History | |
---|---|
United Kingdom | |
Name | HMS Stromboli |
Ordered | 12 March 1838 |
Builder | Royal Dockyard, Portsmouth |
Cost | £41,240 |
Laid down | September 1838 |
Launched | 27 August 1839 |
Completed | 6 September 1840 |
Commissioned | 18 July 1840 |
Honours and awards |
|
Fate | Sold for breaking August 1866 |
General characteristics | |
Type |
|
Displacement | 1,283 tons |
Tons burthen | 965+79⁄94 bm |
Length |
|
Beam |
|
Draught |
|
Depth of hold | 21 ft 0 in (6.4 m) |
Installed power | 280 nominal horsepower |
Propulsion |
|
Sail plan | 3-masted barque rigged |
Complement | 149 (later 160) |
Armament |
|
HMS Stromboli was initially a Steam Vessel second class (later reclassed as a First Class Sloop) designed by Sir William Symonds, Surveyor of the Navy, and built at Portsmouth. She was commissioned and participated in the bombardment of Acre in 1840, during the Russian War she was used as a troop transport in the Baltic in 1854, she was in the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov in 1855. Her last overseas posting was on the South East Coast of America. She was sold for breaking in August 1866.[1]
Stromboli was the only vessel of this name in the Royal Navy.[2]