HM hired cutter Rose
Between 1793 and 1805, five cutters served the British Royal Navy as hired armed vessels under the designation HM hired cutter Rose:
French Revolutionary Wars
''Rose'' (1793–1801)
- Rose, of 55 tons and armed with eight 3-pounder guns, served under contract between 22 March 1793 and 28 November 1801.
On 26 February 1795 Rose and Lieutenant Walker captured the French privateer Terrible.
On 28 September 1795 Rose, Captain William Walker was passing Capraria on her way from Leghorn to Bastia when at 4:30 am she encountered three French lateen-rigged privateers. Rose had thirteen men and a boy on board, and each of the privateers probably had 40 or more men. Rose was carrying three passengers, one a King's Messenger, and two ladies, and £10,000 in specie. Lieutenant Walker decided to attack the largest of the three privateers, which was a little away from the other two. Rose was able to rake the privateer with two broadsides, each gun being triple shotted. The privateer struck, and Lieutenant Williams ordered her captain not to attempt to escape. He then succeeded in sinking one of the remaining two privateers; the third sailed away. Rose was not in a position to rescue any survivors from the privateer that sank. The privateer that struck had one 6-pounder gun and four 1-pounder swivel guns in her bow, as well as 12 brass blunderbusses on her sides. She had a crew of 42 men, 13 of whom were killed in the action. The privateer that sank had a crew of 56 men, and the one that escaped had a crew of 48 men. Rose had only one man injured. The British battened their prisoners below deck on the privateer and towed her to Bastia, where they arrived two days later. Unfortunately for Lieutenant Walker, for unknown reasons his official letter never made it into the London Gazette and so he did not receive the recognition his action deserved.
On 31 May 1800 the hired cutters Rose, Lieutenant Henry Richardson, and sailed to reconnoitre the creeks and harbours between Cape Barfleur and Cape La Hogue at the behest of Commander Charles Papps Price on at the Îles Saint-Marcouf. At 04:30 they observed a small cutter and set off in chase. An hour later they captured their quarry about three or four leagues NW of Cape Barfleur. She was the French privateer Risque a Tout, armed with two 4-pounder guns and small arms, with a crew of 16 men under the command of M. Jacques Neel. She was only 10 hours out of Cherbourg and had not taken anything.
On 22 November Rose, Lieutenant Richardson, arrived at Portsmouth in a shattered state. The previous day, as she was returning from Marcou, she encountered a French privateer of 10 guns off Dungeness. After a two-hour engagement the French privateer sailed away; Rose was unable to pursue.
''Rose'' (1794–1800)
- Rose, of 96 tons and ten 4-pounder guns, was hired on 22 November 1794.
Rose was under the command of her master, Mr. Richard Stephenson, when she made the following captures in 1798:
On 29 April 1798 Rose captured the Flemish fishing vessel Zoomer.
On 28 May Rose was among the many vessels that shared in the proceeds of the capture of Janus.
Next, many of the same vessels, including Rose, shared in the capture several more Dutch vessels:
Rose was among the vessels that shared in the proceeds of the capture of Adelarde on 18 August.
On 13 October 1800 Rose was under the command of Lieutenant Smith when the Dutch gun vessel De Adder captured her off Wattum in the River Ems.
Napoleonic Wars
''Rose'' (1803–1804)
- Rose, of 52 tons and six 3-pounder guns, served under contract between 16 June 1803 and 12 December 1804.
On 24 June 1803 and Rose captured the French privateer Phoebe. Phoebe, of four guns, two swivel guns, and 33 men, had left Cherbourg some seven days earlier.
''Rose'' (1804–1805)
- Rose, of 44 tons and four 12-pounder carronades, served under contract between 26 May 1804 and 26 June 1805. She was renamed Harriet in 1804.
- Rose, of 104 tons, eight 12-pounder carronades, and two 4-pounder guns, served under contract between 4 July 1804 and 5 March 1805. She was renamed Beaumont in 1804.