HMS Castor (1832)

For other ships of the same name, see HMS Castor.
History
United Kingdom
Name: HMS Castor
Ordered: 13 May 1828
Builder: Chatham Dockyard
Laid down: January 1830
Launched: 2 May 1832
Commissioned: June 1832
Reclassified:
Fate: Sold on 25 August 1902
General characteristics
Class & type: 36-gun fifth rate ship of the line
Displacement: 1,808 tons
Tons burthen: 1,283 bm
Length:
  • 159 ft (48 m) (overall)
  • 133 ft 8 in (40.74 m) (gundeck)
Beam: 42 ft 6 in (12.95 m)
Draught: 13 ft 6 in (4.11 m)
Propulsion: Sails
Sail plan: Full rigged ship
Complement: 275
Armament:
  • 36 guns:
  • Upper gundeck: 22 × 32 pdrs
  • Quarterdeck: 10 × 18 pdrs
  • Forecastle: 4 × 18 pdrs
  • After later refit:
  • Upper gundeck: 18 × 32 pdrs and 4 × 68-pounders
  • Quarterdeck: 10 × 32 pdr gunnades
  • Forecastle: 4 × 32pdr gunnades

HMS Castor was a 36-gun fifth rate frigate of the Royal Navy.

Castor was built at Chatham Dockyard and launched on 2 May 1832. She was one of a two ship class of frigates, built to an 1828 design by Sir Robert Seppings, and derived from the earlier Stag class. The Castor class had a further 13 inches (33 cm) of beam to mount the heavier ordnance. Castor cost a total of £38,292, to be fitted for sea.

Her first captain was Lord John Hay, and by September 1832 Castor was at Lisbon.

On 27 August 1834 she collided with the Revenue Cutter Cameleon off South Foreland, Dover, sinking Cameleon with the loss of most of its crew. This incident led to the Court Martial of officers and crew of HMS Castor on 6 September 1834 in Plymouth. [1] [2] The officers were acquitted but the lieutenant of the watch was dismissed from the service, it having been admitted and proven that a proper watch had not been kept.[3]

She spent a period of time in the Mediterranean, before being decommissioned at Chatham in 1842. She spent periods in the East Indies and the Cape of Good Hope, with further periods laid up at Chatham. She came to the assistance of HM Troopship Birkenhead, when the Birkenhead was wrecked on 26 February 1852.[4]

She was used as a training ship from January 1860, and was a Royal Naval Reserve training ship at North Shields from April 1862, having been reduced to 22 guns. She was sold at Sheerness on 25 August 1902 for breaking up at Castle & Sons breakers yard in Woolwich.[5]

Notes

  1. http://royalnavyreenactment.co.uk/index.cgi/HMSCastor
  2. http://www.pbenyon.plus.com/18-1900/C/00866.html
  3. http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=9y0tAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA710#v=onepage&q&f=false Tait's Edinburgh Magazine for 1834, Volume 1, Page 710
  4. A Deathless Story by A C Addison and W H M Matthews ISBN 1-84342-057-0
  5. page 121 A Deathless Story by A C Addison and W H M Matthews ISBN 1-84342-057-0

References

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