HMS Crane (1806)

History
United Kingdom
NameHMS Crane
Ordered11 December 1805
BuilderCustance & Stone, Great Yarmouth
Laid downFebruary 1806
Launched26 April 1806
FateWrecked 26 October 1808
General characteristics
Class & typeCuckoo-class schooner
Tons burthen75194 (bm)
Length
  • 56 ft 2 in (17.1 m) (overall)
  • 42 ft 4+18 in (12.9 m) (keel)
Beam18 ft 3 in (5.6 m)
Depth of hold8 ft 3 in (2.5 m)
Sail planSchooner
Complement20
Armament4 × 12-pounder carronades

HMS Crane was a Royal Navy Cuckoo-class schooner of four 12-pounder carronades and a crew of 20. She was built by Custance & Stone at Great Yarmouth and launched in 1806. Like many of her class and the related Ballahoo-class schooners, she succumbed to the perils of the sea relatively early in her career.

She was commissioned in 1806 under Lieutenant John Cameron for operations in the North Sea. In May 1808 Crane sent into Plymouth the captured Danish vessel Justitia.

In 1808 Crane was under a Lieutenant Mitchell, and then under Lieutenant Joseph Tindale.

At 7:30 pm on 25 October 1808 bad weather drove her from her anchorage at Plymouth. She dropped a second anchor. By 4:00 am on 26 October 1808 she was near shore and got under way to make for the Sound. She returned three hours later to find an anchorage but a squall hit her as she went about. She let go an anchor but struck a rock off Plymouth Hoe. She fired her guns to signal distress, which brought out several boats from Plymouth Dockyard. With some assistance she was refloated, but she went aground again. She sank in deeper water with her starboard gunwales just clearing the surface. Boats picked up all her crew from the water. She was later broken up.