HMS Biter (1804)

HMS Biter was a 12-gun Archer-class gun-brig of the Royal Navy. She was wrecked in 1805.

Career
Lieutenant George Thomas Wingate commissioned Biter in June 1804.

On 2 November HMS Adder (1804) grounded on Romney Flats, about three miles east of Dungeness Light. She did not break up and on 14 November Captain Bolton of HMS Aimable (1782) sent Biter and the bomb HMS Vesuvius (1776) to Romney Roads to attempt to salvage Adder. They were successful in getting her off and she came away under her own sails.

Biter shared with HMS Autumn (1801) and the gun-brigs HMS Manly (1804) and HMS Pincher (1804), in the salvage money for George which they retook in February 1805. It was believed that George had been sailing from Bristol to London when a French privateer had captured her and taken her into Boulogne, where her cargo was landed. Autumn and the brigs recaptured George as she was on her way to Calais and they sent her into Dover.

Biter was part of the squadron under the command of Captain Honyman in HMS Leda (1800) that on 24 April captured seven armed schuyts in an action within pistol-shot of the shore batteries on Cap Gris Nez. Biter does not appear to have taken part in the action, but she did share in the prize money.

Fate
Biter was wrecked on 10 November 1805 off Étaples, on France's north coast. She was on blockade duty when during a dark night she ran aground on a beach. Shortly after daybreak she was able to get herself free, but she had been seen. French troops arrived and opened small arms fire. Shore batteries joined in. Biter returned fire, but a shell penetrated her deck forward and went out her bottom without exploding. Water rushed in through the hole the shell had left and her crew ran her aground to avoid sinking.