HMS Emerald (1876)

HMS Emerald was an Emerald-class corvette, of the Royal Navy, built at the Pembroke Dockyard and launched on 18 August 1876.[1]

History
United Kingdom
Name: HMS Emerald
Builder: Pembroke Dockyard
Launched: 18 August 1876
Fate: Sold on 10 July 1906 to Cox, Falmouth.
General characteristics
Class and type: Emerald-class corvette
Tonnage: 1,864 bm
Displacement: 2,120 long tons (2,150 t)
Length: 220 ft (67.1 m) (p/p)
Beam: 40 ft (12.2 m)
Draught: 18 ft (5.5 m)
Installed power: 2,031–2,364 ihp (1,515–1,763 kW)
Propulsion:
Sail plan: Ship rig
Speed: 12–13 knots (22–24 km/h; 14–15 mph)
Range: 2,000–2,280 nmi (3,700–4,220 km; 2,300–2,620 mi) at 10 knots (19 km/h; 12 mph)
Complement: 230
Armament:

Service history

She commenced service on the Australia Station in September 1878.[1] She escorted Sir Hercules Robinson, the Governor of New Zealand from Sydney to Auckland in May 1879. Emerald was sent on a punitive mission in the Solomon Islands in 1879 after the captain and three crew of HMS Sandfly were killed by natives.

Emerald, under Captain Maxwell, visited the Ellice Islands in 1881.[2][3][4] She left the Australia Station in October 1881 and returned to England.

Emerald was refitted and rearmed in 1882 in England and placed into reserve. She commissioned for the North America and West Indies Station in 1886, before returning to England in 1892 and again being placed into reserve.[1] She was converted into a powder hulk in 1895 at Portsmouth.[1]

Fate

She was sold on 10 July 1906 to Cox, Falmouth.[1]

Notes

  1. Bastock, p.71.
  2. Doug Munro (1987). The Lives and Times of Resident Traders In Tuvalu: An Exercise in History from Below. 10(2) Pacific Studies 73.
  3. Captain Davis (1892). Journal of H.M.S. Royalist.
  4. Resture, Jane. "TUVALU HISTORY - 'The Davis Diaries' (H.M.S. Royalist, 1892 visit to Ellice Islands under Captain Davis)". Retrieved 20 September 2011.
gollark: And actually vote on stuff?
gollark: oh no.
gollark: You should just initiate [REDACTED] and undelete the bot.
gollark: You may not.
gollark: There are apioprocedures about this.

References

  • Bastock, John (1988), Ships on the Australia Station, Child & Associates Publishing Pty Ltd; Frenchs Forest, Australia. ISBN 0-86777-348-0


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.