HMS Venus (1895)

HMS Venus was an Eclipse-class cruiser protected cruiser built for the Royal Navy in the mid-1890s.

Design
Eclipse-class second-class protected cruisers were preceded by the shorter Astraea-class cruisers. Venus had a displacement of 5600 LT when at normal load. She had a total length of 373 ft, a beam of 53 ft, a metacentric height of around 3 m, and a draught of 20 ft. She was powered by two inverted triple-expansion steam engines which used steam from eight cylindrical boilers. Using normal draught, the boilers were intended to provide the engines with enough steam to generate 8000 ihp and to reach a speed of 18.5 kn; using forced draft, the equivalent figures were 9600 ihp and a speed of 19.5 kn. Eclipse-class cruisers carried a maximum of 1075 LT of coal and achieved maximum speed of 20 kn in sea trials.

She carried five 40-calibre 6 in quick-firing (QF) guns in single mounts protected by gun shields. One gun was mounted on the forecastle, two on the quarterdeck and one pair was abreast the bridge. They fired 100 lb shells at a muzzle velocity of 2205 ft/s. The secondary armament consisted of six 40-calibre 4.7 in guns; three on each broadside. Their 45 lb shells were fired at a muzzle velocity of 2125 ft/s. She was fitted with three 18-inch torpedo tubes, one submerged tube on each broadside and one above water in the stern. Her ammunition supply consisted of 200 six-inch rounds per gun, 250 shells for each 4.7-inch gun, 300 rounds per gun for the 12-pounders and 500 for each three-pounder. Venus had ten torpedoes, presumably four for each broadside tube and two for the stern tube.

Service history
Venus was launched at Fairfield's Govan shipyard on 5 September 1895. Venus was commissioned by Sir Archibald Berkeley Milne in November 1897, and served at the Mediterranean Station. The ship paid off in March 1901 at Chatham Dockyard. In March 1900 she visited Corfu.

She was recommissioned in early 1903 with the crew of HMS Australia, whose duties as coastguard ship at Southampton she took over. During this period she was also used as a training ship for naval cadets.

During 1906, Venus was frequently used to patrol waters near Alexandria, and was involved in preventing a mutiny at Port Said.

In 1908 Venus attended the Quebec Tercentenary in Canada.

She joined the 3rd Fleet at Pembroke in 1913 and went to Portsmouth in 1914. Joined the 11th Cruiser Squadron in Ireland in August 1914; captured two German merchantmen in October and lost her foremast in a gale in November 1914. To Egypt 1916; Singapore March 1917; flagship East Indies 1919 until she returned home in May 1919 to pay off.