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HMS Phaeton (1883)

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Name
  
HMS Phaeton

Laid down
  
14 June 1880

Out of service
  
1913

Launched
  
27 February 1883

Tons burthen
  
3.402 million kg

Ordered
  
1880

Commissioned
  
20 April 1886

Construction started
  
14 June 1880

Beam
  
14 m

Builder
  
Glasgow

HMS Phaeton (1883) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Decommissioned
  
28 April 1903 (as sea-going warship)

HMS Phaeton was a second class cruiser of the Leander class which served with the Royal Navy.

Contents

Construction

She was built by Napier in Glasgow, being laid down in 1880, launched in 1883 and completed in 1886.

Acceptance Trials

"The Phaeton has been tried in the Solent. At the previous six hour' full power trial of the Phaeton there was a difficulty experienced in maintaining steam from want of draught in the stokeholds. (Only the Leander of this class has been fitted with fans for forced draught.) The funnels were afterwards raised from 60 ft (18 m) to 68 ft (21 m) (the same height as those of the first-class cruisers), while the space between the firebars was increased. The effect of these changes at the trial was very marked, the engines being provided with an abundance of steam without their being any necessity for resorting to the blast. The trial was intended to have been for six hours, but during the eleventh half hour, the expansion gear of the starboard engine heated and snapped, and the run was brought to a premature close. As, however the machinery worked without any hitch of any kind, and was developing power largely in excess of the Admiralty contract, it was agreed by the officers superintending the trial to accept the means of the five hours as a sufficient test of performance. These afforded the following data: Steam in the boilers, 85.35 lbs [588.5 kPa]; vacuum, 25.3 in (640 mm) starboard and 24.8 in (630 mm) port; revolutions, 100; mean pressures, starboard, 43.7 and 11 lb. [301 kPa and 76 kPa] and 43 and 11.7 lb. [300 kPa and 81 kPa] port; collective horsepower, 5,574.88 ihp (4,157.19 kW) or nearly 600 horses [450 kW] beyond the contract. The mean speed registered by runs on the measured mile was 18.684 knots (34.603 km/h), which was remarkable, notwithstanding her light draught. The coal consumption did not exceed 2.39 lbs. per unit of power per hour [1.45 kg coal per hour per kiloWatt]."

However by September 1886, it was decided that "due caution was not observed in certain particulars by those responsible for taking over the engines of the Phaëton from the contractors. The several officers concerned have been censured by the Admiralty, and the chief engineer has been removed from the ship."

1885–1886

The December 1885 Navy List lists her as at Chatham, with her commissioned and warrant officers borne in the Pembroke as follows:

In the 1880s, what normally happened with a ship was, "the staff necessary for the efficient maintenance of the machinery is supplied by the Steam Reserve, and when orders are received to commission the ship the men who have been employed upon her are as far as possible selected to compose her engine-room staff. In the case of the Phaëton the men who had been so employed had, from various causes, been drafted away before the order was received to commission her, with the exception of three stokers who formed part of her staff. None of the accidents that subsequently occurred in the ship can be attributed to this cause."

1886–1890

The Phaeton was commissioned at Chatham by Captain William H.C. St. Clair, on 20 April 1886. Initially she was listed as on particular service. On 25 May 1886, the Phaeton had an accident with a four-barrelled Nordenfeld gun whilst the crew were at quarters and engaged at target practice. The Nordenfeldt gun had been in use, and the crew of seamen who had been engaged in firing it handed it over to a crew of Royal Marines whilst charged, instead of removing the case of cartridges. The Marine crew were engaged in training the gun fore and aft, when someone touched the lever and fired the gun, which swept the deck, at that time crowded with men, four of whom were wounded. At least four cartridges were in the gun, and the bullets went through two iron beams, and two of the ship's bulkheads. The wounded men were not struck by bullets; they were hit by splinters from the bulkheads. At the time of the occurrence the Phaeton was about a hundred miles from Plymouth, for which port she made, and on arrival at Plymouth on 27 May three of the wounded were sent to the Royal Naval Hospital for treatment:

  • Allen, Able seaman, superficial neck wound ;
  • Shaddick, William, boy, contused wound over spine ; and
  • Gray, severe injuries to face, with loss of front teeth.
  • In addition the steam steering gear broke down on 25 May. The Phaeton left Plymouth on 27 May to continue her cruise. By June 1887 was serving in the Mediterranean.

