释义 |
- Design
- Service
- 1808–1816 vessels
- 1818–1821 orders
- 1823–1826 orders
- References
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2017}}{{Use British English|date=June 2017}}{{Infobox ship imageShip image= | Ship caption=Longitudinal section of HMS Beagle (Cherokee class) as of 1832, by then converted to a barque by addition of a mizzen-mast. }}{{Infobox ship class overview | Name=Cherokee-class brig-sloop | Builders= | UK}} | Class before= | Class after= | Subclasses= | Cost= | Built range= | In service range= | In commission range= | Total ships building= | Total ships planned=115 | Total ships completed=*36 in first batch- 34 in second batch (with another 1 being cancelled)
- 34 in third batch (with another 4 cancelled and 6 orders replaced by orders for equivalent steam-assisted paddle vessels)
| Total ships cancelled=11 | Total ships active= | Total ships laid up= | Total ships lost= | Total ships retired= | Total ships preserved= }}{{Infobox ship characteristics | Hide header= | Header caption= | Ship class= | Ship type=Brig-sloop | Ship tonnage= | Ship displacement= | Ship tons burthen=238 bm | 90|ft|0|in|m|abbr=on}}- Keel: {{convert|73|ft|7+5/8|in|m|1|abbr=on}}
| 24|ft|6|in|m|abbr=on}} | Ship height= | 12|ft|6|in|m|1|abbr=on}} | Ship draft= | Ship depth= | 11|ft|0|in|m|1|abbr=on}} | Ship decks= | Ship deck clearance= | Ship ramps= | Ship ice class= | Ship power= | Ship propulsion=Sails | Ship sail plan= | Ship speed= | Ship range= | Ship endurance= | Ship test depth= | Ship boats= | Ship capacity= | Ship troops= | Ship complement=*Sloop-of-war:75- Survey voyages: On Beagles second voyage, 65 plus 9 supernumeraries
| Ship crew= | Ship time to activate= | Ship sensors= | Ship EW= | Ship armament=*Sloop-of-war:2 × 6-pounder bow chasers + 8 × 18-pounder carronades | Ship armour= | Ship armor= | Ship aircraft= | Ship aircraft facilities= | Ship notes= }} | The Cherokee class was a class of brig-sloops of the Royal Navy, mounting 10 guns. Brig-sloops are sloops-of-war with two masts (a fore mast and a taller main mast) rather than the three masts of ship sloops. Orders for 115 vessels were placed, including 5 which were cancelled and 6 for which the orders were replaced by ones for equivalent steam-powered paddle vessels.[1] Many of these sailing vessels served as mail packet ships, and more than eight assisted with exploration and surveys. The best known of the class was {{HMS|Beagle}}, then considerably modified for Beagle{{'}}s second survey voyage under Robert FitzRoy, with the gentleman naturalist Charles Darwin on board as a self-funded supernumerary.[2][3] DesignThe carronade, nicknamed the "smasher" or "devil gun", was significantly smaller and lighter than conventional cannon. It was also found to have a more destructive broadside at close range, so that a smaller (and cheaper) ship could be more effective in naval actions than a much larger man-of-war. Sir [https://threedecks.org/index.php?display_type=show_crewman&id=23312 Henry Peake] designed a small ship to operate in both shallow and deep waters, carrying eight 16-pounder or 18-pounder carronades plus two long 6-pounder cannon as forward-mounted chase guns.[4] Henry Peake completed the design for the Cherokee class in 1807. The design was approved on 26 November 1807, with the first four vessels having been ordered in March 1807 but not laid down until December; by the end of 1808 another 30 vessels had been ordered to this design. After these 34, a further 2 were ordered in 1812 which were built of teak at Bombay. The design was revived after the end of the Napoleonic Wars, and another 78 were ordered in two batches between 1817 and 1827. The first batch of these later vessels consisted of 35 orders (of which one was cancelled) whilst the second amounted to 44 new vessels of which 4 were cancelled and 6 replaced by orders for paddle vessels. The class was much criticised, being popularly known as 'coffin brigs', following the loss by wrecking or foundering of a number of them. There seems to have been no particular fault in their design, but they were considered to be somewhat too small for the global duties they took on.