HMS Royal George (1756)

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John Cleveley the Elder, The Royal George at Deptford Showing the Launch of The Cambridge (1757).jpg
HMS Royal George, right, shown fictitiously
at the launch of HMS Cambridge in 1755.
History
British-White-Ensign-1707.svgGreat Britain
Name: HMS Royal George
Ordered: 29 August 1746
Builder: Woolwich Dockyard
Laid down: 8 January 1747
Launched: 18 February 1756
Commissioned: October 1755 (before launch)
Fate: Foundered, 29 August 1782, at Spithead
Notes:
General characteristics [1]
Class & type: 1745 Establishment 100-gun first-rate ship of the line
Tons burthen: 2047 bm
Length:
  • 178 ft (54.3 m) (gundeck)
  • 143 ft 5.5 in (43.7 m) (keel)
Beam: 51 ft 9.5 in (15.8 m)
Depth of hold: 21 ft 6 in (6.6 m)
Propulsion: Sails
Sail plan: Full rigged ship
Armament:
  • 100 guns:
  • Gundeck: 28 × 42 pdrs
  • Middle gundeck: 28 × 24 pdrs
  • Upper gundeck: 28 × 12 pdrs
  • Quarterdeck: 12 × 6 pdrs
  • Forecastle: 4 × 6 pdrs

HMS Royal George was a 100-gun first-rate ship of the line of the Royal Navy, built at Woolwich Dockyard and launched on 18 February 1756. The largest warship in the world at the time of launching, she saw service during the Seven Years' War including being Admiral Sir Edward Hawke's flagship at the Battle of Quiberon Bay and later taking part in the Battle of Cape St Vincent. She sank undergoing routine maintenance work whilst anchored off Portsmouth on 29 August 1782 with the loss of more than 800 lives, one of the most serious maritime losses to occur in British waters.

Service

Ordered on 29 August 1746, she was laid down at Woolwich Dockyard in 1746 as Royal Anne, and built to the draught specified by the 1745 Establishment. She was renamed Royal George during building and launched on 18 February 1756.[1][2] At the time of her launch in 1756, she was the largest warship in the world. She served in the Seven Years' War, commissioning under her first commander, Captain Richard Dorrill in October 1755, and after being completed, joined the Western Squadron or Channel Fleet under Admiral Sir Edward Hawke in May 1756.[3] Dorrill was succeeded by Captain John Campbell in July 1756, who was in turn succeeded by Captain Matthew Buckle in early 1757.[3] Royal George was the flagship of Vice-Admiral Edward Boscawen at this time, and flew his flag in the Raid on Rochefort in September that year.[3] Captain Piercy Brett took command in 1758, during which time Royal George became the flagship of Admiral Lord George Anson. Brett was succeeded by Captain Alexander Hood in November 1758, though Royal George's former captain, Richard Dorrill, was back in command the following year, until being invalided out of the ship in June.[3] Dorrill's replacement was another former captain, John Campbell, who commanded her in the blockade of the French fleet at Brest.[3] She became Sir Edward Hawke's flagship in early November of that year, when his previous flagship, Ramillies, went into dock for repairs. Hawke commanded the fleet from Royal George at the Battle of Quiberon Bay[2] on 20 November 1759, where she sank the French ship Superbe.

Royal George was commanded by Captain William Bennett from March 1760, and she was present at the fleet review at Spithead in July that year.[3] John Campbell returned to command his old ship in August 1760, though Bennett was captain again by December. Royal George joined Admiral Charles Hardy’s fleet in the Autumn of 1762, and was then paid off on 18 December that year.[3] She was laid up at the conclusion of the Seven Years' War, undergoing a large repair at Plymouth between 1765 and 1768. The outbreak of the American War of Independence generated a need for more ships and Royal George was fitted at Portsmouth for service in the Channel between May 1778 and April 1779.[3]

She recommissioned under her first new commander, Captain Thomas Hallum, in July 1778, with command passing to Captain John Colpoys in November that year. Royal George was at this time the flagship of Vice-Admiral Sir Robert Harland, with the Western Squadron.[3] Harland struck his flag, and in his place Vice-Admiral George Darby briefly raised his in June 1779, though from August 1779 until December 1781 she was the flagship of Rear-Admiral Sir John Lockhart Ross.[3] Meanwhile, Captain Colpoys was replaced by Captain John Bourmaster in December 1779, and she joined Admiral Sir George Rodney's fleet in their mission to relieve Gibraltar. Under Bourmaster, and flying Ross's flag, Royal George took part in the attack on the Caracas convoy on 8 January 1780, and the Battle of Cape St. Vincent on 16 January 1780, before going on to successfully relieve Gibraltar three days later.[2][3]

