HMS Lark (1880)
HMS Lark was a schooner of the Royal Navy, built by Westacott’s, Barnstaple and launched on 4 December 1880.[1]
Drawing of the inboard profile plan of the Lark, 1881 | |
History | |
---|---|
Name: | HMS Lark |
Builder: | Westacott’s, Barnstaple |
Launched: | 4 December 1880 |
Fate: | sold December 1887. |
General characteristics | |
Type: | schooner |
Commenced service on the Australia Station in 1882.[1] She undertook survey work in the Bougainville Strait, Choisel Bay and San Cristobel Island. During her life the ship's surgeon on board was Henry B. Guppy who also did much scientific research during the journeys.[2]
In 1883 Lark under C. F. Oldham transported the crew of the barque Illie which was wrecked in the Solomon Islands to Brisbane.[3] She sold at Sydney in December 1887.[1]
Based in Hobart, she was sold again in 1888 and was used as a coastal commercial trader in the Solomon Islands based out of Sydney.
Citations
- Bastock, p. 95.
- British Medical Journal: obituary: 5 June 1926
- "The Wreck of the Barque Illie". The Argus. Melbourne. 18 May 1883. p. 6.
gollark: You cannot, say, implement a vector without unsafely doing `void*` everywhere and asking people to pass it sizeofs a lot.
gollark: C has very weak types; stuff will arbitrarily be coerced into other stuff half the time, and it has no generics.
gollark: You're forgetting that Rust has somewhat more stuff going on than "safer C". It also ACTUALLY HAS A TYPE SYSTEM, unlike C.
gollark: Remote function calls, basically.
gollark: Does anyone else prefer RPC-type APIs over REST?
References
- Bastock, John (1988), Ships on the Australia Station, Child & Associates Publishing Pty Ltd; Frenchs Forest, Australia. ISBN 0-86777-348-0
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