HMS Little Belt (1807)

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HMS Little Belt, at right, and the USS President fire upon each other
Career (Denmark) Danish Navy Ensign
Name: Lillebælt
Namesake: Little Belt
Captured: Captured by British at the Battle of Copenhagen on 7 September 1807
Career (UK) Royal Navy Ensign
Name: HMS Little Belt
Acquired: Captured at the Battle of Copenhagen on 7 September 1807
Fate: Sold in 1811
General characteristics
Class and type: 20-gun sixth rate
Tons burthen: 460 tons
Propulsion: Sails
Complement: 121
Armament:

20 guns:

  • 18 × 32 pdrs
  • 2 × 9 pdrs

HMS Little Belt was a 20-gun sixth rate of the Royal Navy.

Contents

[edit] Career

She was formerly the Danish ship Lille Belt. She was captured by the British schooners Scorpion and Chippeway while trying to flee the scene at the Battle of Copenhagen on 7 September 1807.[1] She was commissioned under the Anglicised version of her name, and placed under the command of John Crispo and by 1808 was off the African coast. Crispo was promoted to Post-Captain on 21 October 1810, and was succeeded as commander of the Little Belt by Arthur Batt Bingham in December 1810. He sailed her to Halifax, to operate off the North American coast.

[edit] Little Belt Affair

Main article: Little Belt Affair

By early 1811, Little Belt was in the Caribbean, where on 19 April she was instructed by Rear-Admiral Herbert Sawyer, based at Bermuda, to meet up with Captain Pechell in HMS Guerriere, who was cruising somewhere along the Atlantic seaboard between Charlestown and New York. If he was unable to make contact with Pechell, Bingham was instructed to cruise along the coast, protecting British ships and intercepting enemy vessels. He was warned to be careful to avoid a clash with the Americans, as relations between America and Britain were strained. In the event, Bingham did not locate the Guerriere, and continued to cruise along the coast.

On the morning of 10 May, as the Little Belt was some 48 miles east of Cape Charles at the entrance to Chesapeake Bay, a strange sail was sighted in the distance. Bingham made signal 275 (calling on a strange ship, if a British warship, to show her number). The other ship did not reply, and Bingham concluded that the mystery ship was a frigate of the United States Navy. He hoisted his colours and began to round Cape Hatteras. The frigate followed, closing the Little Belt, and appeared to be trying to manoeuvre into a position to rake the smaller British ship. Bingham wore ship three times to foil the American's attempts, while calling for the frigate to identify herself. Each time though the American demanded the same of Bingham. The frigate, actually the 44-gun USS President under Commodore John Rodgers, Bingham claimed, then opened fire on the Little Belt. Bingham returned fire and an engagement began, lasting three-quarters of an hour. The President was observed to have a fire onboard and drew away.

The President then returned, and asked if Bingham had struck. Bingham replied that he had not, and the President again withdrew. A messenger was sent out to the damaged Little Belt by Rodgers the following morning, lamenting the 'unfortunate affair', and insisting that he would not have attacked, had Little Belt not fired first. Bingham denied this, and turned down Rodger's offer of putting into an American port for repairs, instead making for Halifax, hampered by a gale on the second day of the voyage which caused leaks in the already damaged ship. Little Belt had nine killed outright, and had 23 wounded, some mortally. Two died the day after the battle. Rodgers claimed that the British ship had been mistaken for a larger frigate, and continued to claim that Bingham had fired first. The Admiralty expressed their confidence in Bingham, and promoted him to Post-Captain on 7 February 1812. The Little Belt was paid off shortly after the battle and was sold at Deptford.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Lincoln P. Paine, Hal Fessenden, James H. Terry (1997). Ships of the World: An Historical Encyclopedia. Houghton Mifflin Co. ISBN 0395715563. 

[edit] Further reading

[edit] External links

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