[5] Almost a quarter of them were lost, and they were also nicknamed "Half Tide Rock" as they had low freeboard so the deck was frequently awash with water, and solid bulwarks preventing the water from being shed quickly. William James, in his Naval History written before May 1827, dismissed the supposed design faults, and said that it would be "surprising indeed that the navy board would continue adding new individuals by dozens at a time" to "this worthless class". These open flush-decked ships lacked a forecastle to deflect heavy seas crashing over the bow: one was added to Beagle in 1825 before its first voyage, together with a mizzen mast which improved the handling. Despite these modifications to the design, Captain Pringle Stokes protested that "our decks were constantly flooded".[6] Further extensive modifications were made for the second voyage of HMS Beagle. Darwin noted in his journal in April 1833 that "It blew half a gale of wind; but it was fair & we scudded before it. — Our decks fully deserved their nickname of a "half tide rock"; so constantly did the water flow over them",[6][7] but John Lort Stokes who was on all three survey expeditions praised Beagle: "The reader will be surprised to learn that she belongs to that much-abused class, the '10-gun brigs'—coffins, as they are not infrequently designated in the service; notwithstanding which, she has proved herself, under every possible variety of trial, in all kinds of weather, an excellent sea boat."[8] ServiceFew of the Cherokee class ships took part in sea battles of any importance. Large numbers of them went on to serve as passenger and mail carrying packet ships, running from the UK to the USA and Canada.[10] Several assisted with exploration and survey expeditions, including {{HMS|Barracouta|1820|6}}, which served with William Fitzwilliam Owen's survey of African and Arabian coasts between 1821 and 1826 before being converted to a barque-rigged packet in 1829 and then being sold in 1836.[10] The first voyage of Beagle set out in 1826 under Captain Pringle Stokes as part of Phillip Parker King's survey of South American coasts, which returned late in 1830 with Beagle by then commanded by Robert FitzRoy. Captain Henry Foster commanded HMS Chanticleer on his survey around the South Atlantic, known as his "pendulum expedition", from 1827 to 1831. Chanticleer was then intended to be used for FitzRoy's next survey expedition, but was found to be in poor condition. Instead, the Beagle was repaired and modified for its famed second survey voyage from 1831 to 1836, which took along the naturalist Charles Darwin as a self-funded supernumerary. The Beagle subsequently carried out a survey of coasts of Australia from 1837 to 1843 under John Clements Wickham and John Lort Stokes.[9] From 1838 to around 1841 {{HMS|Britomart|1820|6}}, commanded by Owen Stanley, carried out survey work and other duties around Australia and New Zealand.[10] Other survey ships of this class included HMS Fairy from about 1832 to 1840, Scorpion from 1848 to 1858 and Saracen from 1854 to 1860.[11] 1808–1816 vesselsThe first four vessels listed below were ordered on 30 March 1807, two more on 26 November 1807 and the next twenty vessels on 31 December 1807. Eight more orders were placed during 1808. Name | Built by contract by | Ordered | Laid down | Launched |
