HMS York explained
Ten ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS York after the city of York, the county seat of Yorkshire, on the River Ouse.
- , 52-gun launched 1654 as Marston Moor; renamed York upon the Restoration 1660; ran aground and wrecked 1703
- , 60-gun fourth rate launched 1706; sunk 1751 at Sheerness as a breakwater
- , 60-gun fourth rate launched 1753; broken up 1772
- , 12-gun sloop-of-war Betsy captured from the Americans; purchased into the Royal Navy March 1777; captured by the French, 1778; recovered by the British; recaptured by the French, July 1779; renamed Duc DYork; armed with eighteen, 4-pounder guns; broken up 1783[1]
- HMS York (1779), was the former East Indiaman Pigot, which the Royal Navy purchased in 1779 for use as storeship in the West Indies; sold in 1781 to local buyers in India.
- , 64-gun third rate, intended to be the East Indiaman Royal Admiral; purchased on the stocks 1796 and converted; wrecked 1804
- , 74-gun third rate launched 1807; converted to a convict ship 1819; broken up 1854
- , a former merchant ship used as an armed boarding steamer in the First World War
- , launched 1928; damaged by Italian motor launches and scuttled in Crete May 1941; scrapped 1952
- , Type 42 destroyer launched 1982; Decommissioned in 2012
Battle Honours
See also
References
- Demerliac, Alain (1996) La Marine De Louis XVI: Nomenclature Des Navires Français De 1774 À 1792. (Nice: Éditions OMEGA).
Notes and References
- Demerliac (1996), p.71, #445.
- Web site: Title unknown . dead . http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20100909235610/http://www.royalnavy.mod.uk/operations-and-support/surface-fleet/type-42-destroyers/hms-york/history/ . 9 September 2010 .