Ant-class gunboat

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HMS arrow flatiron.JPG
A model of
Class overview
NameAnt class
Builders
  • Portsmouth Dockyard
  • Robert Napier & Sons
  • Chatham Dockyard
  • Charles Mitchell & Co
  • J & G Rennie, Greenwich
  • Campbell Johnston, North Woolwich
  • Laird Brothers, Birkenhead
  • Pembroke Dockyard
Operators Royal Navy
Preceded by
Succeeded by Medina class
SubclassesGadfly class
Built1870 - 1879
In commission1870 - 1959
Completed24
General characteristics
TypeFlat-iron gunboat
Displacement254 tons standard
Length85 ft (26 m)
Beam26 ft 1.5 in (7.963 m)
Draught6 ft (1.8 m)
Installed power260 ihp (190 kW)[1]
Propulsion
  • Two 2-cylinder horizontal single-expansion steam engines
  • Two screws[1]
Speed8.5 kn (15.7 km/h)[1]
Crew30[1]
ArmamentOne 10-inch (18 ton) muzzle-loading rifle[1]

The Ant-class gunboat was a class of twenty-four Royal Navy flat-iron gunboats mounting a single 10-inch gun, built between 1870 and 1880.[1] They carried no masts or sails, being among the first Royal Navy vessels not to do so. The last four vessels were ordered separately and are sometimes known as the Gadfly class, although they were essentially identical. Members of the class lingered on as steam lighters, dredgers, boom defence vessels and base ships, lasting in some cases into the 1950s.

Design[]

The flat-iron gunboats were designed for coastal defence and bombardment, and were constructed from iron. They were not rigged, and the single 10-inch (18 ton) muzzle-loading rifle was fitted forward on a hydraulic mount that allowed it to be lowered for a sea passage to improve the vessel's seaworthiness, and raised for action.[1] Power was provided by a pair of two-cylinder horizontal single-expansion steam engines driving twin screws. Together they developed 260 indicated horsepower (190 kW), giving a top speed of about 8.5 knots (15.7 km/h).[1]

Ships[]

(foreground, in white)
Name Ship Builder Launched Fate
Portsmouth Dockyard 7 December 1870 Became seagoing tender for weapons testing in 1904. Gunboat August 1914. Sold to W Loveridge, West Hartlepool 19 August 1919.
Portsmouth Dockyard 8 December 1870 Sold to J Pas on 12 May 1908 and broken up in the Netherlands
Robert Napier & Sons, Govan 7 January 1871 Sold to Thos. W. Ward, Milford Haven March 1923
Robert Napier & Sons, Govan 8 February 1871 Sold in a partially dismantled state to Hughes Bolckow on 18 May 1920 and converted to a dredger
Chatham Dockyard 25 March 1871 Converted to tank vessel, renamed C79 in 1903-4 and still listed as in service in 1930
Chatham Dockyard 25 March 1871 Completed as a cable lighter, renamed YC15 on 23 September 1907
Charles Mitchell and Co, Walker 4 April 1871 Renamed Snapper in 1914, sold to Thames Shipbreakers Ltd on 28 November 1931
Charles Mitchell and Co, Walker 22 April 1871 Boom defence vessel in 1917, sold to F Bevis Ltd on 28 June 1921
J & G Rennie, Greenwich 22 April 1871 Sold to W H Webber on 1 March 1922
J & G Rennie, Greenwich 20 May 1871 Sold on 12 January 1909 as salvage vessel Disperser and lost in April 1940
Chatham Dockyard 13 March 1872 Sold to W Loveridge, West Hartlepool on 6 October 1908
Chatham Dockyard 13 March 1872 Hulked or sold in 1905
Campbell Johnston, North Woolwich 17 September 1872 Sold to R Gillham on 16 July 1906
Campbell Johnston, North Woolwich 16 October 1872 Boom defence vessel at Southampton in 1908, sold to G Sharpe on 27 March 1920
Campbell Johnston, North Woolwich 15 November 1872 Dockyard lighter in 1906
Campbell Johnston, North Woolwich 11 December 1872 Sold at Chatham to Deaker, Hull in 1909
Laird Brothers, Birkenhead 14 August 1873 Boom defence vessel 1917, used as a target in 1921, sold to Granton Shipbreaking Company for breaking up on 2 June 1926
Laird Brothers, Birkenhead 14 August 1873 Became base ship, renamed Vivid on 19 February 1912, Vivid II in January 1922, YC37 in 1923 and finally sold to Hocking, Plymouth in 1959
Laird Brothers, Birkenhead 30 August 1873 Sold at Chatham to Adrienne Merveille of Dunkirk on 3 April 1906
Laird Brothers, Birkenhead 4 September 1873 Became oil fuel lighter C118 in 1904
Pembroke Dock 5 May 1879 Converted to a coal lighter at Simonstown, completing on 18 May 1900 and then renamed YC230. Sold at the Cape in 1918
Pembroke Dock 5 May 1879 Sold at Portsmouth on 11 June 1905
Pembroke Dock 15 September 1879 Became steam lighter YC373 in 1905, renamed Flora on 19 June 1923 as base ship, then Afrikander in 1933. Believed to have been broken up at the Cape in 1951
Tickler Pembroke Dock 15 September 1879 Converted to steam lighter at Simonstown in 1902, renamed Afrikander as base ship on 26 February 1919, then Afrikander II in 1933. Broken up at Simonstown in 1937

References[]

  • Colledge, J. J.; Warlow, Ben (2006) [1969]. Ships of the Royal Navy: The Complete Record of all Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy (Rev. ed.). London: Chatham Publishing. ISBN 978-1-86176-281-8.
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Winfield, R.; Lyon, D. (2004). The Sail and Steam Navy List: All the Ships of the Royal Navy 1815–1889. London: Chatham Publishing. ISBN 978-1-86176-032-6.
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