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Rolla | Thomas Pitcher, Northfleet | 30 March 1807 | December 1807 | 13 February 1808 | Cherokee | Perry, Wells & Green, Blackwall | 30 March 1807 | December 1807 | 24 February 1808 | Leveret | Perry, Wells & Green, Blackwall | 30 March 1807 | December 1807 | 24 February 1808 | Cadmus | John Dudman & Co., Deptford | 30 March 1807 | December 1807 | 26 February 1808 | Achates | Samuel & Daniel Brent, Rotherhithe | 26 November 1807 | December 1807 | 1 February 1808 | Parthian | William Barnard, Deptford | 26 November 1807 | December 1807 | 13 February 1808 | Briseis | 31 December 1807 | 19 May 1808 | Jasper | 31 December 1807 | 27 May 1808 | Ephira | 31 December 1807 | 28 May 1808 | Onyx | 31 December 1807 | 8 July 1808 | Badger | 31 December 1807 | 23 July 1808 | Opossum | 31 December 1807 | 9 July 1808 | Wild Boar | 31 December 1807 | 9 July 1808 | Rinaldo | 31 December 1807 | 13 July 1808 | Chanticleer | 31 December 1807 | 26 July 1808 | Goldfinch | 31 December 1807 | 8 August 1808 | Woodlark | 31 December 1807 | 17 November 1808 | Shearwater | 31 December 1807 | 21 November 1808 | Calliope | 31 December 1807 | 8 July 1808 | Hope | 31 December 1807 | 22 July 1808 | Britomart | 31 December 1807 | 28 July 1808 | Prince Arthur | 31 December 1807 | 28 July 1808 | Cordelia | 31 December 1807 | 26 July 1808 | Redpole | 31 December 1807 | 29 July 1808 | Helicon | 31 December 1807 | 8 August 1808 | Lyra | 31 December 1807 | 22 August 1808 | Beaver | April 1808 | 16 February 1809 | Drake | 27 June 1808 | 3 November 1808 | Rosario | 27 June 1808 | 7 December 1808 | Renard | 9 July 1808 | 5 December 1808 | Tyrian | 18 July 1808 | 16 December 1808 | Bermuda | 18 July 1808 | 20 December 1808 | Rhodian | 18 July 1808 | 3 January 1809 | Sarpedon | 30 September 1808 | 1 February 1809 |
Two vessels were ordered 2 October 1812. These were built in India at the Bombay Dockyard under a contract from the British East India Company . They were built of teak, but were otherwise identical to their predecessors. Name | Built by | Ordered | Launched | Disposition |
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Sphinx|1815|2}} | Bombay dockyard | 2 October 1812 | 25 January 1815 | Sold 1835 | Cameleon|1816|2}} | Bombay Dockyard, | 2 October 1812 | 15 January 1816 | Broken up 1849 |
1818–1821 ordersUnlike the wartime batch, all the post-war batches were built in the Royal Dockyards rather than by contractors. Note that several names of vessels from the 1808–1816 batch were re-used for vessels in the second or third batches (as indicated below). Thirty-five vessels were ordered in 1817–1821 – twelve on 13 June 1817, twelve on 2 November 1818, two on 8 December 1818, six on 23 May 1820, one on 6 January 1821 and two on 19 April 1821. Name | Built by HM Dockyard | Ordered | Laid down | Launched |
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Alacrity | Deptford | 13 June 1817 | October 1817 | 29 December 1818 | Ariel | Deptford | 13 June 1817 | February 1819 | 28 July 1820 | Barracouta | Woolwich | 13 June 1817 | June 1818 | 13 May 1820 | Beagle ("Darwin's Beagle") | Woolwich | 13 June 1817 | June 1818 | 11 May 1820 | Bustard | Chatham | 13 June 1817 | November 1817 | 12 December 1818 | Brisk | Chatham | 13 June 1817 | November 1817 | 10 February 1819 | Delight | Portsmouth | 13 June 1817 | November 1817 | 10 May 1819 | Cygnet | Portsmouth | 13 June 1817 | November 1817 | 11 May 1819 | Eclipse | Plymouth | 13 June 1817 | March 1818 | 23 July 1819 | Emulous (2nd of name) | Plymouth | 13 June 1817 | June 1818 | 16 December 1819 | Falcon | Pembroke | 13 June 1817 | May 1818 | 10 June 1820 | Frolic | Pembroke | 13 June 1817 | August 1818 | 10 June 1820 | Lyra (2nd of name) | Plymouth | 2 November 1818 | March 1819 | 1 June 1821 | Jasper (2nd of name) | Portsmouth | 2 November 1818 | May 1819 | 26 July 1820 | Britomart (2nd of name) | Portsmouth | 2 November 