Cyrus-class ship-sloop
Appearance
Class overview | |
---|---|
Name | Cyrus-class post ships |
Operators | ![]() |
Completed | 16 |
General characteristics | |
Type | Sixth-rate post ship |
Tons burthen | 454 80/94 (as designed) |
Length | list error: <br /> list (help) 115 ft 6 in (35.20 m) (gundeck) 97 ft 2 in (29.62 m) (keel) |
Beam | 29 ft 8 in (9.04 m) |
Propulsion | Sail |
Sail plan | Full rigged ship |
Complement | 135. |
Armament | UD: 20 × 32-pounder carronades and 2 × 6-pounder guns |
The Cyrus-class sixth rates of the Royal Navy were a series of sixteen post ships built to an 1812 design by Sir William Rule, the Surveyor of the Navy. The first nine ships of the class were launched in 1813 and the remaining seven in 1814. The vessels of the class served at the end of the Napoleonic War. They were built on the lines of HMS Hermes, which was based in turn on the French ship Bonne Citoyenne.
The Cyrus class was intended to be the counter to the new Frolic class ship-rigged sloops that were under construction for the United States Navy. No encounter took place between any vessel of the Frolic class and Cyrus class, but HMS Levant was captured by the American frigate USS Constitution[1]
Ships in class
- HMS Medina
- Builder: Edward Adams, Bucklers Hard
- Ordered: 18 November 1812
- Laid down: January 1813
- Launched: 13 August 1813
- Completed: 20 December 1813 at Portsmouth Dockyard
- Fate: Sold to be broken up at Rotherhithe in 1832.
- HMS Cyrus
- HMS Levant
- HMS Esk
- HMS Carron
- HMS Tay
- HMS Slaney
- HMS Erne
- HMS Leven
- HMS Falmouth
- HMS Cyrene
- HMS Bann
- HMS Spey
- HMS Lee
- HMS Hind
- HMS Larne
Notes
- ^ Gardiner, p.87
References
- Gardiner, Robert (1996). The Naval War of 1812. Caxton pictorial history. ISBN 1-84067-360-5.
- Rif Winfield, British Warships in the Age of Sail, 1793-1817, Chatham Publishing, London 2005.