HMS Hercules (1868)
{{short description|1868 ironclad of the Royal Navy}}
{{other ships|HMS Hercules}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2016}}
{{Use British English|date=December 2016}}
{{Infobox ship begin}}
{{Infobox ship image | Ship image = HMS Hercules by Henry Morgan.jpg | Ship caption = HMS Hercules painted by Henry J. Morgan in 1869. }} {{Infobox ship career | Hide header = | Ship country = United Kingdom | Ship flag = {{shipboxflag|United Kingdom|naval}} | Ship name = HMS Hercules | Ship namesake = Hercules | Ship ordered = | Ship builder = Chatham Dockyard | Ship laid down = 1 February 1866 | Ship launched = 10 February 1868 | Ship completed = 21 November 1868 | Ship commissioned = | Ship decommissioned = | Ship in service = | Ship out of service = | Ship struck = | Ship reinstated = | Ship homeport = | Ship motto = | Ship nickname = | Ship honours = | Ship fate = Broken up, 1932 | Ship notes = }} {{Infobox ship characteristics | Hide header = | Header caption = | Ship class = | Ship displacement = *{{convert|8677|LT|t|0|abbr=on}}
| Ship length = {{convert|325|ft|m|abbr=on}} | Ship beam = {{convert|59|ft|m|abbr=on}} | Ship draught = *{{convert|24|ft|m|abbr=on}} light
| Ship propulsion = One-shaft Penn trunk engine, {{convert|7178|ihp|0|abbr=on}} | Ship sail plan = Full-rigged ship, sail area {{convert|49400|sqft|m2|abbr=on}} | Ship speed = *{{convert|14.69|kn|mph km/h|lk=in}} under power
| Ship range = | Ship complement = 638 | Ship armament = *8 × RML 10 inch 18 ton gun
| Ship armour = *Belt: {{convert|6 |
9|in|mm|abbr=on}}
|
8|in|mm|abbr=on}}
| Ship notes = }} |
HMS Hercules was a central-battery ironclad of the Royal Navy in the Victorian era, and was the first warship to mount a main armament of {{convert|10|in|mm|adj=on}} calibre guns.
Design
File:HMS Hercules diagrams Brasseys 1888.jpg
She was designed by Sir Edward Reed, and was in all significant factors an enlarged version of his earlier creation {{HMS|Bellerophon|1865|6}} with thicker armour and heavier guns. She had a pointed ram where previous ships had sported a rounded one; she was built with a forecastle, but had no poop until fitted with one as preparation for her role as Flagship, Mediterranean Fleet. She carried a balanced rudder, which reduced the physical effort of turning the wheel. Steam-powered steering was installed in 1874.
The arrangement of the guns precluded the usual arrangement where the anchor cable led into the main deck; in Hercules these cables led into the upper deck; she was the first battleship to be so fitted.
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Armament
She was the first warship to carry the new {{convert|10|in|mm|adj=on}} muzzle-loading rifle, which were ranged four on either side in a box battery. The foremost and aftermost guns could be traversed to fire to within a few degrees of the line of the keel through recessed embrasures in the battery walls. These guns, each of which weighed 18 tons, fired a shell weighing 400 pounds with a muzzle velocity of {{convert|1380|ft/s|m/s|abbr=on}}. A well-trained crew could fire one shot every 70 seconds.
A {{convert|9|in|mm|adj=on}} gun was placed on the mid-line on the main at stem and stern to provide end-on fire, and the {{convert|7|in|mm|adj=on}} guns were mounted either side fore and aft on the upper deck, with firing embrasures cut to allow either end-on or broadside fire.
She carried two torpedo carriages for {{convert|14|in|mm|adj=on}} Whitehead torpedoes on the main deck from 1878.
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Service history
File:HMS Hercules towing Agincourt 1871 by Charles Fitzgerald.jpg, of Hercules (left) towing HMS Agincourt (right) off Pearl Rock near Gibraltar in July 1871.]]She was commissioned at Chatham, and served in the Channel Fleet until 1874.
In 1870 five of her 10-inch guns were damaged when shells burst before leaving the guns' barrels.[http://www.cerberus.com.au/damagedguns.html#appendix "The Guns of the Hercules"], Sheffield Daily Telegraph, 15 January 1870. In 1872 it was reported that three of the 10 inch guns were damaged.[http://www.cerberus.com.au/damagedguns.html#appendix "The Guns of the Hercules"], Mechanics Magazine, 22 June 1872.
In July 1871 she successfully towed {{HMS|Agincourt|1865|6}} off Pearl Rock (Gibraltar).
File:The Foul of HMS 'Hercules' and 'Northumberland' in Funchal Roadstead, Madeira.jpg
She was anchored at Funchal, Madeira, on Christmas Day 1872, when a storm parted the anchor chain of {{HMS|Northumberland|1866|6}} and the ship drifted onto the ram bow of the Hercules. Northumberland was seriously damaged below the waterline, with one compartment flooded, though she was able to steam to Malta for repairs.Ballard, p. 41 Hercules, on the other hand sustained damage to bottom and sides. After a refit from 1874 to 1875 she was posted as Flagship, Mediterranean Fleet, until 1877. Paid off at Portsmouth, she was re-commissioned as Flagship of the Particular Service Squadron formed under the command of Admiral Astley Cooper Key at the time of the Russian war scare in 1878. She was then relegated to the post of guardship in the Clyde until 1881.
