68-pounder gun and crew on Sidon, off Sebastopol during the Crimean War |
|
Career | |
---|---|
Name: | HMS Sidon |
Builder: | Deptford Dockyard, London |
Laid down: | May 26, 1845 |
Launched: | May 26, 1846 |
Fate: | Sold 15 July 1864 |
General characteristics | |
Tons burthen: | 1329 bm[1] |
Length: | 211 ft (64 m) |
Beam: | 37 ft (11 m) |
Draught: | 27 ft (8.2 m) |
Propulsion: | Two direct-acting Seaward engines making 560 horsepower (420 kW) |
Speed: | 10 kt (19 km/h) |
Armament: |
Two x 68 pounder (31 kg)/88 hundredweight (4.5 t) pivots (fore and aft)
|
HMS Sidon was a first-class paddle frigate designed by Sir Charles Napier: her name commemorated his attack on the port of Sidon in 1840 during the Syrian War. Her keel was laid down May 26, 1845 at Deptford Dockyard, and she was launched on May 26, 1846. She had a fairly short career for a warship, but it included the rescue of the crew of the sinking Peninsular & Oriental Steam Navigation vessel Ariel on May 28, 1848, and a trip up the Nile that same year, when her passengers included the explorer and botanist Joseph Dalton Hooker. She served in the Black Sea during the Crimean War, 1854-55 under the command of Captain George Goldsmith. In April 1854, in company with HMS Firebrand (Captain William Houston Stewart), she blockaded the coast from Kavarna to the mouths of the River Danube.[2] In September, during the actual Allied invasion of the Crimea, she was assigned to escorting the French troop transports, and assisted the French line-of-battleship Algiers, which had gone aground in Eupatoria Bay.[3] She was then sent to monitor Russian movements around Odessa, and on 4 October attacked a marching column of 12,000 men on their way to the Crimea. On this occasion she was hit in the funnel by a Russian rocket.[4] She was sold for breaking up on 15 July 1864 to Castle and Beech.