HMS Clio (1858)

For other ships of the same name, see HMS Clio.
HMS Clio at Anchor in Farm Cove, New South Wales, 1872
Career
Name: HMS Clio
Builder: Sheerness Dockyard
Launched: 28 August 1858
Decommissioned: 1876
Fate: Scrapped at Bangor in 1919
General characteristics
Class and type:Pearl-class corvette
Displacement:2,153 long tons (2,188 t)[1]
Tons burthen:1458 bm[1]
Length:225 ft 3 in (68.66 m) oa
200 ft (61 m) (gundeck)
Beam:40 ft 4 in (12.29 m)
Draught:17 ft 6 in (5.33 m) (forward)
18 ft 10 in (5.74 m) (aft)
Depth of hold:23 ft 11 in (7.29 m)
Installed power:400 nominal horsepower
1,540 ihp (1,150 kW)[1]
Propulsion:
  • 2-cyl. horizontal single expansion[1]
  • Single screw
Sail plan:Full-rigged ship
Speed:11.2 knots (20.7 km/h) (under steam)
Armament:
  • 20 x 8-inch (42cwt) muzzle-loading smoothbore cannons on broadside trucks
  • 1 x 10-inch/68pdr (95cwt) muzzle-loading smoothbore cannons pivot-mounted at bow

HMS Clio was a wooden 22-gun Pearl-class corvette, built at Sheerness Dockyard and launched on 28 August 1858.[2] She was the flagship of the Australia Station between 3 September 1870 and 16 October 1873, and from 1876 was used as a school ship.

Her first commission was on the Pacific Station and in 1860 she protected Panama City and the French citizens living within the city. While in the Pacific she was dismasted in bad weather. She returned to England and placed in reserve. Under the command of Commodore Frederick Stirling, she became the flagship of the Australia Station on 3 September 1870. In 1871, she was holed after striking an uncharterd rock in Bligh Sound and was beached to prevent sinking. HMS Virago provided assistance and made temporary repairs enabling the ships the sail to Wellington, where she was repaired, prior to sailing to Sydney to be dry docked.[3]

She transferred the pennant of flagship to HMS Pearl and sailed for Portsmouth on 16 October 1873.[3][4] In 1877 she became a school ship, stationed on the Menai Strait at Bangor, and had 260 pupils. She was sold for scrap and broken up in 1919.

Citations

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Winfield (2004) p.209
  2. The Times (London), Monday, 30 August 1858, p.7
  3. 3.0 3.1 Bastock, p.54.
  4. "HMS Clio". Retrieved 2010-08-05.

References

External links