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HMS Grinder (1855)

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Name
  
HMS Grinder

Laid down
  
13 October 1854

Construction started
  
13 October 1854

Weight
  
288.6 tons

Draft
  
1.83 m

Ordered
  
6 October 1854

Commissioned
  
17 May 1855

Launched
  
7 March 1855

Displacement
  
257,600 kg

HMS Grinder (1855) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Builder
  
J & R White, West Cowes

Cost
  
Hull £4,084, machinery £3,567

HMS Grinder was a wooden 3-gun Dapper-class gunboat, launched on 7 March 1855. Although she served for nine years, her most active period was in her first year when she served in the Crimean War.

Contents

Black Sea and Sea of Azov

During the summer of 1855, Grinder carried out raids on Russian food and ammunition stores to prevent supplies reaching the Russian troops in the Crimea. Grinder and nine other gunboats (Beagle, Boxer, Cracker, Curlew, Fancy, Jasper, Vesuvius, Swallow and Wrangler ) were employed destroying fisheries and corn stores, as well as ammunition stores, around the Sea of Azov. Their raids forced the Russian land forces to maintain a state of constant readiness lest there be a landing.

The British naval squadron, including Grinder, was active on 23 September 1855 at the entrance to the Sea of Azov in destroying communications between Temryuk and Taman, an area of shallow seas, swamps and bridges.

For some of this summer period, Grinder, under the command of Lieutenant Francis Trevor Hamilton, served as a tender to the first rate Royal Albert, flagship of Rear Admiral Sir Edmund Lyons, Bart GCB.

From July 1855 she was commanded by Lieutenant Burgoyne. Grinder played her small part in the actions against the fort at the head of Dnieper Bay as part in a joint force of British and French warships, including the steam frigate Valourous, Gladiator and Clinker, on 18 October 1855.

Further activities of the squadron, including Grinder, consisted of destroying vast quantities of provisions and fuel near the town of Yeisk in the Sea of Azov on 3 November 1855, just as the weather was changing to make naval activities there impossible. The attacks were on such a broad front that even the presence of 1500 cossacks in the area did not inconvenience the landing parties.

Fate

Grinder was decommissioned in 1864, and broken up at Portsmouth.

References

HMS Grinder (1855) Wikipedia