HMS Acasta

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HMS Acasta was a 48-gun fifth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy, launched in England in 1797.

The Historical Acasta

Highlights of Acasta’s Royal Navy service include the following:

Under Capt. Edward Fellowes 1800 -- Captured Spanish Juno 1802 -- Destroyed French privateer Victoire

Under Capt. James A. Wood 1803 -- Captured French privateer Avanture , with two prizes Royal Edward and St. Mary’s Planter 1806 -- Participated with in the burning of two French ships and the capture of a third off Santo Domingo

Under Capt. P. Beaver 1809 -- Served as command ship for the landing of 4500 troops on Martinique 1809 -- Served as Commodore Beaver’s flagship in operation to blockade French naval forces and reduce French forts on Iles des Saintes

Under Capt. Alexander R. Kerr 1812 -- Captured the American brig Federal and re-took the schooner Blonde; Participated in the capture of the American privateer Snapper, the American schooner Farmer’s Fancy, the letter of marque brigs Harold and Porcupine; 1814 -- Captured sloop Diana and Jane, schooners Providence, Stephanie and Hazard 1815 -- Participated in chase of the American frigate USN Constitution. and in the retaking of Levant, one of Constitution’s prizes

Acasta returned to England in July 1815, and was broken up in 1821.

SPOILER WARNING: Plot or ending details for "The Fortune of War," “Treason’s Harbour,” and “The Hundred Days” follow.

In the Canon

Acasta is one of a series of ships in the Aubrey-Maturin series whose commands are promised to Captain Jack Aubrey by the Admiralty, but are instead ultimately given to other, more influential officers. Another such ship, promised to Aubrey but never delivered, is the fictional frigate HMS Blackwater.

The Admiralty’s promise of Acasta is first made to Aubrey in The Fortune of War. She is described by Aubrey to his friend Maturin as a “forty-gun frigate, pretty well the heaviest in the service … And the finest sailer of the lot, on a bowline. Two points off the winds, she could give even dear Surprise foretopgallant, at least. A true, copper-bottomed plum, Stephen….”

Later, in The Surgeon’s Mate, Aubrey learns that Acasta has, in his absence while a prisoner-of-war in Boston, been given to Capt. “Robert Kerr.” Acasta re-appears later in the Aubrey-Maturin series near the end of The Hundred Days, as part of Admiral Lord Barmouth’s squadron at Gibraltar.

Source for historical data: Michael Phillips Ships of the Old Navy, http://www.ageofnelson.org/MichaelPhillips/index.html

--Paulster13 06:35, 7 November 2007 (GMT)

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