For the building at the Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston, Ontario, see HMCS Stone Frigate.
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French warships attacking Diamond Rock off Martinique in 1805.
A stone frigate is a naval establishment on land.
'Stone frigate' is an informal term which has its origin in Britain's Royal Navy (RN), after its use of Diamond Rock, an island off Martinique, as a 'sloop of war' to harass the French in 1803–1804. The Royal Navy was prohibited from ruling over land, so the land was commissioned as a ship. The command of this first stone frigate was given to Commodore Hood's first lieutenant, James Wilkes Maurice, who, with cannon taken off the Commodore's ship, manned it with a crew of 120 until its capture by the French in the Battle of Diamond Rock in 1805.
Until the late 19th century, the Royal Navy housed training and other support facilities in hulks; old wooden ships of the line, moored in ports as receiving ships, depot ships, or floating barracks. The Admiralty regarded shore accommodation as expensive, and liable to lead to indiscipline.
As ships began to use increasingly complex technology during the late 19th century, these facilities became too large to continue afloat, and were moved to shore establishments while keeping their former names. An early 'stone frigate' was the engineering training college HMS Marlborough (1855), moved ashore to Portsmouth in 1880. The gunnery school continued to be named HMS Excellent after its move ashore to Whale Island in 1891. By World War I there were about twenty-five 'stone frigates' in the United Kingdom.
Under Section 87 of the Naval Discipline Act 1866 (29 & 30 Vict. c. 109),[1] the provisions of the act only applied to officers and men of the Royal Navy borne on the books of a warship. When shore establishments began to become more common, it was necessary to allocate the title of the establishment to an actual vessel which became the nominal depot ship for the men allocated to the establishment, and thus ensured they were subject to the provisions of the act.[2] By example, in the Imperial fortress colony of Bermuda, the depot ship permanently berthed at the Royal Naval Dockyard from 1857 to 1897 was HMS Terror, which was replaced by the former troopship HMS Malabar (renamed HMS Terror in 1901). The former HMS Malabar was sold in 1918, following which the name HMS Malabar was applied to the Casemates Naval Barracks in the Royal Naval Dockyard as a stone frigate (under command of the Captain in Charge of the dockyard) to which all shore personnel at Bermuda, whether belonging to the dockyard, to outlying naval facilities (such as Admiralty House, Bermuda, Royal Naval Air Station Bermuda, or the Royal Naval wireless station (from 1961, NRS Bermuda) at Daniel's Head), or to minor vessels assigned to the dockyard for local use, were administratively assigned. As a consequence, HMS Malabar was often used interchangeably with HM Dockyard Bermuda or Royal Naval Dockyard Bermuda, and has been often mistaken as referring only to specific subordinate naval facilities in Bermuda, such as the wireless station at Daniel's Head or the Royal Naval Air Station. After the Bermuda dockyard was reduced to a base in the 1950s, the part that continued to operate as a naval base was commissioned as HMS Malabar until 1995.[3]
The use of stone frigates continues in the Royal Navy and some other navies of the Commonwealth of Nations, including the Royal Canadian Navy, the Indian Navy, the Royal Australian Navy, and the Royal New Zealand Navy.
See also
[edit]
Ascension Island, formerly called HMS Ascension
Coastal artillery
HMCS Stone Frigate
KNM Harald Haarfagre [no]—Formerly Madla Camp; named after the coastal defence ship HNoMS Harald Haarfagre; other Norwegian shore establishments are styled as forts or bases, not ships.
^Warlow, Ben (2000). Shore Establishments of the Royal Navy. Liskeard, Cornwall: Maritime Books. p. 6. ISBN 0-907771-73-4.
^Stranack, Royal Navy, Lieutenant-Commander B. Ian D (1977). The Andrew and the Onions: The Story of the Royal Navy in Bermuda, 1795–1975. Bermuda: Island Press Ltd., Bermuda, 1977 (1st Edition); Bermuda Maritime Museum Press, Royal Naval Dockyard Bermuda, Ireland Island, Sandys, Bermuda, 1990 (2nd Edition). ISBN 9780921560036.
