'HMS ''Hermione''' was a 32-gun
fifth-rate frigate of the
Royal Navy, launched in
1782, notorious for the
mutiny which took place aboard her.
In the
French Revolutionary Wars, she served in the
West Indies, and in
1797 — the year of the
Spithead and Nore mutinies — Captain
Hugh Pigot was posted to command her. Pigot was a ruthless disciplinarian who meted out severe and arbitrary punishment. On
September 21,
1797, Pigot ordered the topsails to be reefed, and dissatisfied with the speed of the operation, gave the order that the last man off the yard should be flogged. In their panic to get down, three young sailors fell to their deaths and their bodies ordered immediately thrown overboard. When other sailors complained, Pigot ordered them flogged.
The crew
mutinied that night, killing Pigot and eight other officers. It was one of the most violent mutinies in Royal Navy history.
The mutineers sailed for
La Guaira,
Venezuela, where on
September 27,
1797, they handed the ship over to the
Spanish. At first the mutineers claimed that they had set the officers adrift in the ship's boat (as in the
mutiny on the ''Bounty'' eight years previously), but the true story soon got out and Sir
Hyde Parker, commander of the
West Indies station, ordered the mutineers to be hunted down. In all, 33 of the mutineers were captured and court-martialled and 24 were hanged.
''Hermione'', renamed ''Santa Cecilia'' by the Spanish, remained at
Puerto Caballo until
October 25,
1799, when 100 men from
HMS ''Surprise'' led by Captain Edward Hamilton cut her out, killing 119. ''Hermione'' was renamed ''Retaliation'', then renamed again in
1802 to ''Retribution''. She was broken up in 1805.
See also
★ See
HMS ''Hermione'' for other ships of this name.
References
★ Leonard F. Guttridge, ''Mutiny: A History of Naval Insurrection,''
United States Naval Institute Press, 1992, ISBN 0-87021-281-8
★ Lincoln P. Paine, ''Ships of the World: An Historical Encyclopedia'', Houghton Mifflin, 1997, ISBN 0-395-71556-3.
★ Dudley Pope, ''The Black Ship'', Secker and Warburg, 1988, ISBN 0-436-37753-5.