Name | Algerine (1857) | Explanation | |
Type | Gunboat | ||
Launched | 24 February 1857 | ||
Hull | Wooden | ||
Propulsion | Screw | ||
Builders measure | 299 tons | ||
Displacement | |||
Guns | 3 | ||
Fate | 1894 | ||
Class | Algerine | ||
Ships book | ADM 135/13 | ||
Note | 1872 sold for mercantile use as Algerine | ||
Snippets concerning this vessels career | |||
Date | Event | ||
16 June 1858 - 27 November 1860 | Commanded by Lieutenant William Arthur, China | ||
(March 1862) | Commanded by Lieutenant commander Frederick William Hallowes, East Indies and China | ||
12 May 1862 | Commanded by Lieutenant commander Arthur Rodney Blane, East Indies and China | ||
7 October 1864 | Commanded by Lieutenant commander John Collier Tucker, China | ||
20 May 1866 - 2 January 1869 | Commanded by Lieutenant commander Compton Edward Domvile, China | ||
Extracts from the Times newspaper | |||
Date | Extract | ||
Ma 16 April 1860 | The Third China War.— Preparations have commenced at Hongkong and Shanghai in good earnest. The four vessels from Shanghai which are announced as having sailed under sealed orders comprise Her Majesty’s ships Sampson, Actaeon, Dove, and gunboat Algerine; two of these vessels are well-known surveying vessels, and it is given on good authority that this small expedition is intended to reconnoitre in the Gulf of Pecheli and the mouth of the Peiho. and to take possession of some convenient slip of land which will be serviceable to our troops. A statement is also current that they were despatched to capture some trading junks which had left Shanghai for the Peiho, and supposed to be loaded with arms and ammunition. It is also stated that the Chinese Government are casting heavy guns, and using large quantities of American anthracite coal for this purpose. Guns of the largest calibre have also been imported from the United States. Her Majesty’s ship Impérieuse, 51 guns, bearing the flag of Rear-Admiral Jones, C.B., second in command, left Hongkong for Shanghai on the 22d of February; she took up six boats, each capable of landing 100 men, a large number of tents, and a bridge or pier, which could be made available for landing troops over the mud. She also had on board field-carriages for mounting her 32-pounders, and a large quantity of ammunition and war stores. The British and French naval commanders are engaged at Hongkong in chartering vessels and steamers, organizlng a Chinese coolie corps, and other necessary measures. General Montauban, the French military Commander-in-Chief, had also arrived from France, and the Quartermaster-General of the British Army. From these active operations it may be augured that it is intended to push the expedition north during the present month, in perfect readiness for the decision of Lord Elgin and his French colleague, Baron Gros. The delay in their departure will consequently be a source of great disappointment and anxiety. Nothing of a reliable nature has been heard of the action or intentions of the Court of Pekin, nor of our Ambassador, Mr. Bruce, It Is rumoured that the Taku forts have been dismantled in order to strengthen those at Tien-tin. There have been no further reinforcements from India. The detachment of the 44th Queen’s Regiment, which was announced in our last as having arrived at Singapore, has left that place for Hongkong, in Her Majesty's ship Pearl, and transport Cressy. A portion of the 99th Regiment had arrived at Singapore from Calcutta in the Octavia, towed by the Reynard. The Simoom, with the troops as originally embarked at Portsmouth, had also arrived, and proceeded on to Hongkong with the transports Mars, Octavia, and Jessamine. The Ringdove, Magicienne, Hooghly, and Fury were engaged in towing vessels from the Straits of Malacca up to Singapore. — London and China Telegraph. |