HMS
Agincourt, named after the victory at the
Battle of Agincourt in 1415, was originally ordered on 2 September 1861 as HMS
Captain, but her name was changed during construction. She was laid down on 30 October 1861 by
Laird's at its shipyard in
Birkenhead. The ship was launched on 27 March 1865, commissioned in June 1868 for sea trials and completed on 19 December. The lengthy delay in completion was due to frequent changes in design details, and experiments with her armament and with her sailing rig. The ship cost a total of £483,003.
Agincourts first assignment, together with her half-sister , was to tow a
floating drydock from England to
Madeira where it would be picked up by and and taken to
Bermuda. The ships departed the
Nore on 23 June 1869, loaded down with of coal stowed in bags on their gun decks, and transferred the floating dock 11 days later after an uneventful voyage.
Agincourt was assigned to the Channel Squadron upon her return and she became the flagship of the second-in-command of the fleet until she began a refit in 1873.
1871 grounding on Pearl Rock (left) towing
Agincourt (right) off Pearl Rock It was during this assignment that she suffered a near-catastrophe when she ran aground on Pearl Rock, near
Gibraltar on 1 July 1871 and nearly sank.
Agincourt was leading the inshore column of ships, contrary to normal practice where the senior flagship lead the inshore column, and gently ran aground sideways when the senior flagship's navigator failed to compensate for the set of the tide.
Warrior, immediately following her, nearly collided with her, but managed to sheer off in time.
Agincourt was stuck fast and had to be lightened; her guns were removed and much of her coal was tossed overboard before she was towed off by , commanded by
Lord Gilford, four days later. Heavy weather set in the night after
Agincourt was freed and it would have wrecked her if she had still been aground. Both the fleet commander and his deputy were relieved of their commands as a result of the incident. at Devonport on the officers of the
Agincourt.
The Graphic 1871The ship was repaired in
Devonport at a cost of £1,195 and Captain J.O. Hopkins assumed command in September with Commander
Charles Penrose-Fitzgerald as his
executive officer. Hopkins later commented: "We turned the
Agincourt from the noisiest and the worst disciplined ship in the squadron into the quietest and the smartest; and a few months after we commissioned we went out to the Mediterranean for the
Lord Clyde court-martial, and beat the whole Mediterranean fleet in their drills and exercises, which was a great triumph." In 1873,
Vice Admiral Sir
Geoffrey Hornby, commander of the Channel Squadron, transferred his flag to
Agincourt as her sister
Minotaur, his former flagship, was taken in hand for a refit that lasted until 1875. That year
Agincourt was paid off in turn for a refit and re-armament that lasted until 1877. During the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–78, the government became concerned that the Russians might advance on the Ottoman capital of Constantinople and ordered Hornby to form a
Particular Service Squadron to show the flag at Constantinople and deter any Russian threat.
Agincourt served as the flagship for his second-in-command and the squadron sailed up the Dardanelles in a blinding snowstorm in February 1878. After those tensions faded, the ship returned to the Channel, where she served as second flag until 1889 including during
Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee
Fleet Review in 1887. Over her active career, she served as flagship to no fewer than 15 admirals. That year she was again paid off and was subsequently held in reserve at
Portsmouth until 1893, when she was transferred to
Portland for use as a training ship.
Agincourt served twelve years at Portland, as a depot ship for boys. She was renamed
Boscawen III in March, 1904. In 1905 she was moved to
Harwich and renamed as
Ganges II. After four years at Harwich, the ship was towed to Sheerness in 1909. After her arrival the old ship was converted into a coal hulk known simply as
C.109. After five ignominious decades as what naval historian
Oscar Parkes called "a grimy, dilapidated and incredibly shrunken relic" of her former self, she was scrapped beginning on 21 October 1960. ==Notes==