HMS Triumph (1870)
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Career | |
---|---|
Laid down: | August 31, 1868 |
Launched: | September 27, 1870 |
Completed: | April 8, 1873 |
Broken up: | 1921 |
Specification | |
Displacement: | 6,640 tons |
Length: | 280 ft |
Beam: | 55 ft |
Draught: | 24 ft 5 inches light, 26 ft 1 inch deep load |
Engine: | One-shaft Maudslay. I.H.P. = 4,890 |
Speed: | 14.07 knots |
Rig: | Ship-rigged, sail area 41,900 sq ft |
Complement | 450 |
Armament: | Ten 9-inch muzzle-loading rifles
Four 6-inch muzzle-loading rifles Six 20-pounder saluting cannon |
Armour: | Belt 8 inches tapering to 6 inches
Battery 6 inches tapering to 4 inches Bulkheads 5 inches to 4 inches |
HMS Triumph was a broadside ironclad battleship of the Victorian era, the sister-ship of HMS Swiftsure. These two ships comprise the Swiftsure class of 1870.
The two sister-ships, which were built side by side by Palmers, were designed and built specifically to serve as flagships on distant stations, primarily with the Pacific squadron. They were powered by a Maudslay horizontal twin-cylinder return connecting-rod engine, and were the last British battleships to be fitted with a hoisting screw.
[edit] Service History
Triumph was initially commissioned in 1873 for the Channel Fleet, being transferred after a short time to the Mediterranean. She paid off in 1877 to be prepared for transfer to the Pacific as flagship, replacing HMS Shah after her indecisive action against the Peruvian pirate ship Huascar. She was relieved by Swiftsure in 1882 and was refitted at Portsmouth, receiving new boilers and launching rails for torpedoes. She was again Pacific flagship from January 1885 until December 1888; her relief at that time by Swiftsure signalled the end of her foreign service. Returning home, she was for a short time in reserve at Devonport, and was then flagship at Queenstown between February 1890 and September 1892. She returned to the reserve at Devonport, where she remained until July 1900; she was then disarmed to become a depot ship at Plymouth. In 1903, with her machinery removed, she was a training ship for boy artificers at Chatham under the new name of Tenedos. From 1905 she was tender to HMS Warrior, and in 1910 was moved to Devonport to form part of the stoker training establishment with the name of Indus IV. She was towed to Invergordon in 1914 to become a floating store with the name of Algiers. She was sold in November 1921, having remained afloat thiteen years longer than her sister.
[edit] References
Oscar Parkes British Battleships, Pen & Sword Books Ltd, 1990. ISBN 0-85052-604-3
Conway's All The World's Fighting Ships 1860-1905, Conway Maritime Press, 1979. ISBN 0-85177-133-5