HMS Bristol (1775)


HMS Bristol was a 50-gun fourth-rate ship of the line, built for the Royal Navy in the 1770s. She served as a flagship during the Battle of Sullivan's Island, Charleston, South Carolina in 1776 during the American Revolutionary War and later participated in the 1783 Battle of Cuddalore during the Anglo-French War of 1778–83. By 1787 the ship had been converted into a church ship. Converted into a prison ship in 1794, Bristol instead served as a hospital ship until she was broken up in 1810.

Description

Bristol had a length at the gundeck of and at the keel. She had a beam of, a draught of at deep load and a depth of hold of. The ship's tonnage was 1,049 tons burthen. Bristol was armed with twenty-two 24-pounder cannon on her main gundeck, twenty-two 12-pounder cannon on her upper gundeck, and four 6-pounder cannon on the quarterdeck and another pair on the forecastle. The ship had a crew of 350 officers and ratings.

Construction and career

Bristol, named after the eponymous port, was ordered on 12 October 1768 to a design by John Williams. The ship, however, was not laid down until May 1771 at Sheerness Dockyard and was launched on 25 October 1775. Commissioned that same month, she cost £23,440 to built and a further £3,574 to outfit.
During the American War of Independence, she was Commodore Sir Peter Parker's flagship during the attack on Sullivan's Island on 28 June 1776 and was heavily damaged during the battle. Later in the war, she was stationed off Jamaica, and fought at the Battle of Cuddalore.
In December 1782 she was escorting a convoy of East Indiamen when they stopped at the island of Trinidade. There she found Captain Philippe d'Auvergne of, which had wrecked there on 12 October 1781. Bristol took the survivors with her to India.
After 1794 she was used as a prison ship, and was broken up in June 1810 at Sheerness.