1818 | June 1819 | 24 August 1820 | Partridge | Plymouth | 2 November 1818 | December 1819 | 22 March 1822 | Reynard (2nd of name) | Pembroke | 2 November 1818 | May 1820 | 26 October 1821 | Weazle | Chatham | 2 November 1818 | May 1820 | 26 March 1822 | Kingfisher | Woolwich | 2 November 1818 | December 1820 | 11 March 1823 | Procris | Chatham | 2 November 1818 | March 1821 | 21 June 1822 | Algerine | Deptford | 2 November 1818 | April 1821 | 10 June 1823 | Magnet | Woolwich | 2 November 1818 | June 1821 | 13 March 1823 | Halcyon | Woolwich | 2 November 1818 | unknown | Cancelled 21 February 1831 | Zephyr | Pembroke | 2 November 1818 | November 1821 | 1 November 1823 | Opossum (2nd of name) | Sheerness | 2 November 1818 | November 1819 | 11 December 1821 | Onyx (2nd of name) | Sheerness | 2 November 1818 | November 1819 | 24 January 1822 | Plover | Portsmouth | 23 May 1820 | August 1820 | 30 June 1821 | Ferret | Portsmouth | 23 May 1820 | August 1820 | 12 October 1821 | Hope (2nd of name) | Plymouth | 23 May 1820 | March 1822 | 8 December 1824 | Mutine | Plymouth | 23 May 1820 | April 1822 | 19 May 1825 | Forester | Deptford | 23 May 1820 | unknown | Re-ordered at Chatham 23 May 1826 | Griffon | Deptford | 23 May 1820 | unknown | Re-ordered at Chatham 23 May 1826 | Tyrian (2nd of name) | Woolwich | 6 January 1821 | April 1823 | 16 September 1826 | Philomel | Portsmouth | 19 April 1821 | June 1821 | 28 April 1823 | Royalist | Portsmouth | 19 April 1821 | August 1821 | 12 May 1823 |
1823–1826 ordersForty-four vessels were ordered in 1823–1826, thirty on 25 March 1823, two on 23 November 1824, two on 7 December 1824, four on 23 May 1826 and six on 28 October 1826. Of these only thirty-four were built as sailing brigs; four were cancelled outright, and the orders for six more were replaced (before any work had commenced) by orders for paddle vessels, using the same names. Name | Built by HM Dockyard | Ordered | Laid down | Launched |
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Leveret (2nd of name) | Portsmouth | 25 March 1823 | May 1823 | 19 February 1825 | Musquito | Portsmouth | 25 March 1823 | May 1823 | 19 February 1825 | Hearty | Chatham | 25 March 1823 | July 1823 | 22 October 1824 | Myrtle | Portsmouth | 25 March 1823 | July 1823 | 14 September 1825 | Lapwing | Chatham | 25 March 1823 | September 1823 | 20 February 1825 | Sheldrake | Pembroke | 25 March 1823 | November 1823 | 19 May 1825 | Harpy | Chatham | 25 March 1823 | March 1824 | 16 July 1825 | Fairy | Chatham | 25 March 1823 | July 1824 | 25 April 1826 | Skylark | Pembroke | 25 March 1823 | May 1825 | 6 May 1826 | Espoir | Chatham | 25 March 1823 | January 1825 | 9 May 1826 | Calypso (2nd of name) (ex Hyaena) | Chatham | 25 March 1823 | March 1825 | 19 August 1826 | Spey | Pembroke | 25 March 1823 | July 1825 | 6 October 1827 | Variable | Pembroke | 25 March 1823 | May 1826 | 6 October 1827 | Briseis (2nd of name) | Deptford | 25 March 1823 | August 1827 | 3 July 1829 | Rapid | Portsmouth | 25 March 1823 | January 1824 | 17 August 1829 | Recruit | Portsmouth | 25 March 1823 | February 1825 | 17 August 1829 | Reindeer | Plymouth | 25 March 1823 | December 1824 | 29 September 1829 | Thais | Pembroke | 25 March 1823 | July 1828 | 12 October 1829 | Rolla (2nd of name) | Plymouth | 25 March 1823 | June 1825 | 10 December 1829 | Savage | Plymouth | 25 March 1823 | October 1829 | 29 December 1830 | Saracen | Plymouth | 25 March 1823 | December 1829 | 30 January 1831 | Scorpion | Plymouth | 25 March 1823 | June 1830 | 28 July 1832 | Sealark | Plymouth | 25 March 1823 | November 1830 | Cancelled 10 January 1831 | Hyaena (ex Calypso) | Deptford | 25 March 1823 | unknown | Cancelled 21 February 1831 | Termagent | Portsmouth | 23 November 1824 | October 1829 | 26 March 1838 | Lynx | Portsmouth | 23 