French corvette Géographe
Géographe and Naturaliste
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History | |
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France | |
Name | Géographe |
Namesake | Geography |
Builder | Originally Deros, Havre, and at his death, Latch (October 1794), Honfleur |
Laid down | September 1794 |
Launched | 8 June 1800 |
Acquired | August 1800 |
In service | September 1800 |
Fate | Broken up after 6 April 1819 |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | Serpente class |
Displacement | 727 tons |
Tons burthen | 350 tons |
Length | 40.3 m (132 ft) |
Beam | 9.7 m (32 ft) |
Draught | 3.8 m (12 ft) |
Propulsion | Sail |
Armament |
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Géographe was a 20-gun Serpente-class corvette of the French Navy. She was named Uranie in 1797, and renamed Galatée in 1799, still on her building site. Her builder refused to launch her, as he had not been paid to that time. Finally launched in June 1800, she was renamed Géographe on 23 August 1800.
On 19 October 1800, under captain
For some 18 months Naturaliste and Géographe explored the less-known regions of New Holland (Australia), and Van Diemen's Land.[2] On 30 May Baudin made his first major discovery. Baudin named the bay they found that day on the coast of Western Australia Geographe Bay. Later, the cape at the south of the bay was named Cape Naturaliste.[3]
Riedlé died at Timor on 21 October 1801 where he was collecting specimens in the region of Kupang. Lasueur, with
In late 1802 the expedition was at Port Jackson, where the government sold 60 casks of flour and 25 casks of salt meat to Baudin to resupply his two vessels. The supplies permitted Naturaliste to return to France and Géographe to continue her explorations of the Australian coast.[4]
Géographe returned to Le Havre on 23 March 1804, under
After her return her armament was steadily reduced. From 1807 she served as a powder hulk in the Caudran district at Lorient. The next year she became a barracks ship. In October 1811 Géographe replaced Société as the headquarters hulk for Lorient.[1] Géographe was decommissioned in December 1807, but continued in use as a service craft.[1]
Fate
On 6 April 1819 Géographe was reported unserviceable and was struck, and presumably scrapped.[1]
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Model of Géographe now exhibited at the museum Ernest Cognac, in Saint-Martin-de-Ré
Citations
References
- L'Historique de la corvette 1650-1850 : monographie La Créole (1827), p. 31. In the Jean Boudriot collection, Archéologie Navale Française
- Ville de Honfleur: Municipal archives (in French): 2p in-folio: manuscript de Paris dated 6 March 1793 – an 2e de la république signé Monge
- Histoire de la ville de Honfleur: P.P.U. Thomas, 1840, p. 428 de l'édition originale (liste des navires construits à Honfleur de 1793 à 1812)
- Baudin, Nicolas; Cornell, Christine (1974), The journal of post Captain Nicolas Baudin, Commander-in-Chief of the corvettes Géographe and Naturaliste, assigned by order of the government to a voyage of discovery, Adelaide: Libraries Board of South Australia, p. 609, ISBN 0-7243-0043-0
- Fornasiero, F. Jean, Peter Monteath, & John West-Sooby (2004) Encountering Terra Australis: The Australian Voyages of Nicolas Baudin and Matthew Flinders. (Wakefield Press). ISBN 978-1862548749
- Roche, Jean-Michel (2005). Dictionnaire des bâtiments de la flotte de guerre française de Colbert à nos jours 1 1671 – 1870. p. 224. OCLC 165892922.
- Winfield, Rif & Stephen S. Roberts (2015) French Warships in the Age of Sail 1786 – 1861: Design Construction, Careers and Fates. (Seaforth Publishing). ISBN 9781848322042