Canopus-class ship of the line explained

The Canopus-class ships of the line were a class of nine 84-gun two-deck second rates of the Royal Navy. Their design was based on an enlarged version of the lines of the captured French ship Franklin, since commissioned in the Royal Navy as HMS Canopus, although this ship herself was not included as a member of the class. The earlier ships were initially ordered as 80-gun third rates, but this classification was altered by changes in the rating system in February 1817. This class of ships is sometimes referred to as the Formidable class.

Ships

Builder: Chatham Dockyard

Ordered: 8 May 1815

Launched: 19 May 1825

Fate: Sold, 1906

Builder: Bombay Dockyard

Ordered: 4 June 1816

Launched: 10 November 1821

Fate: Sold, 1929

Builder: Bombay Dockyard

Ordered: 22 April 1819

Launched: 19 January 1824

Fate: Sold, 1908

Builder: Pembroke Dockyard

Ordered: 23 January 1817

Launched: 27 July 1824

Fate: Sold, 1897

Builder: Chatham Dockyard

Ordered: 23 January 1817

Launched: 21 June 1826

Fate: Broken up, 1864

Builder: Pembroke Dockyard

Ordered: 27 May 1819

Launched: 25 July 1827

Fate: Burnt, 1884

Builder: Bombay Dockyard

Ordered: 26 January 1825

Launched: 17 February 1828

Fate: Burnt, 1864

Builder: Woolwich Dockyard

Ordered: 23 January 1817

Launched: 22 September 1831

Fate: Sold, 1901

Builder: Chatham Dockyard

Ordered: 23 July 1817

Launched: 18 December 1832

Fate: Broken up, 1866

References