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Uruguay

Posted: Thu Dec 04, 2008 5:54 pm
by shipstamps





Argentine gunboat Uruguay which made history when she rescued the members of the Swedish Antarctic Expedition under Professor Otto Nordenskjold from their base at Snow Hill Island after they had been given up for lost. Their vessel the Antarctic, was lost after being crushed in the pack-ice and Nordenskj old's party had to spend two winters in their hut at Snow Hill in 64 deg. 25 min S. before they were picked up by the Uruguay on November 8, 1903 (an error appears to have been made in the stamp design as the date is given as "8. X. 1903") The Uruguay was the first Argentine ship to make an Antarctic voyage. In 1904 she visited the South Orkneys and sailed down Bransfield and Oerlache Straits in search of Dr. Charcots expedition. This was her last Antarctic voyage for she was not suitable for navigation in ice regions, despite the fact that she had been specially strengthened for the work and given a substantial wood sheathing. Her principal assets were a good turn of speed and ability to proceed independently under sail or steam. Warships, however, are not built for Polar work, and it was fortunate that the season 1903-1904 was a particularly open one regarding ice. The Uruguay had a relatively easy time in reaching Snow Hill Island, off Graham Land otherwise there would have been a different ending to the story. The Argentine crew did not know the type of weather conditions they would meet and all honour is due to them. Built at Birkenhead by Lairds in 1874, the Uruguay was a single-screw iron steamer of 550 tons displacement on dimensions 142.8ft. x 25ft. x 11.9ft. The stamp, which has just been issued to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the rescue, shows a spirited picture of the ship and a chart of the regions she visited.
SG855 Sea Breezes 1/54

Re: Uruguay

Posted: Wed Mar 19, 2014 9:32 pm
by Arturo
The corbeta (corvette) ARA Uruguay, built in England, is the largest ship afloat of its age in the Armada de la República Argentina (Argentine Navy), with more than 135 years passed since its commissioning in September 1874. The last of the legendary squadron of President Sarmiento, the Uruguay took part in revolutions, ransoms, expeditions, rescues, and was even floating headquarters of the Navy School.

During its operational history 1874–1926 the Uruguay was a gunboat, school ship, expedition support ship, Antarctic rescue ship, fisheries base supply ship, and hydrographic survey vessel, and is now a museum ship in Buenos Aires. This ship may be the oldest in South America having been built in 1874 at Laird Bros. (now Cammell Laird) shipyard of Birkenhead, England, at a cost of £ 32,000.

This ship is rigged to a barque sailplan (three masts, two of which have cross spars). The ship's steel hull is lined in teak.

The ship's namesake is an earlier Argentine Navy schooner, a seven-gun combatant in the Battle of Juncal, 1827.

She was dismissed from service in 1926 (with 52 years of naval service), to become a floating ammunition dump.

In 1954 the Uruguay was rebuilt in the Río Santiago Shipyard. It was moored two years later at the pier of the Naval School, now officially designated as a museum ship.

Argentina, 1999.

Source: Wikipedia.

Re: Uruguay

Posted: Sat Nov 18, 2023 1:58 am
by aukepalmhof
Argentina 2023 $680 sg?, Scott?

2023 issues ARA URUGUAY rescued the crew of the Swedish Antarctic Expedition in 1903.