Sixteen ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Mermaid after the mermaid:
HMS Mermaid (1545) was a galley captured in 1545 and listed until 1563.
HMS Mermaid (1651) was a 24-gun ship launched in 1651, rebuilt as a 32-gun fifth rate in 1689, rebuilt again in 1707 and broken up in 1734.
HMS Mermaid (1692) was an 8-gun fireship captured in 1692 and burnt by accident in 1693.
HMS Mermaid was to have been a 24-gun sixth rate. She was renamed HMS Kennington in 1735 and launched in 1736.
HMS Mermaid was a 54-gun fourth rate launched in 1708 as HMS Ruby. She was renamed HMS Mermaid in 1744 and was sold in 1748.
HMS Mermaid (1749) was a 24-gun sixth-rate frigate launched in 1749 and wrecked in 1760.
HMS Mermaid (1761) was a 28-gun sixth-rate frigate launched in 1761 and wrecked during combat in 1778.
HMS Mermaid (1782) was a 32-gun fifth-rate frigate launched in 1784 and broken up in 1815.
HMS Mermaid (1798) was a 1-gun gunvessel purchased in 1798 and sold in 1800.
HMS Mermaid (1817) was a cutter built at Howrah in 1816, purchased by the Australian Government in 1817 for use as a survey vessel. Wrecked off Cairns in 1829.
HMS Mermaid (1825) was a 46-gun fifth-rate frigate launched in 1825, used as a powder hulk from 1850, lent to the war department in 1863 and broken up by 1875.
HMS Mermaid (1853) was a coastguard vessel purchased in 1853 and sold in 1890.
HMS Mermaid (1898) was a Mermaid-class destroyer launched in 1898 and sold in 1919.
HMS Mermaid (U30) was a modified Black Swan-class sloop launched in 1943. She was transferred to the German Navy in 1959 and renamed Scharnhorst, was hulked for damage control training between 1974 and 1989, and was towed to be broken up in 1990.
HMS Mermaid (M1184) was a Ton-class minesweeper launched in 1954 as HMS Sullington. She was renamed HMS Mermaid on her conversion to a survey vessel in 1965. She was sold in 1970.
HMS Mermaid (F76) was a frigate, built for the Ghana Navy as Black Star but cancelled, launched in 1966 but unused until purchased by the Royal Navy in 1972. Sold to the Royal Malaysian Navy as KD Hang Tuah in 1977, later refitted as a training ship.
Navy have been named HMSMermaid after the mermaid: HMSMermaid (1545) was a galley captured in 1545 and listed until 1563. HMSMermaid (1651) was a 24-gun...
being purchased by the Royal Navy in 1972. She served for five years as HMSMermaid (F76) before being purchased by Malaysia, where she replaced another...
career in the Royal Naval Reserve. She was sunk in a collision with HMSMermaid on 20 September 1976 whilst en route to Hamburg for an official visit...
frigate HMSMermaid from the Royal Navy to replace the decommissioned Hang Tuah. The ship was also named KD Hang Tuah, but retained HMSMermaid's pennant...
the ship left port, the sloop HMSMermaid and RAF aircraft shadowed her. Later, the destroyer HMS Cheviot relieved Mermaid. Each day during the voyage,...
HMS Milford 1695 HMS Arundel 1695 HMS Rye 1696 HMS Scarborough 1696 HMS Looe (i) 1696 HMS Lynn 1696 HMS Fowey 1696 HMS Southsea Castle (i) 1696 HMS Gosport...
surveying expedition departed Sydney on 22 December 1817 on board the cutter HMSMermaid. On board were King, his two master's mates Frederick Bedwell and John...
while part of an expedition conducted by Captain Phillip Parker King in HMSMermaid. The generic name, Chlamydosaurus, is derived from the Ancient Greek...
forces in their War of Independence, during which he was captured when HMSMermaid was driven ashore on the Maryland coast at Assateague Island near the...
by Philip Parker King, the first European to sight the island, aboard HMSMermaid, while exploring the area in 1818. King named the island after the ship's...