HMQS Midge

HMQS Midge
History
Queensland and Australia
Name: Midge
Builder: J. Samuel White, Cowes[1]
Yard number: 744[1]
Laid down: October 1887[1]
In service: 1887
Out of service: 1912
Homeport: Brisbane, Queensland
Fate: Sold as private pleasure craft in 1912
General characteristics
Displacement: 12 tons[1]
Length: 56 ft 4 in (17.17 m)[1]
Beam: 9 ft 3 in (2.82 m)[1]
Draught: 4 ft 7 in (1.40 m)[1]
Complement: 7
Armament: 1 × 3-pounder gun, 2 × machine guns, 2 sets of dropping gear for 14 inch torpedoes

HMQS Midge was a torpedo launch that served with the Queensland Maritime Defence Force, the Commonwealth Naval Forces and the Royal Australian Navy. After entering service in 1887, Midge served as "picquet boat" along the Brisbane River until Federation in 1901, when she was transferred to the Commonwealth. After this, she served as a training boat until 1912 when she was decommissioned.

Construction and design

Following the formation of the Queensland Maritime Defence Force the colonial government decided to supplement the recently acquired vessels with a small torpedo launch. HMQS Midge was specifically built in England by J. Samuel White, Cowes, for this purpose and shipped out to Australia in 1887. She was of wooden construction using a combination of teak and mahogany, and cost 5,000 pounds sterling.[2] Displacing 12 tons, she was 56 ft 4 in (17.17 m) long, had a 9 ft 3 in (2.82 m) beam and a draught of 4 ft 7 in (1.40 m).[1] The ship was armed with one 3-pounder gun, two machine guns, and had two sets of dropping gear for 14 inch torpedoes.[3]

Service history

Like HMQS Mosquito, she was never commissioned but simply placed into service when required and therefore was usually moored at the Naval Stores Depot at Kangaroo Point on the Brisbane River.[3] She served as a "picquet boat" until Federation in 1901 when she was transferred to the Commonwealth and served as a training ship. Midge was still on strength in 1911 when the Royal Australian Navy was formed but she was stripped and paid off the next year. Midge's engines were found to be in such good condition that they went on to be used for many years at the Royal Australian Navy's engineering school. The hull was sold as a private yacht in 1912, and was renamed Nola II.[1]

See also

References

Bibliography


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