November 1824 | February 1830 | 2 September 1833 | Nautilus | Woolwich | 7 December 1824 | April 1829 | 11 March 1830 | Curlew | Woolwich | 7 December 1824 | November 1829 | 25 February 1830 | Delight (2nd of name) | Chatham | 23 May 1826 | August 1827 | 27 November 1829 | Algerine (2nd of name) | Chatham | 23 May 1826 | October 1827 | 1 August 1829 | Griffon (2nd of name) | Chatham | 23 May 1826 | July 1830 | 11 September 1832 | Forester (2nd of name) | Chatham | 23 May 1826 | September 1830 | 28 August 1832 | Partridge (2nd of name) | Pembroke | 28 October 1826 | August 1828 | 12 October 1829 | Wizard | Pembroke | 28 October 1826 | October 1829 | 24 May 1830 | Charybdis | Portsmouth | 28 October 1826 | December 1829 | 27 February 1831 | Buzzard | Portsmouth | 28 October 1826 | December 1829 | 23 March 1834 | Foxhound | Plymouth | 28 October 1826 | unknown | Cancelled 21 February 1831 | Helena | Plymouth | 28 October 1826 | unknown | Cancelled 21 February 1831 |
Six of the vessels originally ordered 25 March 1823 were swiftly re-ordered as paddle steamers in May 1824 – Alban and Carron (both at Deptford), Columbia, Confiance, Dee and Echo (all four at Woolwich). References1. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.portcities.org.uk/london/server/show/ConFactFile.64/HMS-Beagle.html |title=HMS Beagle – Port of science and discovery – Port Cities | |work= |quote= |accessdate=2009-01-30}} 2. ^{{harvnb|Taylor|2008|pp=36–38}} 3. ^{{harvnb|FitzRoy|1839|pp=17–22}} 4. ^{{harvnb|Taylor|2008|pp=36–38}} 5. ^Gardiner, Robert (Ed.) (1998) The Naval War of 1812, Chatham Publishing, London, p. 90. 6. ^1 {{harvnb|Taylor|2008|pp=33–35}} 7. ^{{Citation | last= Keynes | first= Richard | author-link = Richard Keynes | year= 2001 | title=Charles Darwin's Beagle Diary | publisher=Cambridge University Press | p=152 | accessdate =2014-12-01 }} 8. ^{{harvnb|Stokes|1846|loc=Volume 1, Chapter 1}} 9. ^{{harvnb|Taylor|2008|pp=36–37, 183–185}} 10. ^{{cite web |url=http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/stanley-owen-2692 |title=Biography – Owen Stanley |author=Francis West |date= 1967 |publisher= Australian Dictionary of Biography |accessdate=2014-12-01}} 11. ^1 2 {{harvnb|Taylor|2008|p=37}}
- {{Colledge}}
- Rif Winfield, The Sail and Steam Navy List, 1815–1889 (Chatham Publishing, 2004)
- Rif Winfield, British Warships in the Age of Sail, 1793–1817 (2nd edition, Seaforth Publishing, 2009)
- Rif Winfield, British Warships in the Age of Sail, 1817–1863 (Seaforth Publishing, 2014).
- {{Cite document
| last = FitzRoy | first = Robert | author-link = Robert FitzRoy | year = 1839 | title = Narrative of the surveying voyages of His Majesty's Ships Adventure and Beagle between the years 1826 and 1836, describing their examination of the southern shores of South America, and the Beagles circumnavigation of the globe. Proceedings of the second expedition, 1831–36, under the command of Captain Robert Fitz-Roy, R.N. | publication-place = London | publisher = Henry Colburn | volume=II | url = http://darwin-online.org.uk/content/frameset?itemID=F10.2&viewtype=text&pageseq=1 | accessdate =2009-01-30 | ref = harv | postscript = . }}- {{cite book | first = John Lort | last = Stokes | authorlink =John Lort Stokes | year = 1846 | title = Discoveries in Australia | publisher = T and W. Boone | location = London | ref= harv}}, Volume 1, Volume 2
- {{cite book|first=James|last=Taylor|authorlink=James Taylor (British author and historian)|title=Voyage of the Beagle: Darwin's Extraordinary Adventure in Fitzroy's Famous Survey Ship|chapterurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=g7C-AgAAQBAJ&pg=PT36|year=2008|publisher=Conway Publishing, Anova Books|isbn=978-1-84486-066-1|chapter=1: The Origin & Design of HMS Beagle|ref= harv}}
2 : Cherokee-class brig-sloops|Sloop classes |