Experimental Squadron (Royal Navy)
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The Experimental Squadrons of the Royal Navy were groups of ships sent out in the 1830s and 1840s to test new techniques of ship design, armament, building and propulsion against old ones. They came about as a result of conflict between the "empirical" school of shipbuilding (led by William Symonds, Surveyor of the Navy), the "scientific" school led by the first School of Naval Architecture (closed in 1832), and the "traditional" school led by Master Shipwrights from the Royal Dockyards.
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[edit] 1832
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[edit] 1844
Determined to prove William Symonds' designs to be failures, the new Tory Board of Admiralty sent out successive "Experimental Squadrons" in the mid 1840s. In 1844, a brig squadron (including Symonds' Pantaloon and HMS Flying Fish, the old HMS Cruiser, and ships by other designers) left Portsmouth on 22 October, followed three days later by a ship of the line squadron under Rear-admiral William Bowles (with the old three-deckers HMS Caledonia and HMS St Vincent and Symonds' three-decker HMS Queen). The ships of the line were joined at Lisbon on 3 November by Symonds' two-decker HMS Albion, and all four arrived back in Portsmouth on 27 November, 9 days before the brig squadron.
[edit] 1845
On 15 July the following year, the elderly Rear-Admiral Hyde Parker led the pre-Symonds HMS Trafalgar, St Vincent, HMS Rodney and HMS Canopus, along with Symonds' Queen, Albion, HMS Vanguard and HMS Superb, out of Portsmouth Harbour. The squadron arrived at Cork on 7 September, left on the 18th, and arrived in Plymouth on the 20th. (In this and all the other 1845 squadrons Queen performed well, having performed badly in the 1844 squadron.) In Plymouth, the same squadron was transferred to Rear-Admiral Sir Samuel Pym and sailed on 21 October, returning to the same port on 3 December. The third and final 1845 cruise lasted 43 days and consisted solely of the two deckers from the previous two (Albion, Vanguard, Superb, Rodney and Canopus), accompanied by a brig from the 1844 squadron, HMS Daring. It sailed from Plymouth on 21 October, led, not by an admiral (those then available were all very old and infirm, and the Admiralty placed little confidence in them), but by successive captains in the squadron acting as Commodore (Moresby in Canopus, and then Willes in Vanguard). A final set of cruises occurred in 1846, with a "squadron of evolution" made up of steam-ships and sailing ships of the line.
[edit] Results
Outside factors in the 1840s tests, such as individual captains' political bias or stowage's influence on how well a ship sailed, were underappreciated and so in October 1847 - in the face of the Board's institution of a "Committee of Reference" the previous year to oversee him and modify his designs according to the Board's wishes - Symonds resigned his role.