HMS Quebec (1781)

HMS Quebec was a 32-gun fifth rate frigate launched in 1781 and broken up in 1816. She sailed under various captains, participating in the American War of Independence, the French Revolutionary Wars, and the Napoleonic Wars. During these wars she captured many enemy merchantmen and smaller privateers in northern or Caribbean waters. She was built by George Parsons at Bursledon, Hampshire.

American War of Independence
Throughout 1782, Christopher Mason commanding, HMS Quebec operated in North American waters in the final year of the War of American Independence. On 22 February that year she captured the schooner Betsy, and in April two ships laden with flour, oil, bale goods, salt and wine. On 20 December she was involved when HMS Diomede (1781) and HMS Astraea (1781) captured the American frigate South Carolina, for which she shared in prize money awarded eighteen months later.
 * 1782

French Revolutionary Wars
Admiral John MacBride became commander-in-chief on the Downs station, commanding a frigate squadron with his flag in HMS Cumberland (1774), later transferring his flag to Quebec. He took possession of Ostend after the French retreat in early 1793, and in October transported reinforcements under General Sir Charles Grey to assist in the defence of Dunkirk. In late October 1793 much needed reinforcements and artillery supplies were landed by Quebec at Nieuport, which was then being besieged by French forces, a relief force from Ostend arrived, and the French withdrew.
 * 1793

From March 1794 a taskforce under Vice-Admiral Sir John Jervis, with land forces under General Sir Charles Grey, operated against French possessions in the Leeward Islands of the Caribbean. Quebec was an active participant, supplying some of the assault forces at Martinique (late March) where she lost one man killed. St Lucia fell on 4 April, whereupon Quebec (under Captain Rogers), Blanche, Ceres and Rose were ordered to seize the smaller islands, the Saints, which they did without loss on 5 April.
 * 1794

Parts of Guadeloupe fell to the British on 23 April 1794 with Quebec playing her part, and many enemy ships were captured as they attempted to leave the anchorage. Details of prize monies awarded for the capture of engineering and ordnance stores on Martinique, St Lucia and Guadeloupe named Quebec and thirty other warships, plus six gunboats.

On 12 August 1794 a French ship, Adelle, was captured, for which prize money was awarded a year later.

Actions against Grenada the following year did not go so well. Rogers reported on 9 April 1795 persistent heavy rain had caused delays in the military operations on Grenada. Seemingly in desperation, an assault was made on the last stronghold of the French in the mountains, but the French repulsed the attack, causing heavy British casualties.
 * 1795

In 1796, Quebec – now under the command of Captain John Cooke - was in home waters, reporting from Spithead the capture of a French national cutter Aspic, off the Scilly Isles. Aspic had a crew of 57 men and carried 10 guns., Quebec was soon back in the Caribbean on the Jamaica station. On 3 December 1796 she captured the French corvette ’Affricaine, of 18 guns, near St Domingo.
 * 1796

On 18 April Vice-Admiral Sir Hyde Parker, who commanded the Jamaica station, ordered Captain Hugh Pigot to take his frigate HMS Hermione (1782), as well as the frigates Quebec and HMS Mermaid (1782), the brig HMS Drake (1779) and the Hired armed cutter Penelope to cut out 14 vessels at the Battle of Jean-Rabel, Haiti. The squadron rendezvoused the next day and then the boats went in on the night of the 20th. They succeeded in bringing out nine merchant vessels that French privateers had taken as prizes. In the same series of operations the 74-gun ships HMS Thunderer (1783) and HMS Valiant (1759) destroyed the escorting French frigate, Harmonie.
 * 1797

While he commanded at Jamaica, Hyde Parker sent regular reports of warships and merchant vessels captured or destroyed by the ships under his command. At various times from October 1799 to February 1800, Quebec seized American, French or Danish merchant ships bound for ports in the Americas or Caribbean with cargoes as diverse as cocoa, lumber, wine, soap & sundries, flour, sugar, cotton, honey and hides. A Spanish vessel, Nostra Senora del Carmen “laden with fustie and brazil” was captured in March or April. Between May and August 1800, Quebec took captive an armed rowing boat with a crew of 19 men, a small schooner (name unknown) and six small merchant vessels cut out at different times.
 * 1799 and 1800

