Rahul Sharma (Editor)

HMS Trident (1845)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
HMS Trident

Cost
  
c. £41,366

Commissioned
  
8 August 1846

Launched
  
16 December 1845

Displacement
  
819,200 kg

Ordered
  
13 April 1843

Laid down
  
1845

Construction started
  
1845

Weight
  
917.5 tons

Draft
  
3.28 m

Fate
  
Broken up by Castle at Charlton January 1866

Builder
  
Thames Ironworks and Shipbuilding Company

HMS Trident was an iron paddle sloop built for the Royal Navy by Ditchburn & Mare in 1845 at Leamouth, London. She served in the Mediterranean, off West Africa and in the South Atlantic, and was broken up in 1866.

Contents

Design and construction

Trident's design was commissioned on 2 August 1842 for a steam yacht to replace HMS Black Eagle (previously Firebrand). She was a third class iron paddle sloop, the only ship ever built to her design. The builder's design was approved on 22 August 1843 and she was launched on 16 December 1845. Her hull cost £17,000, and her machinery another £17,502. Fitting out was estimated to have cost a further £6,864.

Propulsion

She was originally intended to be fitted with a Maudslay side lever engine of 200 nominal horsepower, but received a Boulton, Watt & Co. two-cylinder oscillating steam engine with 70 34-inch (180 cm) diameter cylinders and 5-foot (1.5 m) stroke. The engine was rated at 350 nominal horsepower and propelled her at a maximum speed of 9.5 knots (17.6 km/h) through a pair of paddle wheels.

Armament

Trident received a pair of 10-inch (85 cwt) guns and two (later four) 32-pounder gunnades.

Service

Trident commissioned for the first time on 8 August 1846 for the Mediterranean. Between 1852 and 1861 she served on the South America Station and in the West Africa Squadron. On 11 December 1861 her commanding officer, Commander Beville Nicolas, was dismissed the service for cruelty after excessively punishing two boys for leave breaking at Gibraltar. She paid off at Woolwich on 20 December 1864.

Fate

Trident was broken up by Castle at Charlton in January 1866.

References

HMS Trident (1845) Wikipedia