HMS Heron explained
Several ships of the Royal Navy has been named HMS Heron after the wading bird.
- , an 18-gun 340-ton sloop purchased June 1804 (and previously named Jason). Renamed HMS Volcano in 1810 following conversion to a bomb vessel. Sold on 28 August 1816.
- , a originally to have been called HMS Rattlesnake and launched at Upnor, Kent on 22 October 1812, and broken up in March 1831.
- , a 482-ton 16-gun brig launched at Chatham Dockyard on 27 September 1847 and lost at sea off West Africa on 9 May 1859.
- , a wooden screw launched at Miller's Shipyard, Liverpool on 5 July 1860 and broken up in Jamaica in 1881.
- , an 85-ton river gunboat equipped with two 2-pounder guns and constructed at Yarrow. Transferred to the Nigerian Government on 1 January 1899.
- HMS Heron was a 100-ton War Department tender originally called . Following her transfer to the Royal Navy in 1906 she was renamed Heron. Sold in September 1923.
- HMS Heron was assigned to a 1,200-ton sloop, but the vessel had been renamed by the time of her launch in 1938.
- HMS Heron II was a short-term resident at RNAS Haldon before moving to RNAS Charlton Horethorne during World War II. It closed in 1948.
- HMS Heron (shore establishment) is the designation currently given to RNAS Yeovilton in Somerset, England