- Author
- A.N. Other and NHSA Webmaster
- Subjects
- None noted
- Tags
-
- RAN Ships
- HMAS Penguin I, HMAS Penguin (Shore Base - Balmoral)
- Publication
- December 1983 edition of the Naval Historical Review (all rights reserved)
STANDING PROUDLY IN THE GROUNDS of HMAS Penguin at Balmoral, Sydney, is the figurehead of the old Wild Swan Class sloop that gave the establishment its name. It is of a woman of mid-Victorian dimensions and not the sea bird one would have expected. The figurehead is the last relic of the ship which put down slavery off Zanzibar, foiled East African blockade runners and surveyed uncounted thousands of miles of the West Pacific.
Penguin belongs to the class of sloops built during the comparatively brief period of composite construction in the Royal Navy. They were slow, but in seaworthiness, under all possible conditions, and in ease of handling and durability, they had no superiors.
Sister ships to Penguin laid down in 1875 were Wild Swan, Osprey, Pelican and Cormorant and this group were followed by nine more vessels of the same type named Kingfisher, Gannet, Espiegle, Dragon, Doterel, Phoenix, Mutine, Miranda and Pegasus.
Like all the single screw composite sloops built for the Royal Navy, they were barque rigged, carrying a total sail area of 14,800 square feet excluding stun-sails. They were the largest vessels launched after 1870 to carry wooden instead of iron lower masts, each mast made from a single fir tree drawn from those growing in the New Forest specially planted centuries before to meet the needs of the King’s ships.
On commissioning, Penguin was sent to the Pacific where she spent four years before returning home in the latter half of 1881 to pay off at Plymouth. She was put into dockyard hands for replacement of her engines, which had been a continuous source of trouble. At the same time her 64 pdr. stern chase gun was replaced by 2-5 inch 38 cwt. breech load guns mounted on the poop. A long period in the fleet reserve followed and she did not go to sea again until she recommissioned for service on the East Indies Station in 1886.
On her second commission she took part in the suppression of the slave trade on the East African coast and in 1888 she also took part in the blockade of Zanzibar. Penguin returned to England in 1889.
A different kind of service now awaited Penguin, which was destined to last for six full commissions over a period of seventeen years. In the 19th century, the waters of Australasia and the West Pacific were incompletely charted and large stretches of coast in that quarter of the globe remained hazardous for the navigator. The Admiralty, as the body responsible for hydrography, were anxious to remedy this state of affairs and at this period were considering vessels suitable for the purpose. The composite sloops now obsolete as war vessels were ideal, combining as they did good sea-keeping qualities, with ease in handling, shallow draught, and the ability to conserve fuel by the use of her sails.
Accordingly Penguin was selected for conversion to a Survey Ship. All her guns were removed except for a pair of broadside 64 pdrs. which were left on board as an insurance against attack by natives. The spaces left vacant by the removal of her 2-7 inch guns were used for erecting deckhouses as cartography and instrument rooms, and ship’s boats were increased to nine in number, including two steam cutters.
Conversion work was completed in December 1889 and in January 1890, she commissioned and sailed for Australia to begin her long task of filling up the many blanks on the charts. In 1895, working in the Tonga Trough, she sounded to a depth of 4,900 fathoms without touching bottom, beating the existing record of 4,575 fathoms established by HMS Challenger in 1875.
In February 1896 ((Editors Note-October 2014: There is evidence to believe that the date of Penguin’s record sounding was December 1895. Refer: 8 January 1896 edition of The Press (a New Zealand newpaper) and “Thirty Years of Discovering the Mariana Trench” (published in Hydro-International). Hat tip to member Laurie McLean.)), Penguin broke her own record when she obtained a sounding of 5,155 fathoms in the Kermadec Trough in the South Pacific at a point now known as the Penguin Deep. On this occasion in order to make certain the line would hold her commander ordered it to be wound by hand. The ship’s company worked for several hours in relays of four, and were eventually rewarded with an ‘excellent specimen of red clay’.
Survey of the Pacific Cable route was also part of Penguin’s duty and she is reputed, during this period of her service, to have remained under way for eleven months.
Penguin carried out surveys of the treacherous Great Barrier Reef off the Australian coast in 1905-06, correcting much faulty earlier work and continuing the trigonometrical survey of the Queensland coast where Commander E.P. Bedwell in the Llewellyn had left off in 1879.
In January 1907, Penguin arrived Sydney from Queensland waters for paying off which took place on 31st March 1907, bringing a seagoing career of more than thirty years to a close. As a Survey Ship she had completed six full commissions receiving new officers and men in 1893, 1896, 1899, 1902 and 1905. Her duties were taken over by HMS Fantome, commanded for several years by Captain F.C. Pasco, RN, grandson of Crawford Pasco who had served in the Beagle under John Lort Stokes, and great grandson of the Lieutenant Pasco responsible for hoisting Nelson’s famous signal at Trafalgar.
Beagle served as a Survey Ship in Australian waters 1837-43.
On 17th February 1908, Admiralty approved an expenditure of £670 to convert Penguin to a Depot Receiving Ship for use at Garden Island. She commissioned on 1st January 1909.
In 1913, Admiralty relinquished control of Garden Island and its naval establishments to the Australian Commonwealth, selling Penguin as part of the effects for the sum of £2000. She remained a Depot Ship berthed at the Island until 1st January 1923, when she was paid off for disposal out of the service.
However, the old ship’s career did not end there. The hull was cut down and she became a crane lighter operating on Sydney Harbour. Her solid teak planks and iron frame kept her afloat for another sixty years. Her remains were sunk off the coast in the early 1970s.
DETAILS
- Type: Sloop (Barque rigged) Wild Swan Class; single screw; composite construction iron frame sheathed with teak and copper.
- Displacement:1130 tons
- Length:170 feet
- Beam: 36 feet
- Draught: 16 feet 1 inch
- I.H.P.: 700; speed 11 knots (max.)
- Bunkers: 150 tons (coal)
- Armament: Original; 2-7 inch 90 cwt. M.L.R. guns. 4-64 pdr. 64 dwt. MLR guns.
- Builder: Napier, Clyde, Scotland
- Laid Down: 1875
- Launched: March 1876
- Commissioned: 23rd August 1877
(The assistance of the Naval Archivist in the preparation of this article was greatly appreciated).