HHS Glasgow
HHS Glasgow at Zanzibar in 1890 | |
| History | |
|---|---|
| Sultanate of Zanzibar | |
| Name | Glasgow |
| Operator | Sultan of Zanzibar |
| Builder | William Denny and Brothers |
| Yard number | Hull 200 |
| Laid down | 14 May 1877 |
| Launched | 2 March 1878 |
| Out of service | 27 August 1896 |
| Fate | Sunk during Anglo-Zanzibar War, salvaged and broken up 1912 |
| General characteristics | |
| Type | Royal yacht |
| Tonnage | 736 gross register tonnage |
| Displacement | 1,416 tons |
| Length | 210 ft (64 m) |
| Beam | 29 ft (8.8 m) |
| Draft | 16 ft (4.9 m) |
| Installed power | 172 nhp |
| Propulsion | Single compound steam engine with two bladed lifting propeller |
| Speed | 12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph) |
| Armament | 7 x RML 9-pounder; 9-barrel Gatling gun |
His Highness' Ship Glasgow was a royal yacht belonging to the Sultan of Zanzibar. She was built in the style of the British frigate HMS Glasgow which had visited the Sultan in 1873. Glasgow cost the Sultan GB£32,735 (equivalent to £3.2 million in 2023) and contained several luxury features, but failed to impress the Sultan and she laid at anchor in harbour at Zanzibar Town for much of her career. She was brought out of semi-retirement on 25 August 1896, and two days later participated in the world's shortest war – the roughly 38-minute Anglo-Zanzibar War, where she was quickly destroyed by a flotilla of British warships, sinking a few minutes after the war ended. Glasgow's wreck remained in the harbour, her three masts and funnel projecting from the water, until 1912 when she was broken up for scrap.