HMS Forward (1855)

HMS Forward was a British Albacore-class wooden screw gunboat launched in 1855 and sold in 1869. After her sale, Mexican pirates captured her, and boats from the United States Navy sloop-of-war USS Mohican destroyed her in the Battle of Boca Teacapan in 1870.

History
United Kingdom
Name: Forward
Builder: W & H Pitcher
Launched: 8 December 1855
Fate: Destroyed on 17 June 1870 in the Battle of Boca Teacapan
General characteristics (as built)
Class and type: Albacore-class

History

Forward was built by W & H Pitcher at Northfleet, Kent, England, and was launched on 8 December 1855. She was fitted for Royal Navy service in British Columbia in 1859 and then sold off to Hill & Ready in Esquimault, British Columbia in 1869 for use as a commercial vessel. As a commercial vessel, she went south to Mexico for oysters and was seized near Mazatlan, Mexico, by a descendant of Christopher Columbus, Plácido Vega y Daza. Crewed by Mexicans, she preyed on shipping and coastal settlements in the Gulf of California. The U.S. Navy considered her a pirate ship, and sent the sloop-of-war USS Mohican in pursuit of her. A launch and five cutters from Mohican discovered Forward beached in the Teacapan Estuary at Boca Teacapan, Sinaloa, Mexico, and destroyed her on 17 June 1870 in the Battle of Boca Teacapan.[1]

gollark: The performance considerations of the projects I work on are mostly dominated by I/O (peripheral calls and stuff) more than CPU use so it doesn't really matter but it would be nice to know.
gollark: I just do `for k, v in pairs(tbl)`, how is the performance of that?
gollark: Otherwise you could `ATTACH DATABASE ../1/database.db` or something and access other databases.
gollark: You need to block this sort of thing.
gollark: https://www.sqlite.org/lang_attach.html

References

Citations

  1. Brownson, Willard (2015), "The Pirate Ship Forward", America Spreads Her Sails: U.S. Seapower in the 19th Century, Naval Institute Press, pp. 138–152, ISBN 9781612519777

Sources

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