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Spanish ship Nuestra Señora de la Santísima Trinidad

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Santísima Trinidad
History
Spain
NameNuestra Señora de la Santísima Trinidad
NamesakeHoly Trinity
Ordered23 October 1767
BuilderHavana, Cuba
Laid downOctober 1767
Launched20 March 1769
CompletedAugust 1769
Commissioned1 December 1769
HomeportCádiz, Spain
FateCaptured at Trafalgar, 21 October 1805; scuttled 22 October.
General characteristics
Class and type140-gun first-rate
Displacement4,950 tons
Length61.3 m (201 ft)
Beam16.2 m (53 ft)
Draught8.02 m (26.3 ft)
Troops≈140
Complement1,050 crewmen
Armament
  • 112 guns as built:
  • Lower deck 30 × 36 pdrs
  • Middle deck 32 × 24 pdrs
  • Upper deck 32 × 12 pdrs
  • Quarterdeck and forecastle 18 × 8 pdrs

Nuestra Señora de la Santísima Trinidad, nicknamed La Real, was a Spanish first-rate ship of the line and was the largest warship in the world when launched. She originally had 112 guns; this was increased in 1795–96 to 130 guns by closing in the spar deck between the quarterdeck and forecastle. Around 1802 she was further upgraded, to 136 guns (plus 4 small guns on the poop), effectively creating a continuous fourth gundeck, although the extra guns added were actually relatively small.

She was the most heavily armed ship in the world when rebuilt, and bore the most guns of any ship of the line outfitted in the Age of Sail.

Design and construction

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She was built at Havana, Cuba, to a design by Irish naval architect Matthew Mullan (domiciled in Spain under the name Mateo Mullán), originally intended as a ship of 112 guns. He died on 25 November 1767, and the construction of the ship was continued by his son, Ignacio Mullán. The ship was launched in March 1769 and completed in August 1769 as a 116-gun three-decker.[1] She was considerably larger than her British contemporary HMS Victory and somewhat bigger than the French Bretagne.

There is no complete plan of the ship in existence,[dubiousdiscuss] but there are of the 112-gun ship from 1765, from which the original dimensions of the ship may be found. Here, the units of length are the Spanish Burgos foot (27.86 cm) and the SI metre (100 cm), respectively: length = 21323 (59.53); keel = 182512 (50.82); beam = 5734 (16.09); draught = 281112 (8.06).[Note 1]

She was reputed to be the largest warship in the world, for which she was nicknamed El Escorial de los mares by the Spanish, until surpassed in sheer size by the new type French 120-gun ships such as Océan (1790) and Orient (1791). In 1795, her forecastle was joined to her quarterdeck to create a fourth deck containing a battery of eight pounder guns, giving her a total of 130 guns. Her armament seems to have been quickly reduced to 130 from 136 guns, but she still carried more guns than any other ship of her time.

The weight of the additional guns, so high above her waterline, made her poor sailing qualities even worse, leading to her other nickname El Ponderoso.[Note 2] Some naval officers suggested that she should be restricted to defending the Bay of Cádiz.

Santísima Trinidad remains notable as one of the few four-decker ships of the line ever built. The U.S. Navy constructed the four-deck, 136-gun Pennsylvania and the French Navy, the 120-gun Valmy (both with similar flush deck arrangement). The Royal Navy planned – but did not build – the 170-gun four-decker HMS Duke of Kent.

Service

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In July 1779, Spain declared war on Great Britain, joining France in support of the American colonists in the American War of Independence. Santísima Trinidad became the flagship of the Spanish fleet, taking part in the Franco-Spanish operations in the English Channel in the late summer of that year.[citation needed]

On 12 August 1780 she took part in the capture of 55 merchant ships from a convoy of 63, escorted by the ship of the line HMS Ramillies and three frigates.[2] In 1782 she was incorporated into the Mediterranean Squadron, participating in the Great Siege of Gibraltar and she fought in the brief and indecisive Battle of Cape Spartel.[citation needed] In 1795, she was modified by the addition of extra 8-pounder guns on a new deck between her forecastle and quarterdeck.[citation needed]

Infante don Pelayo going to rescue Santisima Trinidad at Battle of Cape St Vincent on 14 February 1797

In 1797, she was the flagship of Teniente General José de Córdoba y Ramos, the Spanish commander, at Battle of Cape St Vincent on 14 February 1797, where she was badly damaged and nearly captured by the British fleet. She was first in action with the British ship HMS Captain (74), commanded by Commodore Nelson, and HMS Culloden (74). She was then attacked by the Blenheim (90), Orion (74), Irresistible (74) and Excellent (74). By now she was severely damaged, having lost all her masts and with half of her crew killed or wounded. She struck her colours, but the British failed to take possession and she was saved by the Infante don Pelayo (74) and Principe de Asturias (112).

