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HMS Esk (1854) facts for kids

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HMS Highflyer
Profile of Esk's sister-ship Highflyer dated 1863
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History
Royal Navy EnsignUnited Kingdom
Name HMS Esk
Ordered 18 August 1852
Builder J. Scott Russell & Co., Millwall
Laid down April 1853
Launched 12 June 1854
Commissioned 21 December 1854
Decommissioned 1868
Fate Broken up at Portsmouth in 1870
General characteristics
Class and type Highflyer-class corvette
Displacement 1,737 12 tons
Tons burthen 1,153 bm
Length
  • 192 ft (59 m) oa
  • 167 ft 3+34 in (50.997 m) pp
Beam 36 ft 4 in (11.07 m)
Draught 15 ft 9 in (4.80 m)
Depth of hold 22 ft 8 in (6.91 m)
Installed power 657 ihp (490 kW)
Propulsion
  • 2-cylinder inclined single-expansion oscillating steam engine
  • Single screw
Sail plan Full-rigged ship
Speed 9.4 kn (17.4 km/h) under steam
Armament
  • As built:
  • 21 guns:
  • 1 × 10-inch/84-pdr (85cwt) gun
  • 20 × 32-pounder (42cwt) long guns
  • Later:
  • 1 × 10-inch/84-pdr (85cwt) gun
  • 18 × 8-inch guns

HMS Esk was a 21-gun Highflyer-class screw corvette launched on 12 June 1854 from J. Scott Russell & Co., Millwall. She saw action in the Crimean War, the Second Opium War and the Tauranga Campaign in New Zealand, and was broken up at Portsmouth in 1870.

Design

Esk was built in exchange for HMS Greenock (which went to the Australian Royal Mail Co.) by J. Scott Russell & Co. The words of the Admiralty Order stated she should be "a wood screw vessel complete of Highflyer's [class] in exchange when built". This made her a small wooden frigate to a design by the Surveyor's Department of the Admiralty on 25 April 1847; she and her sister Highflyer were redesignated as corvettes in 1854. In common with other screw corvettes of the time, she was envisaged as a steam auxiliary, intended to cruise under sail with the steam engine available for assistance. Commensurately she was provided with a full square sailing rig. Her oscillating two-cylinder inclined single-expansion steam engine, provided by the builders, was quite different from Highflyer's, but developed broadly the same power — 657 indicated horsepower (490 kW) — and drove a single screw.

Construction

She was laid down in April 1853 in the Millwall yard of J. Scott Russell & Co. on the River Thames. She was launched on 12 June 1854 and commissioned at Woolwich on 21 December 1854.

Service history

She served in the Mediterranean Station between 1854 until 1856 and was in the Black Sea during the Crimean War. She was part of the East Indies Station between 1856 until 1863, where she participated in Second Opium War at Canton. Afterwards she went to the Australia Station, where she participated in the attack on Gate Pā during the Tauranga Campaign in New Zealand. Her commanding officer Captain John Fane Charles Hamilton was killed in the attack. She left the Australia Station on 2 July 1867.

Fate

Arriving back in Britain in 1867, she was paid off in 1868 and was broken up in 1870 at Portsmouth.

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