Dee was the third ship to carry this name since it was introduced for a 20-gun sixth rate, launched by Bailey of Ipswich on 5 May 1814 and sold on 33 July 1819 to Pitman.[7]
Her keel was laid in October 1829 at Woolwich Dockyard and launched on 5 April 1832. The gundeck was 166feet in length with 146feet reported for tonnage calculation. Her maximum breadth was 30feet with 30feet reported for tonnage calculation. Her depth of hold was 16feet. Her draught both fore and aft was 11feet. Her builder's measure for tonnage was 704 tons with a displacement of 907 tons.[8]
Her machinery was supplied by Maudslay, Son and Field of Lambeth. She shipped two rectangular fire-tube boilers. The steam engine was a vertical single expansion (VSE) side lever engine with cylinders of 542NaN2 with a stroke of 602NaN2, rated at 200 nominal horsepower (nhp).[9] [10] The engines were connected to two 202NaN2 diameter paddle wheels. Steam was produced and delivered to the engines from tubular boilers at 3.5psi above atmospheric pressure.[11] The Science Museum, London has a model of Dees engine.[12] [13] When the paddle wheels turned 18 revolutions per minute, she had a maximum speed of 8kn.[14] In 1856,[15] Dee and the yacht were used in a trial of J Wethered's apparatus for superheated steam. This produced an economy of fuel of 18% in Black Eagle, and 31% in Dee.[16] In 1866, she was given a new 220 nominal horsepower engine.[17]
Her initial armament consisted of two 18-pounder 22 hundredweight (cwt) muzzle loading smooth bore (MLSB) guns on pivot mounts. Her armament was soon changed to six 32-pounder MLSB guns all on pivot mounts. The six guns were a combination of four 63 cwt and two 56 cwt guns. Late in her career the 56 cwt guns were replaced with a single 10-inch 86 cwt shell gun. In 1868 when converted to a storeship, her armament was removed.[18]
HMS Dee initial commission was on 9 June 1832 under the command of Commander Robert Oliver, RN for service with the squadron blockading the Dutch coast[19] from 9 June 1832 – 27 May 1834, when the steamers Dee and were part of a Royal Navy force including three line-of-battle ships and ten other sailing ships that blockaded the Dutch ports in 1832. This was in support of the French Army, which had intervened in the Belgian Revolution in support of the Belgians against the Dutch, and intervened again to besiege the Dutch garrison of Antwerp.[20] "The two steamers had been particularly useful in the narrow channels of the Dutch estuaries with their fast tidal currents."[21] With the end of the Dutch blockade she was assigned to the Home Station under the command of Commander Edward Stanley, RN on 5 November 1833.[22] On 29 May 1854 she was assigned to the North America and West Indies station under the command of Commander William Ramsay, RN.[23] She returned to Home Waters, paying off in April 1837.[24]
Her second commission started in February 1838 under the command of Commander Joseph Shearer, RN for service on south-east coast of America. She returned to Home Waters paying off in May 1841.[25]
In December 1841 she was taken in hand at Sheerness for conversion to a troop transport. The first phase was completed in June 1842 at a cost of £6,939. She was recommissioned under the command of Thomas Driver, Master on 26 May 1842. She underwent the second phase at Woolwich from June to September 1842 at a cost of £5,461. In March 1846 the Dee was engaged bringing food supplies to Sligo as relief following the first failed harvest of the Great Irish Famine. On 18 May 1848 she was under the command of George Filmer, Master for service at the Cape of Good Hope Station. On 14 September 1852 she was under the command of Lieutenant George T.C. Smith, RN remaining at the Cape of Good Hope Station. She returned to Home Waters in mid-1854.[26]
Between November and December 1854 she was converted to a storeship at Portsmouth at a cost of £860.
She was recommissioned on 23 November 1854 under the command of Thomas C. Pullen, Master. At the time of the 1861 Census, she was in Plymouth Sound, under Pullen's command, en-route between the Clyde and Chatham, carrying Marines and family members, one as young as 1 month. [27]
She paid off in 1860. On 12 June 1863 she was commissioned under the command of George Raymond, Master as a storeship. On 14 October 1869, George Waters, Master took command at Woolwich.[28]
She was paid off for the last time on 17 June 1871 at Sheerness. She was broken at Sheerness in October 1871.[29]