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French ship Tourville (1853)

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Ship of the line of the French Navy For other ships with the same name, see French ship Tourville.
Tourville (third from the left) at the Bombardment of Sveaborg, 9 August 1855 by John Wilson Carmichael
History
France
NameTourville
NamesakeAnne Hilarion de Tourville
BuilderBrest
Laid down26 August 1847
Launched31 October 1853
Out of service12 August 1872
FateScrapped 1878
General characteristics
Class and typeTourville-class ship of the line
Tons burthen4,400 tonnes
Length61.40 m (201.4 ft)
Beam16.69 m (54.8 ft)
Draught7.23 m (23.7 ft)
Propulsion
  • Sail
  • Steam engine, 650 hp (485 kW)
Armament90 guns
ArmourTimber

Tourville was a 90-gun sail and steam ship of the line of the French Navy, lead ship of her class.

Career

Part of the Baltic Fleet off Cronstadt, ships L-R; Orion; Du Quesne; Royal George; and Tourville, Flag Ship of Admiral Pénaud. Illustrated London News 1855

She took part in the Baltic theatre of the Crimean War, shelling Sweaborg on 10 August 1855. She later took part in the French Intervention in Mexico as a troop ship.

Put in ordinary in 1864. On the 30 May 1856 off the island of Marmora she collided with a British Government Troopship and horse carrier, the Argo returning troops from the Crimea, compelling the Argo to put in for repairs at Constantinople.

She was hulked in Cherbourg in 1871 to serve as a prison for survivors of the Paris Commune. Struck the next year, she was renamed to Nestor and eventually broken up in 1878.

Citations

  1. ^ Roche, vol.1, p.443
  2. ^ Sail ships of the line (3rd class, 80-90 guns)
  3. "General Screw Steam Company meeting". Bankers Circular. 16 August 1856. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
  4. "Her Majesty's visit to the Argo". London Morning News. 7 August 1856. Retrieved 19 March 2023.

References

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