HMVS Albert

History
Victoria and Australia
Name: HMVS Albert
Builder: Armstrong Mitchell and Co.
Completed: 1884
Out of service: 1897
Reinstated: World War I
General characteristics
Class and type: Armstrong type B1 flat-iron gunboat
Displacement: 350 tons
Length: 115 ft (35 m)
Beam: 25 ft (7.6 m)
Propulsion: Expansion steam engines
Speed: 10 knots
Armament:

HMVS Albert was a gunboat of the Victorian Naval Forces which was requisitioned for service with the Royal Australian Navy during World War I.

Operational history

As depicted in Brassey's naval annual 1888-1889

HMVS Albert was built by Armstrong, Mitchell and Co. of Elswick, United Kingdom. Completed in early 1884, she made the voyage to Victoria in company with HMVS Victoria and HMVS Childers, arriving on 25 June.

Her time in service with the colonial navy was brief and uneventful, receiving an update for her main gun in 1890 before being paid off to reserve in 1893. In 1897 she was sold to the Victorian Public Works Department. During World War I, Albert was requisitioned with the intention of converting her to a tug, however this was cancelled before work began and she was disposed of in 1917.

Similar ships

Albert was an earlier and slightly smaller near-sister ship of Gayundah and Paluma which were also built in 1884 and served with the colony of Queensland. This class was built to a type B1 flat-iron gunboat design from builders Armstrong Mitchell and Co.

See also

Bibliography

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