Puneet Varma (Editor)

HMVS Victoria (1884)

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Name
  
Victoria II

In service
  
1884

Fate
  
Scrapped 1920

Length
  
44 m

Displacement
  
480,800 kg

Decommissioned
  
1893

Homeport
  
Melbourne, Victoria

Launched
  
1884

Weight
  
538.5 tons

HMVS Victoria (1884) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Builder
  
Armstrong Mitchell and Co.

HMVS Victoria was a gunboat that served with the Victorian Naval Forces and Western Australia before being sold into private use.

Contents

Design

This class was built to a type D flat-iron gunboat design from builders Armstrong Mitchell and Co.

Operational history

In late February 1884, Victoria was in Malta on her delivery voyage to Australia with the gunboat Albert and the torpedo boat Childers when news of General Charles Gordon's death at Khartoum reached the British Empire. The three ships were immediately offered for service in the Sudan Campaign. The offer was accepted and the smaller less seaworthy Childers was sent ahead. By the time the two larger gunboats reached their destination on 19 March at Suakin, the conflict had moved too far inland for warships to be of any assistance. The vessels all departed three days later to continue their voyage to the colony. They arrived in Melbourne on 26 June after travelling via Aden, Colombo, the Dutch East Indies and Torres Strait.

Due to the depression of the 1890s Victoria was decommissioned in 1893 and sold. She was subsequently purchased by the West Australian government in 1896. She was purchased in 1902 by the Sydney based tug company Fenwicks, who used her as a towing vessel. She was scrapped in 1920 after 18 years of service on Sydney Harbour.

References

HMVS Victoria (1884) Wikipedia