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List of gunboat and gunvessel classes of the Royal Navy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

List of gunboat and gunvessel classes of the Royal Navy
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This is a list of gunboat[note 1] and gunvessel[note 2] classes of the Royal Navy.

For gun-brigs see List of gun-brigs of the Royal Navy.

Steam gunboats

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Wooden paddle gunboats (Indian service)

Wooden paddle gunboats (Great Lakes)

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Iron paddle gunboat (Great Lakes)

  • Mohawk (1843)
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Iron paddle despatch vessels/gunboats

  • Bann class (1855)
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Wooden screw gunboats

Composite screw gunboats

The gunboats designed from 1870 onwards were of composite construction, i.e. they had an iron keel, stem and stern posts, and iron framing, with wooden planking retained over the iron frames.

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Armoured gunboats

The only ironclads of gunboat size were three largely experimental (and unsuccessful) vessels ordered in 1864. The first two were towed to the Royal Naval Dockyard at the Imperial fortress colony of Bermuda (being considered unsatisfactory to sail under their own power) where they served as harbour vessels and for coastal defence (Vixen ultimately being sunk to block a channel that torpedo boats might have used to attack ships of the North America and West Indies Station at their anchorage on Grassy Bay).[1][2][3][4] Vixen was the first twin-screw vessel built for the Royal Navy, and Waterwitch employed a form of water pump propulsion.

Iron coastal gunboats

  • Staunch class (1867)
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  • Plucky class (1870)
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  • Ant classGadfly, Pincher, Griper and Tickler are sometimes referred to as the Gadfly class.
    • Blazer (1870)
    • Comet (1870)
    • Bustard (1871)
    • Kite (1871)
    • Scourge (1871)
    • Snake (1871)
    • Mastiff (1871)
    • Bloodhound (1871)
    • Arrow (1871)
    • Bonetta (1871)
    • Badger (1872)
    • Fidget (1872)
    • Bulldog (1872)
    • Pike (1872)
    • Pickle (1872)
    • Snap (1872)
    • Ant (1873)
    • Cuckoo (1873)
    • Hyaena (1873)
    • Weazel (1873)
    • Gadfly (1879)
    • Pincher (1879)
    • Griper (1879)
    • Tickler (1879)
  • Medina class (or River class) (1876)
    • Medina (1876)
    • Medway (1876)
    • Sabrina (1876)
    • Spey (1876)
    • Tay (1876)
    • Tees (1876)
    • Dee (1877)
    • Don (1877)
    • Esk (1877)
    • Slaney (1877)
    • Trent (1877)
    • Tweed (1877)

Steel coastal gunboats

  • Bouncer class (1881)
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  • Handy class (1882)
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  • Drudge class (1882)
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Torpedo ram

  • Polyphemus class
    • Polyphemus (1881)
    • Hull 2 (cancelled 10 November 1882 before being named)
    • Adventure (cancelled 12 August 1885)

Torpedo gunboats

Steel gunboats

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River gunboats

Insect class (1915) The Insect-class gunboats were a class of small, but well-armed Royal Navy ships designed for use in shallow rivers or inshore. Several of them took also part in World War II.

    • Aphis: built by Ailsa shipbuilding, scrapped Singapore, 1947
    • Bee: built by Ailsa shipbuilding, flagship of Rear Admiral, Yangtze (RAY), sold in March 1939.
    • Cicala: built by Barclay Curle, sunk by Japanese bombs on 21 December 1941.
    • Cockchafer: built by Barclay Curle, sold for scrap in 1949, the last surviving member of the class.
    • Cricket: built by Barclay Curle, heavily damaged by bombs on 29 June 1941; used as target by Royal Navy and sunk off Cyprus 1944.
    • Glowworm: built by Barclay Curle, scrapped September 1928.
    • Gnat: built by Lobnitz, damaged by U-boat 21 October 1941, declared total loss, and then used as anti-aircraft platform. Scrapped 1946
    • Ladybird: built by Lobnitz, sunk on 12 May 1941 off Tobruk during World War II, then used as an anti-aircraft position
    • Mantis: built by William Doxford & Sons, sold in January 1940 and subsequently scrapped.
    • Moth: built by William Doxford & Sons, scuttled in Hong Kong 1941, captured and repaired by the Japanese and renamed Suma, sunk by mines in Yangtze River on 19 March 1945.
    • Scarab: built by Wood, Skinner & Co, scrapped in 1948.
    • Tarantula built by Wood, Skinner & Co, briefly flagship of the British Pacific Fleet, expended as a target 1946
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Steam gunvessels

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Wooden paddle gunvessels

  • Pluto class (1831) – steam vessel rated from 1837 as a first-class steam gunvessel
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  • Firebrand class (1831) – steam vessels reclassified in 1844 as first-class steam gunvessels
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  • Firefly class (1832) – steam vessels reclassified in 1844 as first-class steam gunvessels
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  • Tartarus class (1834) – steam vessels reclassified in 1844 as first-class steam gunvessels
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  • Lizard class (1840) – steam vessels reclassified in 1844 as second class steam gunvessels
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  • Porcupine class (1844) – steam vessel reclassified in 1844 as a first-class steam gunvessel
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  • Spitfire class (1845) – steam vessel reclassified in 1844 as a first-class steam gunvessel
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Iron paddle gunvessels

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  • Grappler class (1845)
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  • Recruit class (1850)
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NB. A third vessel of the class was retained by Prussia.

Wooden screw gunvessels

This section includes two early iron-hulled screw gunvessels ordered in May 1845, which in other respects were half-sisters to two wooden-hulled gunvessels ordered at the same time. The four vessels comprised the first-class gunvessels Rifleman (wooden hulled) and Sharpshooter (iron hulled), and the second-class gunvessels Teazer (wooden hulled) and Minx (iron hulled). Further vessels ordered later to the same design were either cancelled or built to very different concepts. Rifleman and Sharpshooter were re-classed as sloops in 1854.

Composite screw gunvessels

The gunvessels designed from 1867 onwards were of composite construction, i.e. they had an iron keel, stem and stern posts, and iron framing, with wooden planking retained over the iron frames.

More information Name, Builder ...
More information Name, Builder ...

Like the preceding Arab to Dolphin classes, these were designed by Nathaniel Barnaby; they were re-classed as screw sloops on 26 November 1884.

More information Name, Builder ...

Steel torpedo-and-gunvessels

More information Name, Builder ...
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See also

  • Arctic Whale-class whaler

Notes

  1. The dictionary definition of gunboat at Wiktionary
  2. The dictionary definition of gunvessel at Wiktionary

References

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