    In her initial months of service, the Phaeton suffered from a series of break-downs of her engines. For instance in one accident a piston-rod broke due to a manufacturing defect, and when it broke, cracked one of the cylinders.

    The January 1887 Navy List listed her commissioned and warrant officers as follows:

    1890–1893

    Phaeton was recommissioned at Malta by Captain Reginald N. Custance on 18 March 1890. The January 1887 Navy List listed her commissioned and warrant officers as follows:

    1893–1896

    The Phaeton was in ordinary at Chatham‹See TfD› from 1893 to 1896.

    1896 annual manoeuvres

    The Phaeton was commissioned for the 1896 annual manoeuvres on 8 July 1896, and paid off on 19 August.

    1897–1900

    Phaeton was commissioned at Devonport on 8 June 1897. She was present at the Naval Review on 26 June 1897 at Spithead in celebration of the Queen's Diamond Jubilee. By November 1897 she was serving on the Pacific station. At this time the British naval force on the Pacific Station consisted of:

  • Armoured cruiser: Imperieuse flagship of Rear-Admiral Henry St. L.B. Palliser.
  • Cruisers: Amphion, Leander, Phaeton
  • Destroyers: Sparrowhawk and Virago
  • Sloop: Icarus
  • Gunboat: Pheasant
  • Store and depôt hulk at Coquimbo: Liffey
  • On 1 August 1900, the Phaeton narrowly avoided colliding with the USS Iowa coming up the straits approaching Victoria (British Columbia) in a dense fog.

    The July 1898 Navy List listed her commissioned and warrant officers as follows:

    1900–1903

    Phaeton was re-commissioned at Esquimalt (Canada) on 10 October 1900, to serve on Pacific Station. In July 1902 she visited Acapulco, and the following month she was at Panama. She paid off on 28 April 1903. This commission was the subject of a book in the 'Log' series, entitled: HMS Phaeton, Pacific Station, 1900–1903.

    The March 1901 Navy List listed her commissioned and warrant officers as follows:

    Harbour service and training hulk

    The Phaeton did harbour service at Devonport from 1904 to 1913, where she was used for training stokers and seamen. Her officers were borne on the books of HMS Vivid.

    In 1913 her "stripped out hull" was sold for £15,000 to a charitable institution that ran a training ship for boys based at Liverpool. The charity was founded in 1864 by John Clint, a Liverpool shipowner, with the aim of training the sons of sailors, destitute and orphaned boys to become merchant seamen. The charity's first training ship was the former HMS Indefatigable, an old wooden frigate which served the charity as TS Indefatigable from 1864 to 1914. Mr Frank Bibby, gave the charity money to buy the Phaeton and to refit her at Birkenhead as a training ship. The Phaeton was renamed TS Indefatigable and moored off New Ferry in Liverpool on 15 January 1914. The previous Indefatigable had been condemned by the Inspector of Training Ships in 1912 as unfit, and was towed to the West Float at Birkenhead on 5 January 1914, and sold for scrap on 26 March. The figurehead of William IV from the old Indefatigable was transferred to the ex-Phaeton. An Admiralty warrant for a Blue Ensign defaced with a liver bird for TS Indefatigable was issued on 31 December 1927.

    "Life on board was tough. Breakfast consisted of one slice of bread and margarine washed down with 'cocoa flush' which had been prepared in the galley by dropping solid slabs of cocoa, unsweetened, in a cauldron of boiling water. The liquid was drawn off into kettles which were lowered to the mess decks where the boys drank it from basins. Cups were never seen on board! Dinner consisted of varieties of 'buzz'. There was pea buzz, Irish buzz and mystery buzz. Buzzes were neither soups nor stews but had the characteristics of both and were served in the same basins as the cocoa flush. A small pile of broken ship's biscuits was placed beside each plate. Boiled cod was the 'treat' on Fridays!"

    The Phaeton served as TS Indefatigable until 1941, when due to German bombing of English towns, both the TS Indefatigable and the TS Conway were ordered to be evacuated. The charity committee decided that the time had come to move the training ship to a shore base, it moved for a time to a temporary base in North Wales. The Indefatigable (ex-Phaeton) was then sold to a Preston firm for scrap.

    However, she was repurchased by the Admiralty in 1941 and renamed Carrick II, and served as an accommodation hulk at Gourock throughout World War II.

    In 1946 she was sold for breaking up to Thos W Ward's in Preston, where she arrived on 24 January 1947.

    References

    HMS Phaeton (1883) Wikipedia