HMS Comus (1878)

HMS Comus
History
United Kingdom
NameHMS Comus
BuilderJ. Elder & Co., Glasgow
Laid down1876
Launched4 April 1878
FateSold in 1904
General characteristics
Class and typeComus-class corvette
Displacement2,380 long tons
Length225 ft (69 m)
Beam44.6 ft (14 m)
Draught
  • 16 ft 9 in (5 m) forward
  • 18 ft 10 in (6 m) aft
Propulsion2 engines of 2,590 ihp driving single screw
Speed13 kt
Complement250
Armament

HMS Comus was a corvette (reclassified in 1888 as a third-class cruiser) of the Royal Navy. She was the name ship of her class. Launched in April 1878, the vessel was built by Messrs. J. Elder & Co of Glasgow at a cost of £123,000.[2]

Comus and her classmates were built during a period of naval transition. Sail was giving way to steam, wooden hulls to metal, and smooth-bore muzzle-loading guns to naval rifles. Comus shows this transition; she was driven by both sails and a reciprocating steam engine; her hull was iron and steel but sheathed with wood and copper; and some of her muzzleloading guns were replaced by rifled breechloaders.

Comus was active for about two decades, but in that time went to the ends of empire, from the British Isles to the Caribbean and Nova Scotia to southwest Africa in the western hemisphere, and in the eastern, from the southern Indian Ocean to the northwest Pacific, and from the China station to the Strait of Magellan.

  1. ^ Winfield (2004) p. 272
  2. ^ Supply—Navy Estimates, Statement of Lord Randolph Churchill, House of Commons Debate, 18 July 1887, Hansard vol. 317, cc1189-295