Chilean corvette Chacabuco (1866)

The Chilean corvette Chacabuco was a late 19th-century ship of the Chilean Navy. Commanded by Enrique Simpson in the early 1870s, the ship participated in the exploration of the fjords and archipelagoes of Aysén Region in northern Patagonia.[2] These travels led to the re-discovery of San Rafael Lake and the establishment of Aysén Fjord as the principal access to the inland of Aysén Region.[2] In 1876 Chacabuco transported governor of Magallanes Diego Dublé Almeyda to the Falkland Islands bringing back sheep, thus initiating the Patagonian sheep farming boom of the late 19th century.[3] From 1879 onwards the corvette fought in the War of the Pacific.

Chile
Name: Chacabuco
Namesake: Battle of Chacabuco
Builder: Ravenhill, London, United Kingdom
Launched: 1866
Commissioned: 1868
Fate: Scrapped 1890
General characteristics
Class and type: Corvette
Displacement: 1101
Length: 216 ft 6 in (66.0 m)
Beam: 33 ft 4 in (10.2 m)
Draught: 18 ft 0 in (5.5 m)
Installed power: 1.200 HP
Propulsion: Maudsley return connecting rod engine[1]
Speed: 9 kn
Complement: 200
Armament: 3 Armstrong guns 7 in, 2 guns 70 lb, 4 guns 40 lb

Puerto Chacabuco in Aysén Fjord is named after the ship.

References

  1. Lambert (1 October 1989). Warship. Naval Institute Press. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-85177-449-7. Retrieved 13 November 2012.
  2. Simpson, E. (1874). Esploraciones hechas por la Corbeta Chacabuco al mando del capitán de fragata don Enrique M. Simpson en los Archipiélagos de Guaitecas, Chonos i Taitao. Santiago. Imprenta Nacional.
  3. Martinic Beros, Mateo (2002). "La participación de capitales británicos en el desarrollo económico del territorio de Magallanes (1880-1920)". Magallania (in Spanish). 35: 299–321. Retrieved 25 December 2013.
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