A recent blog told the story of the invention and initial
testing of screw-propellers for ships, building on principles established two millennia
previously. In the late 1830s the practicality of this concept was proven in a
series of exhaustive tests by the experimental steamship SS Archimedes, as detailed in that earlier
article (Click here to read). These tests included evaluation against the
Royal Navy's fast paddle-driven mail-packets
and indicated that “as regards
power-to-weight ratio, the screw propeller had proven equal, if not superior,
to that of the ordinary paddle-wheel."
SS Archimedes - proving the concept and showing the way ahead |
The Royal Navy had taken its first steps into the steam age
in the previous decade, but the associated method of propulsion had major
drawbacks for a man-of-war, not least in that they provided a large and
vulnerable target. Use of steam propulsion was therefore limited to vessels –
such as mail-packets, or gunboats for colonial service – which would be unlikely
to engage in combat with other ships. The screw-propeller however, located as
it was below the waterline, would remove this vulnerability. The success of the Archimedes – a civilian vessel – therefore encouraged the Royal Navy
to build a vessel of its own, directly comparable in power and armament to
typical paddle-gunboats already in service, so as to allow directly comparative
testing.
The tug-of-war: HMS Rattler (l) towing Alecto (r) March 1845 |
The resulting design was to be HMS Rattler, an 894-ton, 185-ft long wooden sloop powered by a 440-hp
steam engine, with an auxiliary sailing rig. The latter was to remain a
standard feature of practically all warship types for the next half-century
since it allowed a degree of independence from coaling locations as well as
economy of operation. The Rattler was designed to carry a powerful
armament – a single 8-inch pivot gun which could bear over a wide arc, and
eight 32-pounders as broadside weapons. This armament was typical of gunboats
of the period, which were more likely to be involved in shore-bombardments in
remote locations than in ship-to-ship combat.
The launch of HMS Trafalgar in 1841 100 survivors of the battle were present |
Testing over, Rattler
was now ready to embark on her active naval career. One of her first tasks was
to help tow Sir John Franklin’s ships Erebus
and Terror to the Orkney Islands, the
first stage of their voyage to disaster in the Canadian Arctic. She thereafter joined the “Squadron of Evolution”, one of the “Experimental Squadrons” employed in the 1830s and 1840s to test the
new technologies – including improved hull shapes – then being introduced. The
most notable – and impressive – aspect of this was that the trials assessed
operations of vessels of differing size in a group, and not individually. If Rattler represented the future, then one
of the largest ships in the squadron very definitely represented the last-gasp
of the Age of Sail. HMS Trafalgar was
a 120-gun first rate ship-of –the-line, launched in 1841, in Queen Victoria’s
presence. She was named by Nelson’s niece and of 500 people on board during the
ceremony, 100 had been at the Battle of Trafalgar. She was powered by sail
alone – she would not have been out of place at Trafalgar – and it was not
until 1859 that she was to receive an auxiliary steam engine. The eight-ship Experimental
Squadron sailed as far as South America and during part of the voyage Rattler towed the 78-gun Superb, launched
in 1842, and herself almost identical to Nelson’s ships four decades earlier.
Rattler’s next
service was to be at the sharp-end of Royal Naval operations in the 1840s as
part of the Atlantic Anti-Slave Trade patrol. The greatest hazard of this
service was not associated with combat, but by being stationed off the West
Coast of Africa at a time when the origin of malaria was not understood and
crews were vulnerable to it when ashore. Rattler’s most notable achievement in
this period was the capture of a Brazilian slave brigantine, the Alepide – the action must have provided
a welcome burst of excitement in two years of otherwise monotonous patrolling.
Rattler thereafter went east and served in the Second Anglo-Burmese War of 1852. Her next deployment was to take her to Chinese waters. In the aftermath of the First Opium War (1839-42) European and and American traders were becoming active in commercial operations along the long Chinese coast. Hong Kong was one of the British soils of that war and the focus of much of the trade. Weak Imperial Chinese power meant however that much of the coast was subject to the depredations of pirates operating from hundreds of locations along it. For many decades Western navies were to be involved in small-scale, but often very vicious, fighting to eradicate this curse. A particularly serious incident occurred in September 1855 when the pirates seized four merchant vessels at Lantau island, just east of Hong Kong. The offence was all the more serious in that the vessels were under escort by the Eaglet, a small civil vessel chartered for British naval service.
Chinese war-junk of the period |
Rattler thereafter went east and served in the Second Anglo-Burmese War of 1852. Her next deployment was to take her to Chinese waters. In the aftermath of the First Opium War (1839-42) European and and American traders were becoming active in commercial operations along the long Chinese coast. Hong Kong was one of the British soils of that war and the focus of much of the trade. Weak Imperial Chinese power meant however that much of the coast was subject to the depredations of pirates operating from hundreds of locations along it. For many decades Western navies were to be involved in small-scale, but often very vicious, fighting to eradicate this curse. A particularly serious incident occurred in September 1855 when the pirates seized four merchant vessels at Lantau island, just east of Hong Kong. The offence was all the more serious in that the vessels were under escort by the Eaglet, a small civil vessel chartered for British naval service.
HMS Rattler was to come to the rescue, operating in concert with the 2400-ton American steam-frigate USS Powhatan (a paddle-steamer!). In service since 1852, the Powhatan had accompanied Commodore Matthew C. Perry's expedition to Japan in 1854, arguably one of the most significant events in modern history. She was very heavily armed – a single 11-inch and ten 9-inch Dahlgren smoothbores and five 12-pounders.
USS Powhatan - she was later to serve with distinction in the American Civil War |
Royal Navy warship engaging a pirate junk off the Chinese coast, 1840s-50s |
This was to be the Rattler’s
final adventure before returning to Britain, where she was scrapped in 1856. A
footnote on the hazards of disease and illness while operating in Eastern
waters is provided by a memorial in St. Ann’s Church, Portsmouth erected by
Rattler’s officers and ship’s company “In
remembrance of thirty- six of their
gallant shipmates who between the years 1851 and 1856 died in the service of
their country”. It notes that of these “twenty
five fell under the baneful effects of the climates of Burmah and China, five
were drowned and six were killed in action with pirates on the coast of China.”
HMS Rattler’s life
had been a short one – a decade and a half – and it was not just eventful but
epoch- making too.
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