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 . Scorpion had a long Royal Navy career, until she was lost in the North Atlantic in 1903.
North Carolina and her sister were intended, together with other warships, to break the Federal blockade of Confederate coastal cities and to hold some Northern cities for ransom.[1] The ships had a length between perpendiculars of 224feet, a beam of 42feet,[2] and a draught of 17feet at deep load. They displaced 2751LT. The hull was divided by 12 watertight bulkheads and the ships had a double bottom beneath the engine and boiler rooms. Their crew consisted of 152 officers and ratings.[3]
The Scorpion-class ships had two horizontal direct-acting steam engines, built by Lairds, each driving a single propeller shaft, using steam provided by four tubular boilers. The engines produced a total of 1450ihp which gave the ships a maximum speed of 10.5kn.[3] The ships carried 336LT of coal, enough to steam 1210nmi at .[3] They were barque-rigged with three masts. The funnel was made semi-retractable to reduce wind resistance while under sail.[4]
No ordnance had been ordered by the Confederates before the ships were seized in 1863, but in British service they mounted a pair of 9-inch rifled muzzle-loading guns in each turret. The guns could fire both solid shot and explosive shells.[5] According to Parkes, going from full depression to full elevation supposedly took one hour in smooth water and with an even keel![4]
The Scorpion-class ships had a complete waterline belt of wrought iron that was 4.5inches thick amidships and thinned to 3inches at the bow and 2.5inches at the stern. It completely covered the hull from the upper deck to 3inchesft3inchesin (ftin) below the waterline.[2] The armour protection of the turrets was quite elaborate. The inside of the turret was lined with 0.5inches of iron boiler plate to which T-shaped beams were bolted. The space between the beams was filled with 10inches of teak. This was covered by an iron lattice 0.75inches thick that was covered in turn by 8inches of teak. The 5.5inches iron plates were bolted to the outside using bolts that ran through to the interior iron "skin". The area around the gun ports was reinforced by 4.5-inch plates to give a total thickness of 10 inches. The turret roof consisted of T-shaped beams covered by 1inches iron plates.[6]
In early 1864, the Admiralty purchased both for the Royal Navy and named them Scorpion and . Commissioned in July 1865, Scorpion was assigned to the Channel Fleet until 1869, with time out for a refit that reduced her sailing rig from a bark to a schooner. In late 1869, she moved to Bermuda for coast and harbour defence service. Scorpion remained there for over three decades before being removed from the effective list. Scorpion was sunk as a target in 1901 but raised the next year and sold in February 1903. She was lost at sea while under tow to the U.S., where she was to be scrapped.[7]
. George Alexander Ballard . The Black Battlefleet . 1980 . Naval Institute Press . Annapolis, Maryland. 0-87021-924-3.