Royal George returned to Britain with the rest of the fleet, and had her hull coppered in April 1780. She returned to service that summer, serving with the Channel Fleet under Admiral Francis Geary, and then George Darby from the Autumn.[3] Both captain and admiral changed in late 1781, Bourmaster being replaced by Captain Henry Cromwell, and Ross striking his flag for Royal George to become the flagship of Rear-Admiral Richard Kempenfelt. She served as part of Samuel Barrington's squadron from April 1782, with Cromwell replaced by Captain Martin Waghorn in May.[3] Royal George then joined the fleet under Richard Howe.[3]

Loss

Sinking of the Royal George
Loss of the Royal George (painting by John Christian Schetky)
File:Blythe House, Science Museum 14 - HMS Royal George anchor cable.JPG
A section of the ship's 24-inch anchor cable, recovered from the wreck and now in the Science Museum store at Blythe House

On 28 August 1782 Royal George was preparing to sail with Admiral Howe's fleet to relieve Gibraltar. The ships were anchored at Spithead to take on supplies. Most of her complement were aboard ship, as were a large number of workmen to speed the repairs. There were also an estimated 200-300 relatives visiting the officers and men, 100-200 'ladies from the Point [at Portsmouth], who, though seeking neither husbands or fathers, yet visit our newly arrived ships of war', and a number of merchants and traders come to sell their wares to the seamen.[4] The exact number is unknown but is estimated to be around 1,200.[4][a]

At seven o’clock on the morning of 29 August work on the hull was carried out and Royal George was heeled over by rolling the ship's guns on one side into the centreline of the ship. This caused the ship to tilt over in the water.[2] The ship was heeled over too far, passing her centre of gravity. Realising that the ship was settling in the water, orders were given to move the guns back into position to restore the ship's balance. During these operations the lower deck gunports were not properly secured, causing an inrush of water. At the time of the sinking a lighter was alongside, loading barrels of rum in through the open lower gunports.[4] The ship rolled on to her side, saved from sinking immediately by the presence of the lighter, which was pushed under the water by the weight of the Royal George's masts.[4] Royal George quickly filled up with water and sank, taking with her around 900 people, including up to 300 women and 60 children who were visiting the ship in harbour. 255 people were saved, including eleven women and one child. Some escaped by running up the rigging while others were picked up by boats from other vessels.[4] Kempenfelt was writing in his cabin when the ship sank; the cabin doors had jammed because of the ship's heeling and he perished with the rest. Waghorn was injured and thrown into the water but he was rescued.[2]

Many of the victims were washed ashore at Ryde, Isle of Wight where they were buried in a mass grave that stretched along the beach. This land was reclaimed in the development of a Victorian esplanade and is now occupied by the streets and properties of Ryde Esplanade and The Strand.[5] In April 2009, Isle of Wight Council placed a new memorial plaque in the newly restored Ashley Gardens on Ryde Esplanade in memory of Royal George. It is a copy of the original plaque unveiled in 1965 by Earl Mountbatten of Burma which was moved in 2006 to the Royal George Memorial Garden, also on the Esplanade.

File:RoyalGeorge-sunk.jpg
A contemporary illustration of the Royal George resting at the bottom of the Solent with its masts sticking up from the surface.

A court-martial failed to attribute blame for the tragedy and acquitted the officers and crew (many of whom had perished), blaming the accident on the 'general state of decay of her timbers' and suggesting that the most likely cause of the sinking was that part of the frame of the ship gave way under the stress of the heel.[2] One of the few survivors was the man perhaps most responsible for the loss, Lieutenant Philip Charles Durham, the officer of the watch at the time of the sinking.[6] Naval historian Nicholas Tracy stated that Durham had allowed water to accumulate on the gundeck. The resulting free surface effect eventually compromised the ship's stability.[6] Tracy concluded that an 'alert officer of the watch would have prevented the tragedy...'[6] Durham was one of the officers investigated at the court-martial, and was acquitted with the surviving officers in the verdict that decided that the cause of the accident was the state of the timbers.[6][b]

A fund was established by Lloyd's Coffee House to help the widows and children of the sailors lost in the sinking, which was the start of what eventually became the Lloyd's Patriotic Fund.[4] The accident was commemorated in verse by the poet William Cowper:

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Toll for the brave
The Brave that are no more,
All sunk beneath the wave,
Fast by their native shore.

