HMS Hampshire (1741)

HMS Hampshire was a 50-gun fourth rate ship of the line of the Royal Navy, built to the 1733 proposals of the 1719 Establishment dimensions at Ipswich, and launched on 13 November 1741.

On 29 March 1742 she was under the command of Captain Thomas Limeburner when she captured the Galgo, a Spanish privateer sloop of 12 guns and 12 patereros (swivel guns). She had a crew of 140 men, some of whom were English. She was a new vessel, only 14 months old, belonging to San Sebastián, and had taken 21 prizes. The Royal Navy apparently briefly took Galgo into service under her existing name.

In January of 1743 Limeburner and Hampshire captured two more privateers, one of the same strength as the Galgo. The other was armed with 15 guns and swivels, and had a crew of 124 men.

On 17 October 1760 Hampshire, HMS Boreas (1757) and HMS Lively (1756) intercepted five French vessels in the Windward Passage. On 18 October Lively captured the French 20-gun corvette Valeur. Boreas captured the frigate Sirenne, and Hampshire chased the merchant frigate Prince Edward on shore where her crew set fire to her, leading her to blow up. On 19 October, Hampshire, with Lively and Valeur, cornered the King's frigate Fleur de Lis in Freshwater Bay, a little to leeward of Port-de-Paix; her crew too set her on fire. Prince Edward was armed with 32 guns and had a crew of 180 men under the command of Captain Dubois. Fleur de Lis was also armed with 32 guns, and had a crew of 190 men under the command of Captain Diguarty. The merchant frigate Duc de Choiseul, of 32 guns and 180 men under the command of Captain Bellevan, escaped into Port-de-Paix. The two merchant frigates carried cargoes of sugar and indigo.

Hampshire served until being broken up in 1766.