Thursday, 19 November 2015

HMS Clio - Her Maiden Voyage

The Voyages of HMS Clio

Pea-Bee’s interest in HMS Clio was sparked by two newspaper cuttings, yellowed with age and neither more than seven lines long, found among the memorabilia hoarded by Grandmother.



The cuttings posed so many questions: Why keep them? What was Clio to her? And what was the story these cuttings hinted at? In setting out to answer these questions, Pea-Bee started turning up more and more about HMS Clio and so this blog was born.

Before the story is allowed to unfold, however, it must be pointed out that at the beginning of the 20th century, rather confusingly, there were two ships in the Royal Navy called Clio. The older one, a wooden screw corvette launched in 1858, had, since 1877, been moored in the Menai Strait off Bangor, where she was used as a training ship for boys. Many hundreds of boys passed through her over her 40-odd years as a school – and Pea-Bee apologises to any of their descendants who have come to this blog hoping to find out more about life aboard her.

This blog is about the other Clio – a Cadmus-class sloop launched in 1903 and sold in 1920.

Clio was a small ship – the complement of officers and men was usually about 120 – but she certainly had an eventful career, and frequently she had to battle the elements: that typhoon reported in the cuttings was not the only storm she had to weather.
Clio’s life with the Service can be divided into five distinct phases:
1.       Her maiden voyage at the beginning of 1904
2.       Nearly a year on the Australia station, mainly cruising the islands of the South Pacific
3.       Ten years on the China Station, protecting British interests along the coast and in the lower reaches of the Yangtze
4.       Four years in the Middle East as part of the campaign against the Turks in Arabia during the First World War.
5.       Having been paid off towards the end of the war and put into the Reserve, Clio was recommissioned for one last adventure – the campaign against “The Mad Mullah” in Somalia – before she was sold for scrap in November 1920.

But first, the technical bit
Clio was the fifth of six Cadmus-class sloops built at the beginning of the 20th century. She took just over a year to build: her keel was laid down at Sheerness dockyard on 11 March 1902 and she was launched on 14 March 1903.
The Cadmus class sloops were built of copper-sheathed steel and each had both a steam engine and a full rig of sails. The engine was a three-cylinder vertical triple expansion steam engine developing 1,400hp and driving twin screws. The sail plan was barquentine-rigged, that is, three masts with a square-rigged foremast and fore-and-aft rigged main and mizzen masts. Clio could reach speeds in excess of 13 knots.
Each ship had six 4-inch/25-pounder and four 3-pounder quick-firing breach loaders together with three Maxim machine guns.
Clio had a length of 185ft, was 33ft at the beam and had a draught of 11¼ft. Overall, she had a displacement of 1,070 tons and carried 195-225 tons of coal.

The officers and crew
The size of the crew varied considerably. Most of the time the ship’s complement was between 110 and 120 officers and men, but for the Somaliland Campaign of 1919/1920, there were over 150 on board.
It would be extremely difficult – if not impossible – to produce a complete crew list for her 16 years of service. After her initial commissioning in 1904, Clio recommissioned six times – effectively six complete new crews to try to identify. Officers and warrant officers appeared in the Navy Lists of the time, and these will appear in a suitable appendix to this blog, as will the handful of other men who have been identified.
Clio was fitted with a hand capstan and hand wheel, situated after under the poop. As a result, the complement of the crew was allowed to include one musician for playing when weighing anchor or working cables. However, there does exist a photograph of Clio’s band and there are 14 men in view – including three members of the Royal Marine detachment on board. There was a bass drummer, two side drummers/buglers and 10 flute players, plus a drum major. How many were musicians by trade is not known but at least four, including the drum major, wore gunners’ badges.
At this point, all that is necessary is to give the dates of recommissioning and a chronology of the commanding officers.

19 January 1904 Sheerness                  Commander Henry Douglas Wilkin DSO
1 August 1906 Hong Kong                     Commander Cecil Dacre Staveley Raikes
24 September 1908 Hong Kong          Commander Charles Tuthill Borrett
12 October 1910 Hong Kong                 Commander Henry Rawdon Veale (joined 30 September)
17 October 1912 Hong Kong                 Commander Colin MacKenzie DSO (joined 25 July)
4 April 1916 “abroad”                              Commander Arthur Welland Lowis (joined 26 January)
Paid off 27 August 1918 Port Said      [Lt RNR Charles Lennard (joined 7 September 1916)]
5 March 1919 Port Said                    Commander Harold Brisbane Bedwell
27 March 1919 Port Said                  Commander Vernon Stanhope Rashleigh
4 November 1919 Gibraltar                  Commander Charles Harold Jones DSO (joined 13 September)

