HMS Mary (1650), commissioned as Speaker and renamed in 1660, was a 50-gun frigate, rebuilt in 1688, and wrecked in 1703, that was the prototype for the Speaker-class
HMS Mary of Rouen was a ship captured in 1626 and listed until 1627.
HMS Mary Thomas was a ship captured in 1545 and listed until 1546.
HMS Maryton was a
Ton-class coastal minesweeper launched in 1958 and sold for scrapping in 1969.
HMS Mary Willoughby was a ship listed in 1535. She was captured by the Scots in 1536, but recaptured in 1547. She was rebuilt in 1551 and sold in 1573.
Royal Mary, of the Royal Scots Navy, launched in 1696, transferred to the Royal Navy at the Union in 1707, when she was renamed
HMS Glasgow (1707), and sold in 1719
His Majesty's Revenue cutter Mary. On 25 July 1797 she captured a small French
privateerchasse maree off
Ballycotton. The privateer was the Acheron, of 28 tons, out of
Morlaix. Acheron was armed with one 8-pounder carronade and had a crew of 40 men. She had just arrived off Ballycotton but had already taken three vessels, which however the British had all recaptured. The Revenue brig Beresford arrived just as Mary took Acheron.[1]
This article includes a
list of ships with the same or similar names. If an
internal link for a specific ship led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended ship article, if one exists.
HMS Mary (1650), commissioned as Speaker and renamed in 1660, was a 50-gun frigate, rebuilt in 1688, and wrecked in 1703, that was the prototype for the Speaker-class
HMS Mary of Rouen was a ship captured in 1626 and listed until 1627.
HMS Mary Thomas was a ship captured in 1545 and listed until 1546.
HMS Maryton was a
Ton-class coastal minesweeper launched in 1958 and sold for scrapping in 1969.
HMS Mary Willoughby was a ship listed in 1535. She was captured by the Scots in 1536, but recaptured in 1547. She was rebuilt in 1551 and sold in 1573.
Royal Mary, of the Royal Scots Navy, launched in 1696, transferred to the Royal Navy at the Union in 1707, when she was renamed
HMS Glasgow (1707), and sold in 1719
His Majesty's Revenue cutter Mary. On 25 July 1797 she captured a small French
privateerchasse maree off
Ballycotton. The privateer was the Acheron, of 28 tons, out of
Morlaix. Acheron was armed with one 8-pounder carronade and had a crew of 40 men. She had just arrived off Ballycotton but had already taken three vessels, which however the British had all recaptured. The Revenue brig Beresford arrived just as Mary took Acheron.[1]
This article includes a
list of ships with the same or similar names. If an
internal link for a specific ship led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended ship article, if one exists.