HMS Dunkirk
Skip to main content

HMS Dunkirk

1651 fourth-rate ship of the line


Service Entry
1651
Operator
Royal Navy
Vessel Type
fourth-rate, 1719 Establishment Group

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

HMS Dunkirk was a notable Fourth Rate ship of the line in the Royal Navy, with a rich history spanning from her initial construction in the mid-17th century to her decommissioning in the mid-18th century. Originally launched in 1651 as the Worcester, she was built at Woolwich Dockyard by Master Shipwright Andrew Burrell. Designed as a 48-gun frigate, she was altered during construction from her initial order as a 38-gun Fourth Rate to a more powerful Third Rate, equipped with 48 guns. Despite her classification, her keel measured only 112 feet, resulting in a slightly reduced number of gunports—twelve pairs on the lower deck, eleven on the upper, six on the quarterdeck, and one on the poop—allowing her to carry up to 60 guns. Throughout her early service, she participated in significant battles during the First Anglo-Dutch War, including the Battle of Dover (1652), Dungeness (1652), Portland (1653), and Santa Cruz off Tenerife (1657). Following the Stuart Restoration in 1660, she was renamed HMS Dunkirk, commemorating the Battle of the Dunes (1658), and was rearmed with a peacetime complement of 48 guns and 230 men. During subsequent conflicts, she played key roles in the Battle of Lowestoft (1665), the Four Days' Battle (1666), the St James's Day Battle (1666), and the Battles of Solebay, Schooneveld, and Texel during the Third Anglo-Dutch War. In 1692, she underwent a significant "Great Repair" at Blackwall, which increased her beam to 33 feet 4 inches. She was reclassified as a Fourth Rate in 1695–96 and rebuilt again at Blackwall Yard in 1704. Further modifications occurred after her 1729 order to be taken apart at Plymouth, with her materials being reused at Portsmouth, where she was effectively rebuilt under the 1719 Establishment and relaunched in 1734. Her service continued into the War of Austrian Succession, notably participating in the Battle of Toulon in 1744. HMS Dunkirk was ultimately broken up in 1749, marking the end of her long and distinguished career.

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

16 ship citations (0 free) in 7 resources

Dunkirk (1660) Subscribe to view
Dunkirk (ex Worcester 1651) Subscribe to view
Dunkirk (ex Worcester, 1651) Subscribe to view
Dunkirk, 1660-1704 Subscribe to view
Dunkirk, 1734-1749, 4th Rate, 60 gun, 1719 Establishment Subscribe to view
Dunkirk, of 1651 Subscribe to view
Worcester (1651) Subscribe to view
Worcester (48-60 guns; built Woolwich 1651; renamed Dunkirk 1660; rebuilt 1704): alluded to Subscribe to view
Worcester, 1651-60, 3rd Rate (1649 Programme) Subscribe to view
Worcester, 48 ship (1651; renamed Dunkirk, 1660) Subscribe to view
Worcester, British third rate ship of the line (1651) Subscribe to view
Worcester, of 1651 Subscribe to view