HMS Undaunted (1861)

HMS Undaunted was a wooden screw frigate, the fifth ship of the name to serve in the Royal Navy.

HMS Undaunted
History
United Kingdom
Name: Undaunted
Builder: Chatham Dockyard
Laid down: 28 May 1859
Launched: 1 January 1861
Completed: 16 July 1861 (for Reserve)
Commissioned: 2 March 1875
Fate: Sold for breaking up in November 1882
General characteristics
Class and type: Bristol-class frigate
Displacement: 4,094 long tons (4,160 t)
Length:
  • 250 ft (76.2 m) (gundeck)
  • 214 ft 9.75 in (65.5 m) (keel)
Beam: 52 ft 1 in (15.9 m)
Draught: 22 ft 9 in (6.9 m) (loaded)
Installed power: 2,503 ihp (1,866 kW)
Propulsion: 1 shaft, 1 Steam engine
Speed: 12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph)
Complement: 550-600
Armament:
  • Thirty 8-inch (203 mm) muzzle-loading smoothbore guns
  • Twenty 32-pounder muzzle-loading smoothbore guns
  • One 68-pounder muzzle-loading smoothbore gun

She was the last of the Bristol-class, (which included Bristol, Glasgow' and Newcastle, as well as Undaunted; other ships ordered to the same design were cancelled).[1] She was built as a composite wooden hulled vessel, built with a telescopic funnel and hoisting screws. She was ship rigged throughout,[2] It is thought that the installation of a wrought iron mast in HMS Undaunted may have been experimental.[3]

After launching, she went to Sheerness Dockyards for completion, and was then put straight into Reserve[2] She was commissioned under Captain Hugh Campbell, sailing for the East Indies [4] as the Flagship of Rear Admiral Reginald Macdonald.

Undaunted had some distinguished Captains, including Captain Harry Woodfall Brent, (1834-1911), who commanded Undaunted later in 1875.[5]

She was then commanded by Captain Nathaniel Bowden-Smith, East Indies, again as the flagship of Rear-Admiral Macdonald, then of Rear-Admiral John Corbett (until he transferred his flag to HMS Euryalus). In 1879, Undaunted, under Captain John D'Arcy, returned to Chatham,[6] where she was decommissioned and then scrapped in 1880.[7] She was finally sold in 1882.[2]

The bell mast, Chatham Dockyard. Formerly the foremast of HMS Undaunted

Bell mast

The iron bell mast from this vessel still survives at the Chatham Royal Dockyard site. It is 100 ft tall and weighs 20 tonnes, it was then refurbished and erected in 1903, and the bell was rung to signal each change of shift for the dockyard employees until its closure in 1984. In 1992, the mast was taken down for repair and storage,[7] due to the construction of the Medway Tunnel.[8]

In April 1999, The bell mast was listed as Scheduled Ancient Monument.[9] It was restored and re-erected in 2001,[7] it now stands at the new entrance to the Historic Dockyard (visitor attraction) off Leviathan Way.[3][8]

Notes

  1. Lyon & Winfield: The Sail and Steam Navy List: All the Ships of the Royal Navy 1815–1889.
  2. MacDougall, Paul (1984). Chatham Built Warships Since 1860. Cornwall: Maritime Books. p. 4. ISBN 0907771076.
  3. "Chatham Bell Mast". www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk. Retrieved 3 March 2013.
  4. "HMS Undaunted". www.pdavis.nl. Retrieved 5 March 2013.
  5. "Harry Woodfall Brent R.N." www.pdavis.nl. Retrieved 5 March 2013.
  6. "Captain John D'Arcy R.N." www.pdavis.nl. Retrieved 5 March 2013.
  7. "THE BELL MAST". pastscape.org. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  8. Muir, John (31 August 2013). "The Bell Mast at Chatham – historic monument and waymark". 4d-studio. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  9. "APPENDIX 1, SCHEDULED ANCIENT MONUMENTS AT APRIL 1999" (PDF). medway.gov.uk. April 1999. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
gollark: No, but you can use accursed streaming base conversion algorithms™ probably.
gollark: I had a paper on generating digits of things like that using a generalized base conversion algorithm on infinite lazy streams, 'twas very weird.
gollark: The Wikipedia article explains how you can attain things from that.
gollark: Xylophone Yttrium Zoo, India.
gollark: Either by starting at the *maximum* length for everything and seeing where it can be shifted to be smaller, or starting at a more optimistic one and trying to make it actually work

References


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