
Last modified: 2011-03-26 by rob raeside
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![[HMS Trincomalee]](../images/g/gb~trin.gif) image by Clay Moss, 30 January 2011
image by Clay Moss, 30 January 2011
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HMS Trincomalee is the oldest ship afloat in the United Kingdom. (Possibly 
the second oldest in the world after USS Constitution.) She was built in Bombay 
as a 38 gun frigate in 1817 and is now preserved in Hartlepool (north-east 
England) as the central attraction in the maritime heritage area. See website at
http://www.hms-trincomalee.co.uk/index.php. She was granted a special Blue 
Ensign, first hoisted on 14 December 2005, by Ministry of Defence warrant of 20 
September 2005. The badge designed by Commander Bruce Nicolls OBE, RN, is based 
on the seal of the HMS Trincomalee Trust. It is not reversed on the other side 
of the ensign, and the ship "sails" towards the fly on the obverse side, and 
towards the hoist on the reverse side.
Trincomalee was to have been 
scraped in 1897 but was bought by W. Cobb to replace the training ship 
Foudroyant, which had just been wrecked. After conversion she was re-named 
Foudroyant in 1902 and served as a training ship until 1986. Between 1950 and 
1986 she flew the Blue Ensign of T.S.Foudroyant, she flew the Blue Ensign of 
Foudroyant. Restoration to her present condition was carried out by the 
Foudroyant Trust, which became the HMS Trincomalee Trust in July 1992.
David Prothero, 30 January 2011, 1 February 2011