HMS Hastings

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Seven ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Hastings, after the town of Hastings. Another two were planned, but renamed before entering service:

  • was a 32-gun fifth rate launched in 1695 and wrecked in 1697.
  • was a 32-gun fifth rate launched in 1698. She capsized in 1707.
  • was a 44-gun fifth rate launched in 1707, in 1739 and sold in 1744 to become a privateer.
  • was a 44-gun fifth rate originally planned as HMS Endymion, but renamed in 1739 and launched in 1741. She was broken up in 1763.
  • HMS Hastings (1819) was a 74-gun third-rate ship of the line, previously in service as an East Indiaman. She was purchased in 1819, converted to screw propulsion in 1855, used as a coal hulk from 1870 and was sold in 1885.
  • was a 32-gun fifth rate launched in 1821 and broken up in 1855.
  • HMS Hastings (L27) was a Hastings-class sloop launched in 1930 and broken up in 1946.
  • HMS Hastings (1956) was to have been a Rothesay-class frigate. She was transferred to the Royal New Zealand Navy in 1957 and renamed HMNZS Otago, being launched in 1958.
  • HMS Hastings was to have been a Leander-class Batch 2TA frigate. She was renamed HMS Dido before her launch in 1961, and then transferred to New Zealand and renamed HMNZS Southland.
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