Conway-class post ship explained
The
Conway class sailing
sixth rates were a series of ten
Royal Navy post ships built to an 1812 design by Sir William Rule. All ten were ordered on 18 January 1812, and nine of these were launched during 1814, at the end of the
Napoleonic War; the last (
Tees) was delayed and was launched in 1817.
These ships were originally designated as "sloops", but were nominally rated as sixth rates of 20 guns when built, as their 12-pounder carronades were not included in the official rating. When this changed in February 1817, they were rated at 28 guns.
Ships in class
-
- Laid down: March 1813
- Launched: March 1814
- Completed: 26 April 1814 at Plymouth Dockyard
- Fate: Broken up at Portsmouth in 1852.
- Laid down: March 1813
- Launched: 19 May 1814
- Completed: 20 June 1814
- Fate: Broken up at Portsmouth in 1833.
- Laid down: May 1813
- Launched: 10 March 1814
- Completed: 7 November 1814
- Fate: Sold in 1825; became the merchantman and whaler Toward Castle and was wrecked in 1838
- Laid down: May 1813
- Launched: 23 March 1814
- Completed: 5 November 1814
- Fate: Sold in 1837.
- Laid down: May 1813
- Launched: 5 May 1814
- Completed: 29 October 1814
- Fate: Sold in 1819.
- Laid down: May 1813
- Launched: 6 May 1814
- Completed: 6 December 1814
- Fate: Broken up at Plymouth in 1822.
- Laid down: June 1813
- Launched: 5 April 1814
- Completed: 8 December 1814
- Fate: Broken up in 1853.
- Laid down: August 1813
- Launched: 20 May 1814
- Completed: 9 November 1814
- Fate: Sold in 1825.
- Builder: Benjamin Hobbs & George Hellyer, Redbridge, Southampton
- Laid down: September 1813
- Launched: 17 August 1814
- Completed: 10 July 1815
- Fate: Broken up at Deptford in 1852.
- Laid down: October 1813
- Launched: 17 May 1817
- Completed: 30 May 1818
- Fate: Sold in 1872.
References
- Rif Winfield, British Warships in the Age of Sail, 1793–1817: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates, Chatham Publishing, London 2005. .