Ship of the line of the Royal Navy
Victor Emmanuel , receiving-ship. British squadron China Station, 1897
History
United Kingdom
Name HMS Victor Emmanuel
Ordered 4 April 1851
Builder
Pembroke Dockyard
Machinery by Maudslay, Sons & Field
Laid down 16 May 1853
Launched 27 February 1855
Commissioned 9 September 1858
Renamed
Launched as HMS Repulse
Renamed HMS Victor Emmanuel on 7 December 1855
Reclassified Hospital and receiving ship from 1873
Fate Sold in 1899
General characteristics [ 1]
Class and type Agamemnon -class ship of the line
Tons burthen 3,074 bm
Length 230 ft (70 m) (gundeck)
Beam 55 ft 4 in (16.87 m)
Depth of hold 24 ft 6 in (7.47 m)
Propulsion
Sails
2-cyl. horizontal single expansion engines
Single screw
600 nhp
2,424 ihp
Sail plan Full-rigged ship
Speed 10.674kts (machinery)
Complement 860
Armament
(as planned) 80 guns:
Lower deck: 36 × 8in guns
Upper gundeck: 34 × 32pdrs + 2 × 8in guns
Quarterdeck/Forecastle: 2 × 8in + 8 × 10in
(as completed) 91 guns:
Lower deck: 36 × 8in guns
Upper gundeck: 34 × 32pdrs
Quarterdeck/Forecastle: 20 × 32pdrs + 1 × 68 pdr
HMS Victor Emmanuel was a screw-propelled 91-gun second-rate ship of the line of the Royal Navy , originally launched as HMS Repulse , but renamed shortly after being launched.
Construction and commissioning [ edit ]
Victor Emmanuel was an Agamemnon -class ship of the line , a class originally designed as 80-gun sailing two-deckers.[ 2] They were re-ordered as screw ships in 1849, and Victor Emmanuel was duly reclassified as a 91-gun ship on 26 March 1852.[ 2] She was built and launched on 27 February 1855 under the name HMS Repulse , but was renamed Victor Emmanuel on 7 December 1855, in honour of Victor Emmanuel after he visited the ship.[ 3] She cost a total of £158,086, with £87,597 spent on her hull, and a further £35,588 spent on her machinery.[ 2]
The Victor Emmanuel Hospital Ship; doctors checking on their patients
Victor Emmanuel Hospital Ship; patients relaxing along bird cage walk
She served in the English Channel , the Mediterranean, and off the African coast during the Anglo-Ashanti wars .[ 3] On 4 May 1861, Victor Emmanuel ran aground on the Leufchino Shoal, in the Mediterranean Sea . Repairs cost £69.[ 4] She was assigned to Hong Kong to replace HMS Princess Charlotte and used as a hospital and receiving ship there from 1873. She was sold in 1899.[ 2]
^ Lavery, Ships of the Line, vol. 1, p. 187.
^ a b c d Lyon & Winfield. The Sail and Steam Navy List . pp. Chap. 5, pp. 5–6.
^ a b Loney. "mid-Victorian RN vessels - Victor Emmanuel" .
^ "Naval Disasters Since 1860". Hampshire Telegraph . No. 4250. Portsmouth. 10 May 1873.
Shipwrecks
20 Feb: Enchantress
5 Mar: Monarch
8 Apr: Witchcraft
20 Apr: USS Columbus , USS Delaware , USS Germantown , USS Merrimack , USS Pennsylvania , USS Plymouth , USS Raritan
21 Apr: USS Columbia , USS Dolphin , USS New York
1 Jun: Lord Hungerford
4 Jun: Canadian
3 Jul: Victory
28 Jul: Petrel
2 Aug: Stag Hound
3 Aug: HMS Driver
18 Aug: Jefferson Davis
1 Oct: Infernal
5 Oct: CSS Venus
11 Oct: USS South Wind
5 Nov: Prony
7 Nov: CSS Winslow
10 Nov: Keystone State
14 Nov: SMS Amazone
23 Nov: CSS Tuscarora
5 Dec: USS Phoenix
8 Dec: USS Cossack , USS Peter Demill , USS South America
19-20 Dec: USS Amazon , USS Garland , USS Rebecca Sims , USS Tenedos
20 Dec: USS American , USS Archer , USS Herald , USS L. C. Richmond , USS Leonidas
21 Dec: USS Kensington
29 Dec: HMS Conqueror
December (unknown date): USS Lewis , USS Maria Theresa , USS Robin Hood
Unknown date: Glentanner
Other incidents