The disaster that overcame the line-of battle ship HMS Royal George in 1782, while anchored in
calm water in sight of shore, was to have as strong an impact on the contemporary
public mind as the loss of the RMS Titanic
was to have one hundred and thirty years later. The tragedy was all the more
terrible for the fact that it had been avoidable if the simplest of precautions
had been taken – and without them over 900 men and women were to die.
When launched
in 1756 the Royal George was the
largest warship in the world at some 2000 tons, a length of 180 feet and armed with
over a hundred guns. The 28 42-pounders and equal number of 24-pounders she
carried gave her massive ship-smashing power. She was to see significant action in the Seven
Years War, then commencing, and was to serve during it as flagship for two of the
Royal Navy’s greatest names, Admirals Anson and Hawke. It was from her that
Hawke was to command the fleet that inflicted such a crushing defeat on the French
at the Battle of Quiberon Bay in 1759, in the course of which she sank the French
ship Superbe. She was to render
equally valuable service during the American War of Independence, operating against
the French and Spanish fleets in the Eastern Atlantic and participating in the “First
Relief” of the Siege of Gibraltar in 1780 when troop reinforcements and
supplies were landed on The Rock. Thus was not the end of the siege however and
it was destined to drag on for another three years.
Admiral Kempenfelt |
The Royal George returned to Britain for a
major refit in 1780 and saw service with the Channel Fleet thereafter. By
August 1782, with the siege still in progress, she was to join a new expedition
to relieve Gibraltar as flagship of Admiral Richard Kempenfelt. She was moored
off Spithead – the Royal Navy’s Portsmouth anchorage – and was taking on
supplies on August 28th when, during deck washing, the ship’s carpenter
discovered that the pipe used to draw clean seawater on board was defective. The
inlet of this pipe, on the starboard side, was some three feet below the waterline
and to access it would demand heeling the ship over to expose it. This was done
by running out the guns on the ship’s port side as far as they could go and drawing
in the starboard guns, securing them amidships. This action not only exposed the
mouth of the pipe to starboard but brought the sills of the open gun-ports on the
port side within inches of the water’s surface.
Female company! |
Though the exact
number could never be confirmed it was estimated that up to 1200 people were on
board, including some 300 women and 60 children. Many were undoubtedly family
members taking leave of their menfolk but contemporary accounts also refer –
delicately – to ladies “who, though seeking neither husbands or fathers, yet
visit our newly arrived ships of war”. A number of traders and pedlars also
appear to have been present.
In mid-morning
a slight breeze began to ruffle the water and it lapped occasionally over the
port-sills on the port side. This appeared to drive up mice from the lower part
of the ship and they began to be hunted as a game. The wind was freshening
further and yet more water began to spill in, but nobody had yet perceived the
situation as dangerous. A 50-ton sloop, the Lark,
had come alongside with supplies of rum and she was secured to the port side to
allow transfer of kegs.
Royal George starts her fatal roll |
It was the carpenter
who first awoke to the hazard and he went to the nineteen-year old lieutenant
of the watch, Philip Charles Durham, to request an order to right the ship. He
was ignored at first attempt but at the second Durham told him “If you can
manage the ship better than I can, you had better take the command.” Only when the ship heeled lurched further did the
lieutenant order the drummer to beat to “right ship”. It was too late – a gust
of wind heeled her still further and many of the starboard guns appear to have
broken loose and rolled to port. Water was now pouring in through every port.
The huge ship rolled on her side until her masts lay flat on the water, the mainmast
bearing down on the sloop Lark alongside.
The Royal George now sank like a stone,
taking the sloop with her.
Contemporary view - the Royal George sinks close to the rest of the fleet |
Admiral
Kempenfelt was being shaved in his quarters as the ship rolled but the movement
jammed the doors and he could not be got out. Hundreds of others were equally
unlucky and the majority of 255 saved were already on deck. These were to save themselves
by running up the rigging, while only about 70 were able to scramble out from
below through the ports. The presence of so many other ships in the anchorage
meant that rescue boats were quickly on the scene but this was little help for the
wretches trapped below deck.
The scramble through the open gunports |
One survivor,
named Ingram, managed to get out through a port and looking back saw the opening
“as full of heads as it could cram, all trying to get out.” He went on “I
caught hold of the best bower anchor, which was just above me, to prevent
falling back into the porthole and, seizing hold of a woman who was trying to
get out of the same porthole I dragged her out.” He was sucked down with the vessel
but rose clear to the surface and swam to a block floating near. Using this to
support him he saw the Admiral’s baker in the shrouds of the mizzen-topmast, which
was just above water, and behind him, still floating, the woman he had pulled
free. With the baker’s help he managed to catch her and secure her to the
rigging. A rescue boat took her to HMS Victory
– Nelson’s future flagship – and she appears to have survived. Another survivor was a child who was playing on
deck with a sheep as the vessel rolled and as he spilled into the water he managed
to keep hold of the animal’s fleece. It swam about, supporting him, until a
boat reached them. The Royal George’s
captain was another survivor, but the carpenter drowned.
The final
death-toll was estimated to be over 900, including all but a few of the women
and children. A few days after the ship sank bodies started to come up. It is a
sad commentary on human nature that many of the watermen who made their living
by ferrying families and traders to and from the ships stripped the bodies of
buckles, money and watches. One witness wrote of these bodies “towed into
Portsmouth harbour in their mutilated condition, in the same manner as rafts of
floating timber, and promiscuously (for particularity was scarcely possible)
put them into carts, which conveyed them to their final sleeping place in an
excavation prepared for them in Kingston churchyard”.
The final roll - note the figures in the rigging (incorrect depiction - the Royal George rolled to port!) |
The Royal George's mast-tops |
Durham in 1820 |
Britannia’s Spartan - and the Taku Forts, 1859
The Anglo-French assault at the Taku Forts in Northern China – and the highly irregular but welcome intervention of the neutral United States Navy – was one of the most dramatic incidents of the mid-nineteenth century. It also led to the only defeat of the Royal Navy between the end of the Napoleonic Wars and the outbreak of World War 1.
A remark of the American commander at the height of the battle - "Blood is thicker than water" - has entered the English language.
The Taku Forts attack event is described in detail in the opening of Britannia's Spartan.
Click here to read about this bloody action.
The Taku Forts attack event is described in detail in the opening of Britannia's Spartan.
Where do the dramatic illustrations of the "fatal roll" and the "scramble" out of the ports come from, Antoine - presumably a book? Thanks.
ReplyDeleteHello Daphne - the illustrations came from a Victorian book called "Story of the Sea", dating from about 1895 and edited by Q - Sir Arthir Quiller Couch
DeleteMany thanks for the information, Antoine. Apologies for my lateness in replying - have been so busy I forgot to check back.
DeleteI'm glad you found this of interest Daphne. Feedback like yours keeps me tapping away at the blog as well as at the novels!
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