URGENT HMS 1855

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aukepalmhof
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Joined: Thu Apr 02, 2009 1:28 am

URGENT HMS 1855

Post by aukepalmhof » Wed Oct 14, 2020 8:27 pm

Bermuda issued a set of four stamps in 2010 in the series Pioneers of Progress - Dockyard apprentices which shows the floating dock-yard with a ship in the dock for repairs, while in the lower part is a plumb bob.
In “jotting from the journals” by the late Peter Bolton in Log Book March/April 2011 page 54 I read that the vessel in the dry-dock in Bermuda is the HMS URGENT. There were three Royal Navy vessel which have carried that name, and the only I could find on the internet which has visited Bermuda was the URGENT built in 1855 who visited the island in 1877 before her appointment as a depot ship in Jamaica.

She was built as a passenger ship for Russian account with the intended name ASSAYE by the yard of C.J. Mare in Blackwall, but bought by the Royal Navy from the yard on the stocks on 13 June 1854.
She was then lengthened.
02 August 1855 launched as the HMS URGENT.
Tonnage 1,964 ton (bm), displacement 2,801 ton, dim.83.0 x 11.7 x 8.14m, length of keel 76.3m.
Powered by a 2-cyl. horizontal single expansion steam engine manufactured by Maudslay, Sons & Field, 400nhp, (1.483 ihp, 1,106 kW), one shaft, speed 11.7 knots.
25 July 1855 commissioned.
Fitted out in Sheerness and completed 29 September 1855.

HMS URGENT was an iron screw troopship of the Royal Navy. She served her later years as a storeship and depot ship based in Jamaica.


Construction and commissioning
URGENT was originally constructed by C. J. Mare, of Blackwall, under the name ASSAYE. Also being constructed by Mare at this time was a near-sistership to ASSAYE, the Russian SOBRAON. ASSAYE may have also been being built for Russian owners, as both ships were purchased by the Admiralty in 1854 to serve as auxiliaries in the Crimean War. ASSAYE was purchased under an Admiralty order dated 13 June 1854, and was launched on 2 April 1855. She completed fitting out for sea at Sheerness Dockyard on 29 September 1855, having by then cost a total of £89,936. She entered service as HMS URGENT, while her near-sister SOBRAON was named HMS PERSEVERANCE .

Service
30 September 1855 after embarking 1,114 troops at Portsmouth she sailed on her maiden voyage to Malta, where after she returned to the U.K.
On 21 October 1855, URGENT ran aground at Fort Ricasoli, Malta on a voyage from Plymouth, Devon. All 1,100 people on board were rescued. Having departed from Spithead on 28 February 1857, URGENT sprang a leak in the Bay of Biscay on 3 March. She put in to Coruña, Spain in a sinking condition. On 1 November 1858, URGENT ran aground on the East Pole Sands, 6 nautical miles (11 km) east of the Nab Lightship whilst on a voyage from Corfu, United States of the Ionian Islands to Portsmouth. She was refloated with assistance from the Government tug ECHO.
06 June 1857 paid off and refitted in Portsmouth.
From March 1859 she was under the command of Henry William Hire for service in the East Indies and China, and on 20 August 1859 was at Peiho. From July 1864 she was under Samuel Hood Henderson. In August 1864, she ran aground at St. Anns, Nova Scotia, British North America. She was later refloated and taken in to Quebec City, Province of Canada, British North America, where she arrived on 5 September. URGENT was at Portsmouth in 1870.

After service as a troopship, URGENT was moved to Jamaica and to serve as a depot ship, and was commissioned there in her new role on 21 July 1877.
In 1880, her tender was the gunboat HMS TYRIAN, which was also used as a tug. From 1880 to 1885, her tender was the schooner HMS SPARROWHAWK , which was surveying the area at the time. From February 1878 until 1890 URGENT flew the broad pendant of the Hon. William John Ward, the son of Edward Southwell Ward, 3rd Viscount Bangor. In 1886 URGENT came under the command of Francis Mowbray Prattent, and between September 1889 and 1890 she flew the broad pendant of Rodney Maclaine Lloyd. She finally flew the broad pendant of Daniel M K Riddel from March 1901.
She was sold locally in Jamaica for scrapping to Butler & Co in June 1903, after the naval establishment was moved ashore.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_URGENT_(1855)
Bermuda 2010 35c sg 1069, scott
Attachments
2010 URGENT HMS Hull-of-boat-under-construction-plumb-bob.jpg

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