File:'The Portland 'Bus,' or steam launch attached to HMS 'Hercules,' in fair and foul weather - The Graphic 1883.jpg, or steam launch attached to HMS Hercules, in fair and foul weather. The Graphic 1883]]
File:HMS Hercules forcing the blockade of Berehaven, Bantry Bay. Naval Manoeuvres of 1888 - ILN 1888.jpg, during the Naval Manoeuvres of 1888. Illustrated London News]]
She was flagship of the reserve fleet from 1881 until 1890, with a short break in 1885 when she formed part of the second Particular Service Squadron formed under Admiral Geoffrey Hornby.
Modernised between 1892 and 1893, she was held in reserve at Portsmouth until 1904. From March to June 1902 she served temporarily as port guard ship at Portland with the crew of the permanent guardship HMS Revenge, which was in for a refit.{{Cite newspaper The Times |title=Naval & Military intelligence |date=17 March 1902 |page=10 |issue=36717}} In July the same year she was temporarily commissioned by Captain John de Robeck, who transferred to HMS Warrior when it had finished a refit to become depot ship.{{Cite newspaper The Times |title=Naval & Military intelligence |date=17 July 1902 |page=9 |issue=36822}}
=Depot and training ship=
The ship's name was changed to Calcutta in 1909, and she served as depot ship at Gibraltar. In July 1914 she arrived at Devonport in tow of the old cruiser HMS Sutlej,{{cite news |title=Naval and Military |url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000329/19140706/194/0008 |access-date=16 October 2023 |work=Western Morning News |issue=16961 |date=6 July 1914 |location=Plymouth |page=8|via=British Newspaper Archive}} Calcutta{{'}}s engines being by this time inoperable, and in April 1915 she became an artificers' training establishment at Portsmouth under the name of Fisgard II.{{winfield}} By this time she was lacking masts, funnels, armament and superstructure, and was quite unrecognisable as the ship which had been widely regarded as Reed's masterpiece.
In April 1922 Fisgard II was sold to Thos. W. Ward of Sheffield for scrap, and arrived at their yard at Morecambe, Lancashire, on 2 September, the last vessel to arrive there. With the Morecambe facility to close in April 1923, only limited demolition was carried out there, and on 1 December 1922 the hulk was towed to Wards' Preston yard where breaking up was completed.Buxton & Dalziel, pp. 29-31
Gunnery trials
A trial was undertaken in 1870 to compare the accuracy and rate of fire of turret-mounted heavy guns with those in a centre-battery ship. The target was a {{convert | 600 |ft |m}} long, {{convert |60|ft|m }} high rock off Vigo. The speed of the ships was {{convert|4 - 5| kn| mph kph}} ("some accounts say stationary"). Each ship fired for five minutes, with the guns starting "loaded and very carefully trained". The guns fired Palliser shells with battering charges at a range of about {{convert | 1,000 |yds|km}}. Three out of the Captain's four hits were achieved with the first salvo; firing this salvo caused the ship to roll heavily (±20°); smoke from firing made aiming difficult. The Monarch and the Hercules also did better with their first salvo, were inconvenienced by the smoke of firing, and to a lesser extent were caused to roll by firing. On the Hercules the gunsights were on the guns, and this worked better than the turret roof gunsights used by the other ships.
class="wikitable" | ||
valign=top
!| Ship !| Weapons firing !| Rounds fired !| Hits !|Rate of fire | ||
valign=top | Hercules | 4 × 10-inch MLR
|align=right| 17 |align=right| 10 | align=right| 0.65 |
valign=top | Monarch | 4 × 12-inch MLR
|align=right|12 |align=right| 5 | align=right| 0.40 |
valign=top | Captain | 4 × 12-inch MLR
| align=right | 11 | align=right| 4 | align=right| 0.35 |
valign=top
| colspan=5| Source:{{citation |title = Warrior to Dreadnought | last1= Brown |first1 = David K | publisher = Chatham Publishing | date = 1997 | isbn = 1861760221 | page=50 }} |
References
{{reflist}}
Bibliography
- {{cite book|last=Ballard|first=G. A.|title=The Black Battlefleet |year=1980|publisher=Naval Institute Press|location=Annapolis, Maryland |isbn=0-87021-924-3|author-link=George Alexander Ballard}}
- {{cite book|last=Brown|first=David K.|title=Warrior to Dreadnought: Warship Development 1860–1905 |year=1997|publisher=Chatham Publishing|location=London|isbn=1-86176-022-1}}
- {{cite book|last1=Buxton|first1=Ian|last2=Dalziel|first2=Nigel|title=Shipbreaking at Morecambe|date=1993|publisher=Lancaster City Museums|location=Lancaster|isbn=0-905665-06-6|pages=29–31}}
- {{citation|last1=Dodson|first1=Aidan|title=The Incredible Hulks: The Fisgard Training Establishment and Its Ships|work=Warship 2015|pages=29–43|year=2015| isbn=978-1-84486-276-4 |publisher=Conway |location=London}}
- Parkes, Oscar, British Battleships {{ISBN|0-85052-604-3}}
- {{cite book|title=Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860-1905|editor1-last=Chesneau|editor1-first=Roger|editor2-last=Kolesnik|editor2-first=Eugene M.|publisher=Conway Maritime Press|chapter=Great Britain and Empire Forces|author-last=Roberts|author-first=John|location=Greenwich, UK|date=1979|isbn=0-8317-0302-4|name-list-style=amp|url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/conwaysallworlds0000unse_l2e2}}
External links
{{Commons category|HMS Hercules (ship, 1868)}}
{{British ironclads}}
{{1872 shipwrecks}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hercules}}
Category:Battleships of the Royal Navy
Category:Ships built in Chatham