Girish Mahajan (Editor)

HMS Daedalus (1826)

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Name
  
HMS Daedalus

Builder
  
Sheerness Dockyard

Fate
  
Sold 14 September 1911

Launched
  
1826

Ordered
  
23 July 1817

Laid down
  
November 1822

Construction started
  
November 1822

HMS Daedalus (1826) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumbf

Class and type
  
Modified Leda-class frigate

HMS Daedalus was a nineteenth-century warship of the Royal Navy. She was launched as a fifth-rate frigate of 46 guns of the Modified Leda class in 1826, but never commissioned in that role, being roofed over fore and aft and then laid up in Ordinary (reserve). After spending 18 years laid up in reserve, she was raséed (cut down) at Woolwich Dockyard into a corvette, reduced to 19 guns in 1844.

On 6 August 1848, Captain McQuhae of the Daedalus and several of his officers and crew (en route to St Helena) saw a sea serpent which was subsequently reported (and debated) in The Times. The vessel sighted what they named as an enormous serpent between the Cape of Good Hope and St Helena. The serpent was witnessed to have been swimming with four feet (1.2 m) of its head above the water and they believed that there was another sixty feet (18 m) of the creature in the sea. Captain McQuahoe also said that "[The creature] passed rapidly, but so close under our lee quarter, that had it been a man of my acquaintance I should have easily have recognised his features with the naked eye." According to seven members of the crew it remained in view for around twenty minutes. Another officer wrote that the creature was more of a lizard than a serpent. Evolutionary biologist Gary J. Galbreath contends that what the crew of the Daedalus saw was a sei baleen whale.

In 1853 the Daedalus was laid up at Plymouth Dockyard. Between March and June 1851 she was fitted out as a training ship, and transferred to the Royal Naval Reserve as a drill ship at Bristol. She was finally paid off from this role in September 1910, and sold in 1911 at Bristol to take to pieces.

  • Matthew Willis, Daedalus and the Deep (2013)
  • References

    HMS Daedalus (1826) Wikipedia