- HMS Congo (1816)
The HMS "Congo" was the first
steam -powered warship built for the BritishRoyal Navy , though it must be recorded that she was not very successful as such.She was classified as a "steam sloop" and was built in
1816 atDeptford specifically for an exploration of theCongo River .Armament is recorded as one
carronade and twelve smallswivel gun s. Thesteam engine is recorded as weighing 30 tons and was capable of developing '20 Horse Power'.Trials proved that this power, when transmitted to the
paddle wheel s, could only propel the vessel at about three knots. Such a rate of progress, coupled with unsatisfactory handling characteristics (she was described as "very crank") resulted in the engines and paddle wheels being removed. Examination of the situation by James Watt Junior, son ofJames Watt , could only come up with a recommendation to use the engine for pumping out docks atPlymouth . Thus, the "Congo" sailed to her destination without the steam engine, rigged as aschooner .The Congo expedition
The expedition, under
James Kingston Tuckey , was the first attempt to map the Congo River, and did little beyond prove that the lower river was not navigable beyond one hundred miles (160 km) from the sea. The other thing it proved was that such expeditions were little more than suicide until medical science had improved - all of the officers and most of the crew were dead of disease (especiallyyellow fever ) before they reached therapids which blocked further progress. It was to be another fifty years before the river was mapped, byHenry Morton Stanley .
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