When the Treaty of Amiens brought what would turn out to be a temporary peace, the Admiralty took Quebec out of commission. She did not return to active service until 1805.
 * 1802

Napoleonic Wars
On 28 May 1806 Quebec and HMS Paulina (1805) were in company and shared in the capture of the Frau Geziner.
 * 1806-7

In April 1807 the vessel Providentia fell to Quebec, and between 16 August and 2 September 1807, nineteen Danish merchant ships were taken by Quebec and her consorts. Quebec’s station during this time was in the Downs and North Sea.

On 22 March, while Danish harbours were still largely frozen in, Quebec was operating in the Great Belt and Kattegat as the British navy gathered. The last operating Danish ship-of-the-line was under orders to clear the Great Belt of enemy (British) warships but was closely watched that morning by Quebec, with the sloop HMS Lynx (1794) in company. In the early afternoon HMS Falcon (1802) joined them in Sejerø Bay, followed two hours later by the British ships-of-the-line Nassau and HMS Stately (1784). Quebec and the two sloops observed the ensuing battle without putting themselves in harm's way.
 * 1808

A few days later off Nyborg, a late winter storm dismasted Quebec. Falcon then helped her to erect a new mast and rigging.

In 1810, Quebec stationed in the North Sea primarily off the Frisian Islands of Texel and Vlie to help enforce the naval blockade of that coast. In March she retook the Susannah Margaretta, and boats from the hired armed cutters Idas and King George, under Quebec’s command, captured a French privateer schyut of four guns, while subject to heavy small arms fire. On 21 March Quebec captured another French privateer, the lugger Imperatrice of 14 guns and 42 men off the Dogger Bank. On 23 May, when Desiree captured the Financier, Quebec (under Charles Hawtayne) and HMS Active (1799) were in company and shared the prize money.
 * 1810

Also on 23 May, Quebec captured the James Cook. Six days later a cutting out expedition at Vlie with boats from Desireee, Quebec, HMS Britomart (1808) and HMS Bold (1801)) yielded a French lugger (12), a French privateer (4), a Dutch gunboat and a small rowboat. The British had no casualties; the French lost one man killed and three wounded. On the last day of May, Quebec took three more ships: St Jean Baptiste, Comtessa, and Forben. One more ship was taken on 17 September (Bienenstock) and two ships were recaptured during October 1810 (Jonge Edward and Perle).

On 8 November Quebec cut out a "fine French privateer schooner, La Jeune Louise (14)" from the Vlie Stroom, an area of difficult and shallow navigation.

The year finished with the capture on 2 December of the French privateer cutter Renard, of six guns. Quebec shared the prize money with HMS Kite (1805).

Quebec was still under the command of Captain Hawtayne and on the same station when she recaptured the Aquator on 26 May.
 * 1811

In August 1811 in company with 5 lesser warships, Quebec captured a Vaisseau de Guerre of the Imperial Customs Service, later named as a privateer Christine Charlotte, with her crew of one officer and twelve men, as she was leaving Nordeney (East Frisian Islands) with a merchant vessel in tow. Boats from Quebec and her consorts then attacked and after a hard fight captured four French gunboats (numbers 22, 28, 31, 71) in the harbour at Nordeney. Two months later, on 30 October, Quebec was off the Flemish Banks when she captured the privateer Olympia, of ten 18-pounder guns and 78 men, after a long chase. This was the former schooner HMS Olympia (1806).

Fate
At the end of the Napoleonic Wars, the Royal Navy laid up many of its ships, Quebec among them. She was advertised for sale in April 1816 for breaking up within twelve months. "Lying at Sheerness, Quebec of 32 guns and 700 tons".