HMS Pandora explained
Ten ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Pandora after the mythological Pandora. Another was planned, but the name was reassigned to another ship:
- , a 24-gun sixth rate launched in 1779. She was sent to capture the Bounty mutineers in 1790 and ran aground in 1791 on the Great Barrier Reef, Queensland.
- HMS Pandora (1780) was the French 14-gun brig, launched in 1780, that the British captured in 1795 and renamed HMS Pandora; she foundered in the North Sea in 1797.
- , an 18-gun launched in 1806 and wrecked in 1811 off the Skaw with the loss 27 men to exposure.[1]
- HMS Pandora, to have been another 18-gun Cruizer-class brig-sloop. She was ordered in 1812, renamed HMS Lynx later that year, and was cancelled in 1818.
- , an 18-gun Cruizer-class brig-sloop launched in 1813, converted to a ship-sloop in 1825, put up for sale in 1827 and sold in 1831.
- , a 3-gun packet brig launched in 1833. She became a coastguard watchvessel in 1857 and was sold in 1862.
- , a wooden gunboat launched in 1859 and sold in 1875 for use as an Arctic expedition ship. She was sold to American explorers in 1878, renamed and sunk by ice in 1881.
- HMS Pandora, a armoured cruiser launched in 1889, renamed in 1890 and sold in 1906.
- , a armoured cruiser launched in 1900 and scrapped in 1913.
- , a depot ship, formerly the civilian Seti. She was renamed HMS Dolphin in 1924 and was sunk by a mine in 1939.
- , a launched in 1929 and sunk at Valletta, Malta in 1942. She was raised in 1943 and broken up in 1957.
See also
References
- Book: Hepper, David J.. 1994. British Warship Losses in the Age of Sail, 1650-1859. Jean Boudriot. Rotherfield. 0-948864-30-3.
Notes and References
- Hepper (1994), p. 135.