Part I Clio’s maiden voyage
Clio’s career did not get off to a good start, even though her sea trials after commissioning were satisfactory. It was on her maiden voyage, which began on 29 January 1904, that things started to go wrong. She was heading for the Australian station and, as reported at the time:
“Very heavy weather conditions were experienced down the English Channel, and Clio proved herself to be anything but a good vessel in a seaway. She shipped large quantities of water, and being a ship of extremely light draught rolled and pitches severely. So roughly was she handled by the elements that her commander deemed it advisable on the day after sailing to run into Portland for shelter, and while there two of the ship’s company deserted. The stormy conditions having somewhat moderated the voyage was resumed on January 31, and Plymouth was reached the same afternoon. A few hours were spent at this port and Clio sailed the same evening.
“While steaming across the Bay of Biscay a terrific tempest was encountered, resulting in some amount of damage being done to the ship. No sooner had Clio lost sight of the Eddystone lighthouse than a violent gale sprang up. The tempest continued to rage with unabated fury during the whole of February 1 and 2. One of the ship’s dinghies which was hanging over the stern of the ship was dashed to atoms by the mountainous seas which were running at the time. The jib forward was washed away and a good deal of damage done aft. The mess deck forward was flooded to the extent of 2ft or 3ft, and the contents were floating from one side of the side to the other. Clio rolled and pitched heavily, and at intervals of every few minutes shipped gigantic seas. On February 3, after passing Finisterre, the conditions moderated, and Gibraltar was safely reached, much to the relief of the whole of the ship’s company, on February 5. The ship was coaled and departure was again taken on February 8 for Malta.”
But the voyage had only just begun. On leaving Gibraltar, Clio sustained further damage: one of the blades of the port propeller was bent. When she reached Malta on 11 February, Clio went into dry dock and the repairs delayed her until 18 February, when she resumed her journey, arriving at Post Said on 22 February. The coal bunkers having once more been replenished, the Clio entered the Canal on the following day, and anchored off Ismalia for the night. The next morning she arrived at Suez and set sail down the Red Sea on 25 February.
Just about the time Clio was sailing between Gibraltar and Malta, the Russo-Japanese war broke out.
“In the Red Sea Clio encountered a fleet of Russian warships, and those in command scanned the Clio with great suspicion. During the night one of the Russian destroyers, with all her lights extinguished, steamed within 50 yards of Clio, and followed her closely for about 10 minutes. No signals were made, and no communication of any kind took place. Eventually the Russians having evidently satisfied themselves that Clio belonged to Great Britain abandoned pursuit, and the destroyer which had shadowed her was soon lost to sight.”
 After her close encounter with the suspicious Russians, Clio continued her voyage past Aden and across the Indian Ocean without incident until…
“While in the Malacca Straits on the way to Singapore, Clio picked up a native canoe floating bottom upwards. There were no traces of life in the vicinity, but it was presumed that the disaster had overtaken some boating party. The canoe was secured, and has been brought on to Sydney…[where] its history created a good deal of interest.”
Clio arrived at Singapore on 26 March and after a few days relaxing set off again on 3 April.
“Early on the morning of Sunday, 10 April, Engine-room Artificer Andrew Mott died of appendicitis, and at 11 am that day he was buried at sea off Timor with naval honours.”
Andrew John Mott had been born in Chelsea on 5 September 1878 but his birth was not registered and his parents have not been identified.
On 11 April, Clio reached Thursday Island off the tip of Cape York, Queensland. She remained there until 19 April, during which time football matches were organised against some of the shore teams.
“Three of the ship’s company, a stoker and two boys, deserted the ship in one of the boats. An exhaustive search was made, and although the boat was eventually discovered no trace of the missing men could be found.”
Clio sailed without them but when she reached Cooktown, further down the Queenland coast on 23 April “orders were received from Vice-Admiral Fanshawe from Sydney to return to Thursday Island to arrest the three deserters, who had in the meantime been captured by the civil authorities. The Clio arrived for the second time at Thursday Island on April 28, and received the deserters on board the following day. She sailed on April 30 for Sydney direct, and a stop was made each night while coming through the Great Barrier Reef.”
On reaching Sydney on 9 May 1904, there was some good news reported: “Since leaving Gibraltar excellent weather conditions had prevailed.”
Clio was to replace HMS Sparrow (which had been taken out of commission) on the Australian station and upon arrival at Sydney moored in Farm Cove, just off Mrs Macquarie’s Chair.

Sources
Unlike other of Pea-Bee’s blogs, individual facts have not been referenced this time. That is because virtually everything appears in The Sydney Morning Herald of Tuesday 10 May 1904 (via trove.nla.gov.au)
Other sources are:
The Navy List (via Ancestry.com)
Naval Database (www.pbenyon.plus.com/18-1900/C/01006.html)
Naval-History.net (www.naval-history.net/OWShips-WW1-18-HMS_Clio3.htm)
Exeter Flotilla (www.exeterflotilla.org/history_misc/nav_customs/nc_customs.html)

Historical Photographs of China (hpc.vcea.net/Database/Images?ID=31207)

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