William Cowper, The Loss of the Royal George, 1782

Salvage attempts

Initial attempts

1783 medallion commemorating the sinking of the Royal George
File:Model Royal George.jpg
Stern of the Royal George: 1779 painting of a model at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich

Several attempts were made to raise the vessel, both for salvage and because it was a major hazard to navigation, lying as she did in a busy harbour at a depth of only 65 ft (20 m).

In 1782, Charles Spalding recovered six iron 12-pounder guns and nine brass 12-pounders using a diving bell of his design.[7]

Deane brothers (1834)

After that no further work was carried out on the wreck until 1834, when Charles Anthony Deane and his brother John, using the first air-pumped diving helmet which they themselves had invented, began work. From 1834—1836 they recovered 7 iron 42-pounders, 18 brass 24-pounders and 3 brass 12-pounders for which he received salvage from the Board of Ordnance. The remaining guns were buried under mud and the timbers of the wreck and were unable to be recovered.

It was during this operation that local fishermen asked the divers to investigate something on the seabed that their nets kept snagging. A dive by John Deane 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) north east of the Royal George revealed timbers and guns from the Mary Rose, the first time that its resting place had been located for several centuries.[8]

Pasley (1839)

In 1839 Major-General Charles Pasley, at the time a colonel of the Royal Engineers, commenced operations. Pasley had previously destroyed some old wrecks in the Thames to clear a channel using gunpowder charges; his plan was to break up the wreck of Royal George in a similar way and then salvage as much as possible using divers. The charges used were made from oak barrels filled with gunpowder and covered with lead. They were initially detonated using chemical fuses, but this was later changed to an electrical system using a resistance-heated platinum wire to detonate the gunpowder.

Pasley's operation set many diving milestones, including the first recorded use of the buddy system in diving, when he ordered that his divers operate in pairs. In addition, a Corporal Jones made the first emergency swimming ascent after his air line became tangled and he had to cut it free. A less fortunate milestone was the first medical account of a diver squeeze suffered by a Private Williams: the early diving helmets used had no non-return valves; this meant that if a hose became severed, the high-pressure air around the diver's head rapidly evacuated the helmet causing tremendous negative pressure that caused extreme and sometimes life-threatening effects. At the British Association for the Advancement of Science meeting in 1842, Sir John Richardson described the diving apparatus and treatment of diver Roderick Cameron following an injury that occurred on 14 October 1841 during the salvage operations.[9]

Pasley recovered 12 more guns in 1839, 11 more in 1840, and 6 in 1841. In 1842 he recovered only one iron 12-pounder because he ordered the divers to concentrate on removing the hull timbers rather than search for guns. Other items recovered, in 1840, included the surgeon's brass instruments, silk garments of satin weave 'of which the silk was perfect', and pieces of leather; but no woollen clothing.[10] By 1843 the whole of the keel and the bottom timbers had been raised and the site was declared clear.[11]

Destruction

In 1840, the broken wreckage was destroyed by the Royal Engineers in a huge controlled explosion that shattered windows as far away as Portsmouth and Gosport.[8]

Surviving timbers and guns

In the 1850s, timber from the ship was used to make the billiard table, still in use today, for the North Wing of Burghley House.[12] Timber salvaged from the Royal George was also used to make the coffin for the famous menagerie owner George Wombwell who died in 1850.[13] Several of the salvaged bronze cannon were melted down to form the base of Nelson's column in London's Trafalgar Square.[8] A 24 pounder from the ship is part of the Royal Armouries collection and is on display at Southsea Castle.[14]

Notes

a. ^ Royal George's usual complement was 867.[4]

b. ^ Durham's career was unaffected by the accident, he went on to become a distinguished frigate captain during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, and commanded a ship at Trafalgar. He died in 1845 a Knight Grand Cross of the Bath with the rank of Admiral.[6]

Citations

  1. 1.0 1.1 Lavery, Ships of the Line vol.1, p173.
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  5. Portraits of the Isle of Wight, P. Sanders, Kingsmead Press, Bath, 1979
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  10. The Times, London, article CS117993292 dated 12 Oct 1840, retrieved 30 Apr 2004.
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  13. J.L. Middlemiss, A Zoo on Wheels: Bostock and Wombwell's Menagerie (Burton on Trent: Dalebrook Publications, 1987), p.11
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References

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Additional reading

  • David Hepper, British Warship Losses in the Age of Sail, 1650-1859 (1994)
  • John Harris, "Lost st Sea"

External links

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