North Sea and Baltic
Under Trollope, Glatton first served in the English Channel where she engaged a French squadron on 15 July 1796.[8] The French squadron consisted of a 50-gun ship, five frigates (two of 36 guns and three of 28), a brig, and a cutter. Glatton drove the French vessels into Flushing, having lost only two men wounded, one of whom died later, and despite having at times been surrounded by the enemy and exchanging fire at less than 20 yards.[8] The French vessels may have included Brutus (a 74-gun cut down to 46-50 guns), Incorruptible (50 guns), Magicienne (32 guns), and Républicaine, and one French vessel apparently sunk in Flushing harbour. (It was in this action that Captain Strangeways of the Royal Marines sustained the wound of which he died shortly thereafter, and which the illustration above commemorates.) In March–April 1797, Trollope kept Glatton's crew from joining the Nore mutiny. By threatening to fire on the 64-gun HMS Overyssel (1795) and the 40-gun HMS Beaulieu (1791), which were in open mutiny, he convinced their crews to return to duty.[9] In August Captain Charles Cobb took command.
In April and May 1798 Glatton participated, with many other vessels, in the capture of sundry Dutch doggers, schuyts, and fishing vessels.[10] On 4 and 5 May Glatton was among the vessels that captured 12 outward-bound Greenland ships. The other vessels included the hired armed cutters Fox and Marshall Cobourg, though most were much larger and included HMS Monmouth (1796), HMS Ganges (1782), HMS Director (1784), HMS America (1777), among others.[11] On 28 May Glatton, HMS Monarch (1765), Ganges, America, HMS Veteran (1787), HMS Belliqueux (1780), Director, HMS Apollo (1799), the hired armed cutters Fox the First, and Rose when they captured Janus. All the British vessels were part of the fleet under the command of Admiral Lord Duncan.[12] Next, many of the same vessels, including Glatton, HMS Proserpine (1798), Fox the First and Rose, captured several more Dutch vessels:
On 18 August 1798, Glatton, Veteran, Belliqueux, Monmouth, HMS Kent (1798), Ganges, HMS Prince Frederick (1796), HMS Diomede (1798), the sloop HMS Busy (1797), and the hired armed cutter Rose captured Adelarde.[13] Glatton was with other ships from Duncan's fleet, including HMS Astraea (1781), HMS Scorpion (1785), HMS Cruizer (1797), the hired armed lugger Rover, and cutters Liberty and Hazard, when they captured Harmenie on 21 April 1799.[14] Glatton was in company with Kent, HMS Romney (1762), HMS Isis (1774) and HMS Ranger (1794) when they captured the Dutch hoy Johanna on 16 May 1799.[15]
Then in August 1799, Glatton participated in the Anglo-Russian invasion of Holland. The expedition was under the command of Admiral Adam Duncan and the Duke of York. Some 250 craft of all sizes transported 17,000 troops from Margate Roads and the Downs across the Channel on 13 August. Due to bad weather it was 21 August before they anchored off Kijkduin. The next day Vice Admiral Mitchell sent a summons to Vice Admiral Samuel Story, calling on him to surrender his fleet. When he declined, the Duke of York landed his army near Den Helder on 27 August under covering fire from the fleet. Den Helder was occupied the following day when the garrison evacuated the town. The expedition then took possession of 13 old warships laid up in ordinary. On 30 August, Glatton, HMS Romney (1762), HMS Isis (1774), Veteran, HMS Ardent (1796), Belliqueux, Monmouth and Overyssel, the Russian ship Mistisloff and the frigates, anchored in line ahead in the Vlieter and Mitchel again summoned Story.[16] This time Story agreed to surrender his squadron of 12 modern warships. The Royal Navy purchased 11 of these. The Dutch surrender, without any resistance, became known as the Vlieter Incident. As a result of the surrender, Duncan's fleet was awarded prize money, in which Glatton shared.[17]
On 15 January 1800 a court martial on board Glatton, in Yarmouth Roads, tried Lieutenant James Watson, and the surviving officers and crew for the loss on the Cockle Sands of the 12-gun brig HMS Mastiff (1797) as she left Yarmouth Roads via the Northern Passage for Leith. Eight of the crew had been lost in the incident. The court absolved Watson, his officers, and men for the loss of the vessel, and praised their conduct after the wrecking.
In November, Captain George Stephen took command of Glatton, followed in 1801 by Captain William Bligh, formerly of HMS Bounty. Bligh was only captain for about a month, but during that month he sailed her to the Baltic where Glatton participated in the Battle of Copenhagen on 2 April 1801. The battle cost her 17 killed and 34 wounded.[19] In 1847 the Admiralty would award the Naval General Service Medal with clasp "Copenhagen 1801" to all surviving claimants from the action.[1] Glatton was next under Captain William Nowell and then under Captain William Birchall. In August 1801 she was fitted at Sheerness for a guardship in protected waters. Captain John Ferris Devonshire took command that same month.
- Hoop (6 June);
- Stadt Embden (11 June);
- Neptune (12 June);
- Rose and Endrast (14 June);
- Hoop (15 June); and
- Vrow Dorothea (16 June).[12]