HMS Swaggerer (1809)

HMS Swaggerer was a French privateer, the Bonaparte, captured in 1809. She served the Royal Navy in the Leeward Islands until broken up in 1815.

Career
The circumstances of Bonaparte's capture are obscure and there are no details as to her dimensions.

The British renamed her Swaggerer and armed her with eight 18-pounder carronades and two 6-pounder guns. Lieutenant George James Evelyn, late of HMS Eclair (1801) commissioned her on 8 February 1809.

On 17 April 1809, HMS Pompee (1793) captured the Hautpoult. Swaggerer was among the vessels entitled to share in the prize money. Thereafter, Swaggerer assisted at the capture of Martinique, The Saintes and Guadeloupe.

In August 1812 Swaggerer was in company with HMS Surinam (1805) when they captured four American vessels:
 * General Hamilton (11 August), lying at Parimarabo, Surinam, carrying a cargo of molasses;
 * Mary (11 August), lying at Parimarabo, Surinam, in ballast;
 * Pochohantes (12 August), lying at Braam's Point, Surinam, and carrying a cargo of salt; and
 * Mercator (24 August), bound to Baltimore, laden with molasses.

Evelyn was invalided out of Swaggerer in October 1812. His replacement, Lieutenant Martin Guise, took command of Swaggerer in 1813. Then in 1814 Lieutenant Charles Deyman Jeremy replaced Guise.

Swaggerer was in company with HMS Eclipse (1807) when, on 13 March 1814, they captured the brigantine Admiral Martin, which they sent in to Antigua. Then on 28 March Swaggerer and HMS Ister (1813) captured the Camilla, which they sent into Tortola. By December, Swaggerer was under the command of Lieutenant Alexander Sandilands.

Fate
Swaggerer was broken up in 1815.