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Royal Navy shore establishments
Current
Naval bases
HMNB Clyde
HMNB Devonport
HMNB Portsmouth
HMS Jufair
Stone frigates
BRNC Dartmouth
CTCRM Lympstone
HMS Collingwood
HMS Drake
HMS Excellent
HMS Nelson
HMS Raleigh
HMS Sultan
HMS Temeraire
Institute of Naval Medicine
Defence Diving School
Royal Marines bases
RM Bickleigh
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RM Condor
RM Norton Manor
RM Poole
RM Stonehouse
RM Tamar
RM Instow
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RNAS Culdrose
Predannack Airfield
RNAS Merryfield
RNAS Yeovilton
HMS Gannet
Royal Naval Reserves
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HMS Eaglet
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HMS President
HMS Scotia
HMS Sherwood
HMS Vivid
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Other
Navy Command Headquarters
RNAD Coulport
British Defence Singapore Support Unit
UK Joint Logistics Support Base
Former
Home
HMS Abastor
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HMS Badger
HMS Daedalus II
HM Dockyard Chatham
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HM Dockyard Erith
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HM Dockyard Portland
HM Dockyard Rosyth
HMS Cambridge
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HMS Ferret
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HM Fort Roughs
HMS Forward (1939)
HMS Flycatcher
HMS Ganges
HMS Harrier
HM Holmrook Hall
HMS Imperieuse
HMS Lochinvar
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HMS King Alfred (1939)
Scapa Flow
HMS Newt
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Port HHZ
RM Turnchapel
RNAD Broughton Moor
DM Crombie
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HM Victualling Yard Royal Clarence
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List of air stations of the Royal Navy
Overseas
Grand River Naval Depot
HM Naval Yard Penetanguishene
HM Naval Shipyards York
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HM Dockyard Bermuda
HM Dockyard Bombay
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HM Dockyard Jamaica
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HM Dockyard Madras
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HM Naval Yard Garden Island
HMRND Esquimalt
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HMRND Kingston
HM Dockyard Malta
Auckland
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HMS Tamar
HM Dockyard Antigua
Navy Hall
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Royal Naval Air Stations
Current
RNAS Culdrose (HMS Seahawk) (1947–)
Predannack Airfield (1959–)
RNAS Merryfield (1956–1958, 1960–1961, 1972–)
RNAS Yeovilton (HMS Heron) (1940–)
Former UK
A
Abbotsinch (1943–1963)
Angle (HMS Goldcrest) (1943)
Anthorn (HMS Nuthatch) (1944–1958)
Arbroath (HMS Condor) (1940–1971)
Ayr (HMS Wagtail) (1944–1946)
B
Ballyhalbert (HMS Corncrake) (1945)
Ballykelly (HMS Sealion) (1945–1971)
Bramcote (1946–1958)
Brawdy (HMS Goldcrest) (1946–1971)
Bungay (HMS Europa III) (1945–1946)
Burscough (HMS Ringtail) (1943–1946)
Bush Barn (1944)
C
Campbeltown (HMS Landrail II) (1940–1945)
Charlton Horethorne (HMS Heron II) (1943–1945)
Cowdray Park (1941–1945)
Crail (HMS Jackdaw) (1940–1947)
Culham (HMS Hornbill) (1944–1953)
D
Dale (HMS Goldcrest) (1943–1948)
Donibristle (HMS Merlin) (1939–1959)
Dounreay (HMS Tern II) (1944–1954)
Drem (HMS Nighthawk) (1945–1946)
Dundee (HMS Condor II) (1941–1944)
Dunino (HMS Jackdaw II) (1942–1946)
E
East Haven (HMS Peewit) (1943–1946)
Eastleigh (HMS Raven) (1939–1946)
Eglinton (HMS Gannet & HMS Sea Eagle) (1943–1963)
Evanton (1944–1948)
F–G
Fearn (HMS Owl) (1942–1946)
Ford (HMS Peregrine) (1939–1940, 1945–1948, 1950–1958)
Gosport (HMS Siskin) (1945–1956)
Grimsetter (HMS Robin) (1943–1945)
H
Haldon (HMS Heron II) (1941–1943)
Halesworth (HMS Sparrowhawk) (1945–1946)
Hatston (HMS Sparrowhawk) (1939–1945)
Henstridge (HMS Dipper) (1943–1946, 1959–1954)
Hinstock (HMS Godwit) (1942–1947)
I–K
Inskip (HMS Nightjar) (1943–1946)
Kirkistown (HMS Corncrake II) (1945–1946)
L
Lawrenny Ferry (HMS Daedalus II) (1942–1943)
Lee-on-Solent (HMS Daedalus & HMS Ariel) (1939–1996)
Limavady (1945–19??)
Lossiemouth (HMS Fulmar) (1945–1972)
Ludham (HMS Flycatcher) (1944–1945)
Lympne (HMS Buzzard & HMS Daedalus II) (1939–1940)