraltar, Minorca, and the West Indies. The fleet sailed on Christmas Day from St Helens, Isle of Wight. On 4 January 1780, Rodney detached Captain Hyde Parker, Jr. at 46°2'N 13°12'W in the 74-gun HMS Hector (1774), together with HMS Phoenix (1759), HMS Greyhound (1773), and Tapageur to escort the West Indies convoy, which was transporting troops from the 88th Regiment of Foot and the 89th Regiment of Foot.

Fate
Tapageur was wrecked in March while warping into Carenage Bay at Saint Lucia. The British had captured Saint Lucia in December, though Tapageur arrived too late to participate.

Questionable information
Although the records are clear that Tapageur was wrecked, there are later accounts of her continued service. First, Rodney lists her as repeating an order to HMS Marlborough (1767) at the Battle of Martinique on 17 April. Second, she appears at the Battle of Porto Praya under the command of Lieutenant Philip D'Auvergne. Then she accompanied HMS Jason (1763) on a reconnaissance towards the Cape of Good Hope and returned to Porto Praya with the news of the presence at Saldanha Bay of five Dutch East Indiamen. The British sailed there and captured four (the fifth was destroyed) at the Battle of Saldanha Bay. However, none of these accounts is supported by primary sources.