The was a class of composite screw corvettes designed by Nathaniel Barnaby for the Royal Navy. The ships were a development of the preceding that replaced wooden construction with one that combined frames and keels of wrought iron, a stem and stern post of cast iron and a cladding of teak. The additional longitudinal strength of the metal frames was designed to afford the opportunity to build in finer lines, and thus higher speeds. The ships did not deliver this better performance, partly due to poor underwater design, and also were prone to oscillate in heavy weather. In service, however, they proved to be good sailing vessels in all sorts of weather. The ships were later redefined as third-class cruisers.
The corvette had a length between perpendiculars of 220feet, with a beam of 40feet and draught of 18feet. Displacement was 2120LT. The engines were provided by Hawthorn. The ship was equipped with six cylindrical boilers feeding a compound engine consisting of two cylinders, working on low and high pressure respectively, rated at 2000ihp. The engines drove a single shaft, to give a design speed of . The vessel achieved from 1994ihp. Range for the class varied between 2000nmi2280nmi at . The steam engine was complemented by 18250square feet of sail, which was ship-rigged. This proved difficult to handle as it meant the vessel was too responsive to weather. Between 1880 and 1890, this was altered to a barque rig.
Turquoise had an armament consisting of 12 slide-mounted 64-pounder rifled muzzle-loading (RML) guns. Five were mounted to each side to provide a broadside, the remainder being fitted in pairs firing through embrasures at the ends of the ship. The ship had a complement of 230 officers and ratings.
Laid down by Earle's Shipbuilding at their shipyard in Kingston upon Hull on 8 July 1874 alongside sister ship, Turquoise was launched on 22 April 1876 and was completed on 13 September 1876 at a cost of £95,547. The warship was the second of the class to enter service. During trials, After experiencing repeated engine failure that delayed commissioning for a year, the vessel finally being commissioned at Sheerness in 13 September 1877.[1] [2] The warship was the first in Royal Navy service to be given the name, which recalled the gemstone turquoise.
Initially sailing to San Francisco, arriving on 7 July 1878, the corvette was then sent to the Pacific Ocean in response to the War of the Pacific.[3] The vessel observed the conflict between Chile and Peru, including reporting the sinking of the at the Battle of Iquique on 21 May 1879.[4] The ship remained there, often as part an international force with representation from France and the US, into the following year, sometimes acting as a hospital ship carrying the injured to safety.
Subsequently, the ship was transferred to the Sultanate of Zanzibar and served in the Indian Ocean on patrols to combat the Indian Ocean slave trade. As the years passed, the crew noted an increase in the number of slave traders. Between 1884 and 1885, Turquoise captured five slave ships. One of the more successful was the capture of a Burmese man-of-war on the Irrawaddy River.[5] The anti-slavery patrols did prove increasingly successful and step by step the slave trade ran down. Between 1886 and 1890, Turquoise captured ten slave ships, each potentially leading to the release of over 100 slaves. Occasionally these led to conflict. For example, after a confrontation, a crew in one of the ship's boats was rammed by a slaving dhow. The British crew boarded the slave ship and, despite that vessel capsizing in the fight, rescued 53 slaves without a sailor losing being killed.
On 1 January 1890 the anti-slavery effort was cemented with the statement that all people born in Zanzibar were free. To enforce this, the Royal Navy was called upon to support local troops and those of the British Army. On 21 October 1890 the crew of the corvette joined a expeditionary force under Vice-admiral Edmund Fremantle sent to Witu to dissuade the people there from slave trading by force if necessary. The mission was a success, led to an almost complete cessation of the slave trade in the area and caused no casualties amongst the crew. The vessel subsequently returned to the UK. On 24 September 1892, the ship was retired and sold to be broken up by Pounds of Hartlepool.