Bonetta class sloop

Class overview
Operators:  Royal Navy
Preceded by: Cruizer (1752) class
Built: 1755-1756
In commission: 1756-1778
Completed: 3
Lost: 1
General characteristics (common design)
Type: Sloop-of-war
Tons burthen: 220 4394 bm
Length:
  • 85 ft 10 in (26.2 m) (gundeck)
  • 70 ft 0 in (21.3 m) (keel)
Beam: 24 ft 4 in (7.4 m)
Depth of hold: 10 ft 10 in (3.30 m) (vessels without platform in hold)
Sail plan: Snow rig
Complement: 100
Armament:
  • 10 × 6-pounder (short) guns;
  • also 12 x ½-pounder swivel guns

The Bonetta class was a class of three sloops of wooden construction built for the Royal Navy between 1755 and 1756. All three were built by contract with commercial builders to a common design prepared by Thomas Slade, the Surveyor of the Navy.

All three were ordered on 9 July 1755, assigned names on 29 July 1755, and were built as two-masted snow-rigged vessels.

Vessels

Name Ordered Builder Launched Notes
Bonetta 9 July 1755 Henry Bird,
Globe Stairs, Rotherhithe
4 February 1756 Sold 1 November 1776 at Woolwich.
Merlin 9 July 1755 John Quallett,
Rotherhithe
20 March 1756 Captured 23 August 1778 by the French
in the Mediterranean.
(Recaptured 26 August 1780 by British privateer Fame and burnt).
Spy 9 July 1755 Robert Inwood, Rotherhithe 3 February 1756 Sold 3 September 1773 at Sheerness.

References

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