Terpsichore attacking the Santissima Trinidad, two weeks after the Battle of St. Vincent, by John Christian Schetky

Several days later, Santísima Trinidad was spotted, still damaged, making her way back to Spain, and engaged by the 32-gun frigate HMS Terpsichore under Captain Richard Bowen, but she escaped. She eventually returned to Cadiz for repairs.[citation needed]

Eight years later, commanded by Francisco Javier Uriarte and the flagship of Rear Admiral Baltasar Hidalgo de Cisneros, she took part in the Battle of Trafalgar on 21 October 1805 as part of the combined Franco-Spanish fleet. Due to her great bulk, her helm was unresponsive in the light winds on the day, contributing to her ineffective service in the combined fleet's cause.[citation needed] Her great size and position immediately ahead of the fleet flagship Bucentaure made her a target for the British fleet, and she came under concentrated attack by several ships, even though she managed to engage seven enemy vessels and inflict impressive casualties to the British flagship. She lost her mast and eventually surrendered with 200 dead and a hundred wounded to the Neptune, a 98-gun second rate commanded by Captain Thomas Fremantle. She was taken in tow by the 98-gun second rate Prince,[3] but was eventually scuttled by her British captors northwest of Cádiz.[4][5]

It is possible that her wreck was found by coincidence during testing of a new sidescan sonar of the Spanish Navy, in 2009.[6] An earlier attempt to find her wreck was inconclusive as lack of visual evidence could not confirm the identity of the ships found.[5]

Replicas

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Model of the Santísima Trinidad at the Museo Naval de Madrid

A full-size representation[7] of the Santísima Trinidad could be seen in the harbour of Alicante, in Spain. This vessel had formerly operated as a floating restaurant. To allow regeneration works to the marina area, where the ship's mooring has now become an extended boardwalk, the replica was towed outside of the harbour and left moored on the seaward side of the breakwater. Here, close to the Panoramis centre, the ship gradually became a rotting hulk, with most of the masts and rigging collapsed onto the main deck. As of summer 2024, the vessel has completely vanished. There are unsubstantiated rumours of its being towed to Cape Verde.

A non-profit non-governmental Canadian association, the Friends of Santísima Trinidad,[8] assisted the Office of the Historian of the City of Havana, Cuba with the construction of a new 1:25 four-metre-long scale model of La Santísima Trinidad. Interior construction details are exposed on one side of the vessel, and visitors are able to use a computer interface and touch screen to take a virtual tour of the ship in Spanish, English, and French. The model is displayed in the Naval Museum of La Habana, opened in June 2008 at Castillo de la Real Fuerza, the oldest building in Cuba and the oldest stone fortress in the New World.

Notes

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  1. ^ For exact figures, and those in the General characteristics frame, see: José Cayuela Fernandez, Trafalgar, hombres y naves entre dos épocas: Ariel (2004)
  2. ^ El Ponderoso, 'the ponderous' is a pun on el poderoso, 'the powerful'.

Sources and references

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  1. ^ Gervasio de Artinano y de Galdacano, La Arquitectura Naval Espanola (en Madera) (Madrid 1920), p.365
  2. ^ Harbron, John (1988). Trafalgar and the Spanish Navy. Conway Maritime Press. p. 84. ISBN 0-85177-477-6
  3. ^ Fremont-Barnes, Gregory and Hook, Christa (2005). Trafalgar 1805: Nelson's crowning victory. Osprey. p 23. ISBN 1-84176-892-8
  4. ^ Fremont-Barnes and Hook, page 81
  5. ^ a b "Battle of Trafalgar, Admiral Lord Nelson's Fatal Victory". National Geographic Magazine. Archived from the original on 27 March 2008. Retrieved 5 June 2017.
  6. ^ "Have the remains of the Santísima Trinidad been discovered?". Kongsberg. Retrieved 5 June 2017.
  7. ^ "El Santísima Trinidad de Alicante pasa a ser historia tras siete años de abandono". Información. 1 June 2023. Retrieved 8 November 2024.
  8. ^ "Friends of the Santísima Trinidad". Archived from the original on 26 July 2011.

Bibliography

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  • Winfield, Rif; Tredrea, John M; García-Torralba Pérez, Enrique & Blasco Felip, Manuel (2023). Spanish Warships in the Age of Sail 1700—1860: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates. Barnsley, UK: Seaforth Publishing. ISBN 978-1-5267-9078-1.
  • John D. Harbron Trafalgar and the Spanish Navy (1988) ISBN 0-87021-695-3
  • José Cayuela Fernandez – Trafalgar, hombres y naves entre dos épocas – Ariel (Barcelona) 2004 ISBN 8434467607
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