History | |
---|---|
United Kingdom | |
Name | HMS Scorpion |
Ordered | 1862 |
Builder | John Laird Sons & Company, Birkenhead |
Laid down | April 1862 |
Launched | 4 July 1863 |
Completed | 10 October 1865 |
Fate |
|
General characteristics | |
Type | Ironclad turret ship |
Displacement | 2,751 long tons (2,795 t) |
Length | 224 ft 6 in (68.4 m) (p/p) |
Beam | 42 ft 4 in (12.9 m) |
Draught | 17 ft (5.2 m) (deep load) |
Installed power | |
Propulsion | 2 shaft, 2 direct-acting steam engines |
Sail plan | Barque-rigged |
Speed | 10.5 knots (19.4 km/h; 12.1 mph) |
Range | 1,210 nmi (2,240 km; 1,390 mi) at 10 kn (19 km/h; 12 mph) |
Complement | 153 |
Armament | 2 × twin 9-inch (229 mm) muzzle-loading rifles |
Armour |
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Notes | sister ship: HMS Wivern |
HMS Scorpion was an ironclad turret ship built by John Laird Sons & Company, at Birkenhead, England. She was one of two sister ships secretly ordered from the Laird shipyard in 1862 by the Confederate States of America.
Her true ownership was concealed by the fiction that she was being built as the Egyptian warship El Tousson. She was to have been named CSS North Carolina upon delivery to the Confederacy. Her sister was built under the false name El Monassir and was to have been renamed CSS Mississippi. In October 1863, a few months after their launch and before they could be completed, the UK Government seized the two ironclads.
In 1864 the Admiralty bought them and commissioned them into the Royal Navy: El Tousson as HMS Scorpion and El Monassir as HMS Wivern. Scorpion had a long Royal Navy career, until she was lost in the North Atlantic in 1903.