The Pickle was also the first ship to bring the news of Nelson's victory to Great Britain, arriving at Falmouth on November 4, 1805. She had been chosen to carry the dispatches of Vice Admiral Collingwood who had taken over after the death of Nelson. After arriving in Falmouth Lapenotiere took a coach to London to deliver the dispatches to the Admiralty, he was promote dto Commodore for his efforts. To this day the Navy's petty officers[?] have an annual Pickle Night dinner, as do many private clubs in the British Commonwealth.
The ship was built in Bermuda, and was originally a civilian vessel named Sting. She struck a shoal at Cadiz and was lost in 1808.
Reference: David Howarth, Trafalgar: The Nelson Touch (Atheneum, 1969).
A later HMS Pickle, a schooner of 3 guns, was involved in the slave trade suppression, and achieved fame for capturing the armed slave ship Voladora off the coast of Cuba on June 5, 1829.
Reference: W.E. Ward, The Royal Navy and the Slavers (Pantheon, 1969), p. 135.
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