HMS Detroit
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HMS Detroit


Service Entry
1813
Commissioning Date
1813-08
Operator
Royal Navy
Vessel Type
sloop-of-war

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HMS Detroit was a 20-gun sloop of the Royal Navy, launched in July 1813 during the War of 1812. Designed as a powerful vessel for service on Lake Erie, she was built at Amherstburg Royal Naval Dockyard in Upper Canada, following a design similar to Queen Charlotte but modified for Great Lakes conditions by Master Shipwright William Bell. The ship measured approximately 92 feet 6 inches in length between perpendiculars, with a beam of 26 feet, a depth of hold of 11 feet, and a draught of 12 feet. Her tonnage was about 305 tons burthen, and her displacement was roughly 400 long tons. Constructed amidst logistical challenges, her build required extensive oak timber, pine, and other materials, though delays and shortages slowed her completion. Initially armed with a planned complement of four 12-pounder long guns and sixteen 24-pounder carronades, her armament was compromised by shortages, resulting in a mixed, less optimal array of guns taken from other ships and Fort Malden, including 24-pounder, 18-pounder, and 9-pounder weapons. She carried a crew of approximately 150 men. Commissioned in August 1813, HMS Detroit served as the flagship of Commander Robert Barclay and participated actively in the Battle of Lake Erie on 10 September 1813. During the battle, she engaged American ships, notably exchanging fire with Commodore Perry’s flagship, Lawrence, and was instrumental in the British defeat when she became entangled with the Queen Charlotte and was eventually captured by American forces. After her capture, she was renamed USS Detroit and used as a hospital ship until she was dismasted in a gale and rendered unusable. Postwar, the vessel was sunk at Misery Bay for preservation, then raised and converted for commercial use. She remained active on the Great Lakes until 1841, when she was reduced to a hulk at Buffalo. Her final act was a failed attempt to sail over Niagara Falls in 1841, which ended with her running aground and breaking up on a shoal. The vessel’s history highlights her significance as a key naval asset in the War of 1812 and her later transformation into a commercial and spectacle vessel.

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

28 ship citations (2 free) in 13 resources

Detroit (1813) Subscribe to view
Detroit (2nd), 1813
Book The History of the American Sailing Navy: The Ships and Their Development
Author Howard I. Chapelle
Published W.W. Norton & Co., New York,
ISBN 1568522223
Page 272
Detroit (British flagship): at battle of Lake Erie, built at Amherstburg Subscribe to view
Detroit (British): Battle of Lake Erie Subscribe to view
Detroit (Lake Erie) Subscribe to view
Web WorldCat
Published OCLC, Dublin, Ohio
Detroit (Sloop, 20 guns) Subscribe to view
Detroit, 1813-1813, Ship sloop on Great Lakes Subscribe to view
Detroit, British unrated ship-sloop (1813) Subscribe to view
Detroit, HM sloop of war: armament of Subscribe to view
Detroit, HM sloop of war: as new ship building at Amherstburg Subscribe to view
Detroit, HM sloop of war: construction of Subscribe to view
Detroit, HM sloop of war: fitting out Subscribe to view
Detroit, HM sloop of war: in Battle of Lake Erie (Capt. Robert H. Barclay) Subscribe to view
Detroit, HM sloop of war: launched Subscribe to view
Detroit, HM sloop of war: ordnance for Subscribe to view
Detroit, HM sloop of war: readiness of Subscribe to view
Detroit, HM sloop of war: sailing qualities of Subscribe to view
Detroit, HMS (Canadian Lakes, sloop 20, 1813) Subscribe to view
Detroit, US sloop of war (formerly HM sloop of war Detroit) Subscribe to view
Detroit: (Royal Navy ship-rigged sloop of war, later United States Navy, Upper Lakes) Subscribe to view
Detroit: (Royal Navy ship-rigged sloop of war, later United States Navy, Upper Lakes), armament Subscribe to view
Detroit: (Royal Navy ship-rigged sloop of war, later United States Navy, Upper Lakes), as Barclay's flagship Subscribe to view
Detroit: (Royal Navy ship-rigged sloop of war, later United States Navy, Upper Lakes), at the Battle of Lake Erie Subscribe to view
Detroit: (Royal Navy ship-rigged sloop of war, later United States Navy, Upper Lakes), British loss of Subscribe to view
Detroit: (Royal Navy ship-rigged sloop of war, later United States Navy, Upper Lakes), construction Subscribe to view
Detroit: (Royal Navy ship-rigged sloop of war, later United States Navy, Upper Lakes), short on armament and stores Subscribe to view