1812
Two days after General Armstrong captured Queen, it captured Lucy & Alida (captained by Deamy), a ship sailing from Suriname to Liverpool with dry goods. However, the letter of marque Barton of Liverpool recaptured Lucy & Alida.[4][a] The American privateer Revenge of Norfolk later captured Lucy & Alinda.[9][10]
On 19 November 1812 General Armstrong captured Sir Sidney Smith as Sir Sidney Smith, Knight, master, was sailing from London and Madeira to Berbice. The news item in Lloyd's List stated that General Armstrong was armed with 19 guns.[11] Sir Sidney Smith foundered off Nantucket,[12][b]
On 29 November General Armstrong unsuccessfully attacked Maxwell off the Brazil coast.[13] General Armstrong also captured the brig Union, originally sailing from Guernsey to Saint Kitts, and sent to New York after her capture.[14]
1813
In 1813 General Armstrong captured and burned an unnamed schooner and an unnamed brig that were sailing to France.[15][16]
On 20 March 1813 William, Cunningham, master, was on her way from St John's New Brunswick, to Barbados when General Armstrong captured William within sight of Barbados. General Armstrong took William into Puerto Rico. HMS Spider, Captain Willcock, claimed her there. The authorities gave William up and she arrived at St Thomas's on 19 April.[17]
1814
The General Armstrong captured multiple ships throughout 1814. In January she captured the sloop Resolution, which was sailing from Jersey for Lisbon with linen and paper, seizing her cargo and releasing her. That month General Armstrong also captured and scuttled the brig Phoebe, which sailed from Forney for Madeira laden with butter and potatoes.[18]
On 19 April 1814 General Armstrong captured the eighteen-gun British letter of marque Fanny and its 45-man crew off the coast of Ireland. Fanny had been sailing from Maranhão to Liverpool. The engagement lasted about an hour and was described as a "severe" close-range action fought within "pistol shot range." Eventually the British struck their colors after several men were killed or wounded. The General Armstrong's crew lost one killed and six wounded; Fanny lost a like number out of a much smaller crew. The British third-rate ship Sceptre later recaptured Fanny.
On 26 April 1814 Lloyd's List reported the General Armstrong was seized and the crew taken prisoner when she put into Dunkirk.[20] However, the crew was later released and General Armstrong allowed to sail.[21] On 25 June 1814 General Armstrong captured the Portuguese ship Mercury but allowed her to proceed as she was neutral.[22] On 19 July 1814 General Armstrong captured the sloop Henrietta, which was bound to Chesapeake with stores, and sent her to Egg Harbor.[23]
According to Niles' Register, during the rest of 1814 the General Armstrong captured various other prizes:
- brig Duke of York, of Greenock, captured and burnt
- sloop George, laden with pork, captured off the Ireland coast and sunk
- brig Swift, in ballast, captured and made into a cartel ship
- brig Defiance, laden with whiskey, butter, and bread and bound for Lisbon, captured and burnt
- brig Friendship, laden as above, captured and burnt
- brig Stag, laden with a full and very valuable cargo of dry goods, captured and divested of some articles and burnt in sight of a British frigate, brig, and schooner
- ship Dorcas, out of Anguilla, captured by the General Armstrong's boats and sunk
- three other very valuable prizes, captured, manned by prize crews, and ordered into port.[23]
Of these last three ships listed in Niles' Register, one may have been Fanny. Another may have been the Sir Alexander Ball, which General Armstrong captured after a short engagement some 80 miles (130 km) west of Lisbon. Sir Alexander Ball had six men wounded, two probably fatally. Champlin sent her crew into Lisbon, and sent her with a prize crew for America. However, HMS Niemen recaptured Sir Alexander Ball and by 20 July 1814 she was at Halifax, Nova Scotia, being condemned as a prize to Niemen.
Of the prizes the General Armstrong captured and ordered to port, about a third were recaptured. Battle-damaged and short-manned, they were fairly easily recaptured. Niles' Register details the plight of one such captured vessel:
Shifting Owners! The prize schooner to the General Armstrong (lately arrived at an Eastern Port) was formerly the Matilda, American privateer. She was captured on the Brazil coast, some months since, by the Lion, British privateer ship of 28 guns, after severe action, recaptured going into England by the late U.S. Brig Argus, re-captured going into France by a British 74, and again re-captured by the American privateer Armstrong.[23]
General Armstrong arrived in home port in late July 1814. Samuel Reid took over as captain and departed Sandy Hook on 9 September 1814, a few weeks before the fateful Battle of Fayal.