HMS Princess Royal (1853)
HMS Princess Royal was a 91-gun second rate ship of the line of the Royal Navy, launched on 23 June 1853 at Portsmouth. During her career she took part in both the Baltic Campaign and the naval bombardment of Sebastopol during the Crimean War. She later served as the Flagship of Rear-Admiral George St Vincent King in his role as Commander-in-chief, East Indies and China Station. She was broken up in 1872. For more than 30 years the wooden figurehead of Princess Royal adorned the outer wall of Castle's ship breaking yard at Baltic Wharf, Millbank, London.
primaryTopic
HMS Princess Royal (1853)
HMS Princess Royal was a 91-gun second rate ship of the line of the Royal Navy, launched on 23 June 1853 at Portsmouth. During her career she took part in both the Baltic Campaign and the naval bombardment of Sebastopol during the Crimean War. She later served as the Flagship of Rear-Admiral George St Vincent King in his role as Commander-in-chief, East Indies and China Station. She was broken up in 1872. For more than 30 years the wooden figurehead of Princess Royal adorned the outer wall of Castle's ship breaking yard at Baltic Wharf, Millbank, London.
length (mm)
has abstract
HMS Princess Royal was a 91-gu ...... altic Wharf, Millbank, London.
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commissioning date
1853-10-29
decommissioning date
1867-08-14
length (μ)
6.61416e+1
ship launched
1853-06-23
status
Broken up, 1872
top speed (kmh)
type
Wikipage page ID
49,972,413
Wikipage revision ID
712,954,109
Ship armament
*91 guns:
*Gundeck: 30 × 56-po ...... r guns
*Fc: 1 × 68-pounder gun
Ship builder
Portsmouth Dockyard
Ship complement
Ship flag
Ship honours
*Participated in:
*Baltic Campaign
*Naval Bombardment of Sebastopol
Ship propulsion
Steam engine, , single screw
Ship sail plan
Ship tons burthen
comment
HMS Princess Royal was a 91-gu ...... altic Wharf, Millbank, London.
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label
HMS Princess Royal (1853)
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wasDerivedFrom
isPrimaryTopicOf
name
HMS Princess Royal
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