[3] A report from Paris dated 19 December 1804 stated that Général Pérignon had sent into port Aurora, with coals, and Courier, with sail cloth and provisions.
[7] By mid-February 1805 Sorcière and Général Pérignon had made a number of captures: Rover, of Jersey; Nancy (8 guns), from Lisbon; Victor, of Poole, from Newfoundland; Ark, of Poole, from Newfoundland; and Peggy, of 150 tons, carrying iron for London.
They also burned three vessels: brig Temple, from Swansea; Hebe, of Guernsey, from Dublin; and Nancy, of Irvine.
[9] On 23 February 1805 HMS Nautilus sent into Plymouth a valuable Spanish ship from the River Plate.
The Spanish ship had fallen prey first to a Jersey privateer, and then to Général Pérignon before Nautilus recaptured her.
[11] Général Pérignon's third cruise took place from March 1805 to December 1805 while she was under the command of René Rosse.
[13] The French Journal de Commerce reported on 22 November 1805 that Général Pérignon, of Saint-Malo, had returned from a cruise during which she had taken four prizes.
[3] The Journal de Commerce reported that Général Pérignon had arrived at Saint-Malo on 13 February 1806 with two English prizes, one of 300 tons and one of 400.
[18] In March 1807 General Perpignon captured and burnt Clothier, Edwards, master, off Rochefort.
However the gun-brig HMS Sharp Shooter and the hired armed cutter Britannia recaptured Patent and sent her into Plymouth.
[23] Général Pérignon's sixth cruise took place under André Papin from November 1807 to March 1808, with possibly a spell under René Rosse again in 1807.
[25] Lloyd's Register (LR) for 1810 carried the brig Intention, of 305 tons (bm), launched in France in 1804, with trade Plymouth–London.
[1] It also carried the brig General Perignon, with exactly the same data, including the names of the masters and owners.