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HMS Badger

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Eight ships and one shore establishment of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Badger, after the Eurasian badger:

Ships

Shore establishment

  • HMS Badger was commissioned in 1939 as the headquarters of the Flag Officer In Charge, Harwich. The site was decommissioned in 1946, but the facility remained an emergency port control until 1992.

Hired armed vessels

  • His Majesty's hired armed cutter Badger shared in the prize money for Dutch vessels captured at the Vlieter Incident on 30 August 1799.[1]
  • His Majesty's hired armed cutter Badger, of ten 6-pounder guns and 107 3594 tons (bm), served the Royal Navy under contract between 16 November 1811 and 13 May 1814.[2]

Excise cutter

  • His Majesty's Excise Cutter Badger was recorded as capturing the French privateer lugger Calaifen between Folkstone and Dungeness on 5 December 1798.[3]
  • His Majesty's Excise Cutter Badger brought into Yarmouth on about 16 December 1803 a French privateer armed with one swivel gun and having a crew of 35 men.[4]

Subterranean vessel

  • During the summer of 2012, the inflatable "HMS Badger 1" was utilised by a group of British cavers to cross various flooded stretches of caves on the Vercors Plateau of France. The vessel appears to have been retired from cave exploration, however its operators have yet to comment on whether a "HMS Badger 2" could be launched on the Vercors or in a similar environment in the future.[5]

Replica

  • HMS Badger is a 35 ft replica gunboat, converted from a Great Lakes lifeboat and launched in 2001. She operates from Penetanguishene on the Canadian side of Lake Huron.

Notes

  1. ^ "No. 15533". The London Gazette. 16 November 1802.
  2. ^ Winfield (2008), p. 395.
  3. ^ "No. 15088". The London Gazette. 11 December 1798.
  4. ^ Lloyd's List, no. 4931.
  5. ^ "Journey to the centre of the earth: British climbers drop nearly 4,000 feet into cave once dubbed 'world's deadliest' to capture haunting images of world within a world". The Daily Mail. 7 September 2012. Retrieved 2013-01-13.

References