Achilles was recommissioned in 1901 as a depot ship at Malta under a succession of different names. She was transferred to Chatham in 1914 and was again renamed multiple times before she was sold for scrap in 1923. Achilles had more changes of her rigging and armament than any other British warship, before or since.
Achilles was the third member of the 1861 Naval Programme and was designed as an improved version of the earlier armoured frigates with a complete waterline armour belt.[2]
The ship was 380feet long between perpendiculars, had a beam of 58feet and a draft of 27feet.[3] She displaced 9820LT[4] and had a tonnage of 6,121 bm.[3] The hull was subdivided by watertight transverse bulkheads into 106 compartments and had a double bottom.[5] Achilles was designed with a high centre of gravity and was very stiff. So much so that the ship only rolled 10 degrees during one storm that ripped the main and mizen topgallant masts off and split her topsails. Because of her great length she was not very manoeuvrable. Achilles had a crew of 709 officers and ratings.[6]
The ship had a single two-cylinder trunk steam engine made by John Penn and Sons driving a single 241NaN1 propeller.[7] Ten rectangular boilers provided steam to the engine at a working pressure of 25psi. During her sea trials on 15 March 1865, Achilles had a maximum speed of 14.32kn from 5722ihp. The ship carried 750LT of coal,[8] enough to steam 1800nmi at .[2]
As built, Achilles was ship-rigged with four masts, called bow, fore, main and mizen from fore to aft, and she was the only British warship ever to have four masts.[9] They carried a total of 44000square feet of sail area, excluding the stunsails, the greatest area ever spread in a British warship.[5] Her performance was unsatisfactory when the wind was before the beam and her bowsprit and bowmast were removed in June 1865 in an attempt to correct this problem. However, now she had too much weather helm so the bowsprit was replaced and the foremast was moved forward 25feet in July 1866.[2] This reduced her sail area to 30133square feet.[5] In 1877 Achilles was rerigged as a barque.[9] Both of her funnels were retractable to reduce wind resistance while under sail alone.[10]
The intended armament of Achilles changed no less than five times before it was finally mounted. She received four rifled 110-pounder breech-loading guns mounted on the upper deck, two of which served as chase guns at the bow and stern, and 16 smoothbore, muzzle-loading 100-pounder Somerset cannon, eight on each side on the main deck. The breech-loading guns were a new design from Armstrong and much was hoped for them. Firing tests carried out in September 1861 against an armoured target, however, proved that the 110-pounder was inferior to the 68-pounder smoothbore gun in armour penetration and repeated incidents of breech explosions during the Battles for Shimonoseki and the Bombardment of Kagoshima in 1863–1864 caused the navy to withdraw the gun from service shortly afterwards. In 1865, six 68-pounder smoothbores were added, three on each side of the main deck, although she was not comprehensively rearmed until her 1868 refit.[11]
Detailed data for the Somerset cannon is not available, but the 7.9adj=onNaNadj=on solid shot of the 68-pounder gun weighed approximately 68lb while the gun itself weighed 10640lb. The gun had a muzzle velocity of 1579ft/s and had a range of at an elevation of 12°. The 7inches shell of the 110-pounder Armstrong breech-loader weighed 107lb110lb. It had a muzzle velocity of 1150ft/s and, at an elevation of 11.25°, a maximum range of . The 110-pounder gun weighed 9520lb. All of the guns could fire both solid shot and explosive shells.[12]
Achilles was rearmed during her 1867–68 refit with 22 seven-inch and eight 8inches rifled muzzle-loading guns. The eight-inch guns and 18 seven-inch guns were mounted on the main deck and the remaining seven-inch guns replaced the 110-pounders on the upper deck.[13] The shell of the 15-calibre eight-inch gun weighed 175lb while the gun itself weighed 9LT. It had a muzzle velocity of 1410ft/s and was credited with the ability to penetrate 9.6inches of wrought iron armour at the muzzle. The 16-calibre seven-inch gun weighed 6.5LT and fired a 112lb shell. It was credited with the ability to penetrate 7.7adj=onNaNadj=on armour.[14]
In 1874 the ship was rearmed with 16 nine-inch rifled muzzle-loaders replacing the 4 eight-inch and 20 of the 22 seven-inch guns. Fourteen of the 9adj=on0adj=on guns were mounted on the main deck and the other two replaced the seven-inch chase guns. The two remaining seven-inch guns stayed in their position on the quarterdeck. As the nine-inch guns were considerably bigger than their predecessors, the gun ports had to be widened to accommodate them. The shell of the 14-calibre nine-inch gun weighed 254lb while the gun itself weighed 12LT. It had a muzzle velocity of 1420ft/s and was rated with the ability to penetrate a 11.3inches of wrought iron armour at the muzzle.[14]
The ship had a wrought-iron waterline armour belt that ran the full length of the ship. Amidships, it was 4.5inches thick for a length of 212feet and tapered to a thickness of to the ends of the ship. The armour extended 5inchesft6inchesin (ftin) below the waterline. The main deck was protected by a strake of armour, also 4.5-inch thick and 212 feet long. To protect against raking fire the upper strake was closed off by 4.5-inch transverse bulkheads at each end.[15]
Achilles, named after the Greek mythological hero,[16] was ordered on 10 April 1861 from the Chatham Dockyard.[17] She was the first iron-hulled warship to be built at a royal dockyard and her construction was delayed by the need to acquire the necessary machinery to handle iron and to train the workers to use it. The ship was laid down on 1 August 1861 in a drydock and was floated out rather than being launched on 23 December 1863. Achilles was completed on 26 November 1864 at the cost of £469,572.[18]
She served in the Channel Fleet until 1868. After a refit and her first major re-armament, Achilles became the guardship at Portland until 1874 when she was again re-armed. Upon its completion in 1875, the ship became guardship at Liverpool until 1877 when Captain William Hewett, VC, assumed command. In 1878 she was one of the ships in the Particular Service Squadron which Admiral Geoffrey Hornby took through the Dardanelles at the time of the Russian war scare in June–August 1878 during the Russo-Turkish War. Achilles accidentally collided with the flagship of the Mediterranean Fleet,, on 4 October 1879, but was only lightly damaged by Alexandras propeller.[19] [20] The ship rejoined the Channel Fleet in 1880 and was paid off in 1885.[21]
She lay derelict in the Hamoaze until April 1901, when she was sent to Malta as a depot ship. To release her name for the new armoured cruiser, Achilles was renamed Hibernia in 1902. She was renamed Egmont in March 1904, and remained in Malta until 1914. Her role in Malta was assumed by the stone frigate Fort St Angelo.[22] She was brought home to Chatham that year, and served there as a depot ship under the successive names of Egremont (19 June 1916) and Pembroke (6 June 1919).[16] The ship was sold for scrap on 26 January 1923 to the Granton Shipbreaking Co.[23]
Charles Dickens offered a short meditation on the construction of HMS Achilles following a visit to Chatham Dockyard in 1863, first published in the weekly magazine All the Year Round on 29 August 1863, and then included in his collection The Uncommercial Traveller. Dickens came away impressed by the experience, and the idea that such a large iron construction could float or move. "To think that this Achilles, monstrous compound of iron tank and oaken chest, can ever swim or roll! To think that any force of wind and wave could ever break her!" [24]