Vautour (ship) explained
Numerous vessels have been named Vautour (French for "vulture"):
Privateers
- Vautour was a privateer that captured after a six-hour chase. Vautour was armed with seven 4-pounder guns and two 12-pounder carronades. She was of 130 tons burthen (bm), with a crew of 78 men. She had sailed from Morlaiz on 13 October 1796 and not taken anything.
- was a privateer launched in 1797 at Nantes that the British Royal Navy captured in 1800. She later became the whaler Vulture that a Spanish privateer captured in 1809.
- Vautour, was a privateer from Bordeaux commissioned in July 1797, with 64 men and 10 guns under a Captain Bolle. captured Vautour on 29 March 1798.
- Vautour, was a privateer cutter from an unknown harbour, commissioned in early 1797, that HMS Impetueux captured on 8 March 1797.
- Vautour was a Spanish felucca privateer of one 9-pounder gun and 54 men that captured off Altavella (the eastern point of the island of Santo Domingo) on 10 August 1804.
Two privateers named Vautour appear in a list of 78 Corsairs commissioned in Boulogne during the period 1793-1814, with Captains Durand and Captain Orielle.
Naval vessels
- an 18-gun brig-sloop, captured 1809, commissioned in the Royal Navy 1810, and sunk 1813
- Vautour was an launched in 1795 at Dieppe and belonging to the French Navy. captured her off Cape Finisterre.
- was launched in the 1920s, scuttled in 1942, refloated, and then sunk in an air raid in 1944.
References
- Book: Demerliac, Alain. La Marine de la Révolution: Nomenclature des Navires Français de 1792 A 1799. 1999. Éditions Ancre. 2-906381-24-1. French.
- Book: Norman, Charles Boswell . The Corsairs of France . 1887 . S. Low, Marston, Searle, & Rivington.
- Book: Winfield, Rif. British Warships in the Age of Sail 1793 - 1817: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates. Seaforth. 2008. 1-86176-246-1.