Training ship
Ship used to train seafarers
A port bow view of the Singapore training ship RSS Panglima
A training ship is a ship used to train students as sailors . The term is mostly used to describe ships employed by navies to train future officers. Essentially there are two types: those used for training at sea and old hulks used to house classrooms. As with receiving ships or accommodation ships , which were often hulked warships in the 19th Century, when used to bear on their books the shore personnel of a naval station (as under section 87 of the Naval Discipline Act 1866 (29 & 30 Vict. c. 109),[ 1] the provisions of the act only applied to officers and men of the Royal Navy borne on the books of a warship), that were generally replaced by shore facilities commissioned as stone frigates , most "Training Ships" of the British Sea Cadet Corps , by example, are shore facilities (although the corps has floating Training Ships also, including TS Royalist ).
The hands-on aspect provided by sail training has also been used as a platform for everything from semesters at sea for undergraduate oceanography and biology students to character-building for youths.[citation needed ]
Notable training ships
Royal Navy
Painting of the first Mersey boat race between cadets of HMS Conway (on the right) and London's HMS Worcester on 11 June 1891. Also moored in line are reformatory ships Clarence (centre, furthest away) and Akbar , and TS Indefatigable .[ 2]
Arethusa (1849) from 1874 to 1933.
Boscawen , a series of training ships from 1860 to 1906 (the original HMS Boscawen (1844) went on to serve as TS Wellesley from 1873 to 1914).
Britannia , a series of two training ships from 1859 to 1905.
Bristol (D23) , a 1973 destroyer used for training from 1987 to 2020.
Buzzard (1887) from 1904 to 1921 (renamed President in 1911).
Castor (1832) from 1860 to 1902.
Clio (1858) from 1876 to c.1919.
Conway , a series of three training ships from 1859 to 1956, and then a shore-based school.
Cornwall (see also Wellesley )
Defiance (1861) from 1884 to 1931.
Duncan (F80) , a 1955 frigate used for training from 1969 to 1985.
Eastbourne (F73) , a 1957 frigate used for training from 1971 to 1985.
Excellent , a series of three gunnery training ships from 1830 to 1892 before moving ashore.
Exmouth (1905) , the Royal Navy's first specially commissioned training ship; renamed HMS Worcester after 1945.
Foudroyant (1798) , training ship for gunnery from 1862 to 1884, and for boys from 1891 to 1897. See also Trincomalee .
Ganges (1821) from 1865 to 1905; continuing renamed Tenedos III , Indus V and Impregnable III until 1923.
Implacable , formerly the French Duguay-Rouin (1800) renamed in 1805, from 1855 to c.1949.
Impregnable , a series of training ships between 1862 and 1929
TS Indefatigable , a series of two training ships from 1865 to 1941, including the former HMS Phaeton (1883) .
Kent (D12) , a 1963 destroyer used for training from 1980 to 1993.
Lion (1847) from 1871 to 1905.
Mars (1848) from 1869 to 1929.
TS Mercury , a naval training establishment founded as a ship in 1885.
Mount Edgecumbe , formerly HMS Winchester (1822) , renamed Conway (1861–76), used from 1876 to 1920.
Northampton (1876) from 1894 to 1905.
President (1829) from 1862 to 1903.
Southampton (1820) from 1866 to 1912.
Trincomalee (1817) from 1860 to 1903, continuing renamed TS Foudroyant until 1986.
Warspite , a series of three training ships from 1862 to 1940.
Wellesley (see also Cornwall and Boscawen ).
Worcester , a series of three training ships from 1862 to 1968.
St Vincent (1815) from 1862 to 1905.
Other navies
Juan Sebastián de Elcano sailing with the battle ensign in 2013
BAP Unión at Callao, in 2017
The second Gorch Fock in front of the Naval Academy Mürwik (Red Castle ) in 2015
Amerigo Vespucci in Venice, 2006
JS Kashima in Portsmouth, in 2008
Algerian Navy
Argentine Navy
Bangladesh Navy
Brazilian Navy
Bulgarian Navy
Royal Canadian Navy
Chilean Navy
Chinese People's Liberation Army Navy
Colombian Navy
Dominican Navy
Ecuadorian Navy
Finnish Navy
French Navy
German Navy
Indian Navy
Indonesian Navy
Irish Naval Service
Italian Navy
Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force
Mexican Navy
Royal Dutch Navy
New Zealand Navy
Pakistan Navy
PNS Babur , formerly HMS Diadem (84) , bought in 1956 and used for training from 1961 to 1963.
PNS Rah Naward , formerly Prince William (2001), bought in 2010.
Peruvian Navy
Polish Navy
Portuguese Navy
Romanian Navy
Spanish Navy
Sri Lankan Navy
United States Navy
Uruguayan Navy
Venezuelan Navy
Merchant fleet
John W. Brown
Sedov
Cape Don
Christian Radich , Norway
Herzogin Cecilie , Germany
Belem , France
Kruzenshtern , Russia
Khersones , Ukraine
Kraljica Mora , Croatia
Pamir , Germany, sunk 1957
Passat , Germany
STS Mir , Russia
STS Sedov , Russia
Sørlandet , Norway
John W. Brown , USA
John W. Brown II , USA
Statsraad Lehmkuhl , Norway
Danmark , Denmark
TS Dolphin Leith , United Kingdom[ 3]
TS Dufferin (IMMTS Dufferin ), British India
TS Rajendra , India
TS Chanakya , India
TS Kapitan Felix Oca of the Maritime Academy of Asia and the Pacific
TV Bluefin of the Australian Maritime College
MV Stephen Brown Permanently Moored vessel of the Australian Maritime College
United States Maritime Administration–owned training ships
Other sail training vessels
Californian in San Diego , California
Tenacious in 2010, largest wooden ship built in the UK for over 100 years.
Argo , schooner launched in 2006.
Atyla , schooner launched in 1984.
STV Black Jack , brigantine launched in 1904.
Californian , launched in 1984.
Christian Radich
Dar Młodzieży
Harvey Gamage , schooner launched in 1973.
Irving Johnson and Exy Johnson , twin brigantines launched in 2002.
Kaiwo Maru
Kruzenshtern
Lady Washington
Malcolm Miller
Nippon Maru
Ocean Star , schooner launched in 1991.
Pacific Swift
Peking , 1911 barque used as TS Arethusa II from 1932 to 1940 and then 1945 to 1975.
Pelican of London
Picton Castle , former trawler (1928) converted to barque (1990s) for use 1997 onward.
Pilgrim
TS Royalist , a series of two ships launched in 1971 and 2014.
Sir Winston Churchill
Stavros S Niarchos
Tenacious , barque launched in 2000.
Tole Mour
SSV Tabor Boy
In fiction
See also
References
External links