HMS Arethusa
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HMS Arethusa

1757 fifth-rate frigate


Service Entry
1757
Commissioning Date
1757
Operator
Royal Navy
Vessel Type
fifth-rate frigate
Current Location
48° 24' 56", -4° 58' 56"
Aliases
Aréthuse

* This information from Wikidata is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

HMS Arethusa was a fifth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy, originally launched in 1757 as the French frigate Pélerine. She was constructed at Le Havre for privateer warfare and was soon purchased by the French Crown, being commissioned as Aréthuse in January 1758. The vessel measured approximately 36 guns, characteristic of a 5th-rate frigate, and played a notable role during the Seven Years' War. During her service with the French, Aréthuse was active in defending the French Fortress of Louisbourg in Nova Scotia. Under Captain Jean Vauquelin, she participated in bombarding British siege positions and managed to evade British blockades after departing Louisbourg in July 1758, despite damage from shore batteries. Her efforts contributed to the fortress’s surrender shortly afterward. In May 1759, Aréthuse was intercepted near Audierne Bay by three Royal Navy ships—Thames, Venus, and Chatham—while traveling from Rochefort to Brest. After a two-hour chase, she lost her topmasts and was forced to surrender following heavy fire, suffering significant casualties. She was then incorporated into the Royal Navy as HMS Arethusa. During her twenty years in service, HMS Arethusa operated mainly in British waters, capturing several French privateers. Notably, she arrived in Boston in 1772 after a gale lost her masts and had a crew desertion incident. In December 1776, she became historically significant when James Aitken, known as John the Painter, was hanged from her mizzenmast for arson at Portsmouth Dockyard—a solitary execution of its kind for dockyard arson. HMS Arethusa's combat record includes a famous duel in June 1778 against the French frigate Belle Poule, which marked the first naval confrontation between Britain and France during the American Revolutionary War. Although Arethusa was crippled in the battle, Belle Poule escaped, and the engagement was celebrated in both nations. Her final service ended in March 1779 when she engaged the French vessel Aigrette and sustained heavy damage before being wrecked off Ushant. Her legacy persisted in naval tradition, with subsequent ships and classes bearing her name, symbolizing her historical significance in maritime warfare.

This description has been generated using GPT-4.1-NANO based on the Vessel's wikidata information and then modified by ShipIndex.org staff.

Ships

6 ship citations (2 free) in 5 resources

Arethusa (1759) Subscribe to view
Arethusa (France; 1759) Subscribe to view
Web WorldCat
Published OCLC, Dublin, Ohio
Arethusa, 1759-1779, 5th Rate, 32 gun, ex-French prize Subscribe to view
Arethusa, British fifth rate frigate (1759) Subscribe to view
Arethusa, HMS (1759)
Book Ships of the World: An Historical Encyclopedia
Author Lincoln P. Paine
Published Houghton Mifflin, Boston,
ISBN 0585109486, 9780585109480, 0395715563, 9780395715567
Page 58