HMS Calcutta (1795)
| Régulus stranded on the shoals of Les Palles, 12 April 1809; Calcutta is on the right, also aground. | |
| History | |
|---|---|
| East India CompanyGreat Britain | |
| Name | Warley | 
| Builder | Perry & Co., Blackwall | 
| Launched | 16 October 1788 | 
| Fate | Sold to the Royal Navy in 1795 | 
| Great Britain | |
| Name | HMS Calcutta | 
| Acquired | 9 March 1795 | 
| Commissioned | May 1795 | 
| Fate | Captured by the French Navy, 26 September 1805 | 
| France | |
| Name | Calcutta | 
| Captured | 26 September 1805 | 
| Fate | Destroyed by fire on 12 April 1809 at the Battle of the Basque Roads | 
| General characteristics | |
| Type | 
 | 
| Tons burthen | 1,175, or 1,17573⁄94 (bm) | 
| Length | 
 | 
| Beam | 41 ft 3+1⁄2 in (12.6 m) | 
| Draught | 17 ft 2 in (5.2 m) | 
| Complement | 
 | 
| Armament | 
 | 
HMS Calcutta was the East Indiaman Warley, converted to a Royal Navy 56-gun fourth rate. This ship of the line served for a time as an armed transport. She also transported convicts to Australia in a voyage that became a circumnavigation of the world. The French 74-gun Magnanime captured Calcutta in 1805. In 1809, after she ran aground during the Battle of the Basque Roads and her crew had abandoned her, a British boarding party burned her.