HMS Constant Warwick (1645)


Constant Warwick was a 32-gun fourth-rate frigate which served in the English Royal Navy, built by Peter Pett I at Ratcliff and launched in 1645. She is sometimes regarded as the 'first English frigate', although a number of vessels built or acquired earlier also merit a similar description. The term 'frigate' during the period of this ship referred to a method of construction, rather than a role which did not develop until the following century.

Service history

Constant Warwick was not built for the Navy, but was built as a privateer for a consortium which included the Earl of Warwick and Sir William Batten, but was hired by the navy from 1646 until 20 January 1649, when she was purchased outright.
She was rebuilt at least once. Her original dimensions altered by 1660, evidence that she may have seen structural changes during the 1650s. She was certainly rebuilt by Sir John Tippetts at Portsmouth Dockyard in 1666 as a 42-gun fourth rate ship of the line. Her armament had been reduced to 40 guns by 1685, with eighteen demi-culverins on the lower deck, eighteen sakers on the upper deck, and four 3-pounder guns on the quarter deck. She was downgraded to a fifth rate in 1691, scheduled to be reduced to 28 guns, but before this took effect she was captured on 12 July 1691 off Portugal by a French squadron.

Description

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