Peruvian Gunboat Pilcomayo
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The ''Pilcomayo'' was originally a Peruvian gunboat involved in several actions during the War of the Pacific. Captured by the Chilean navy on November 18, 1879, it was repaired and participated in the blockade of the Peruvian ports. After the war it was used for hydrographic research, then as a training ship. In service until 1909, it was finally used as a pontoon at Talcahuano.


General technical characteristics

Its hull was made of nailed teak, copper-bottomed and reinforced with galvanized iron cross bracing. Its four boiler 1080 horsepower engine, manufactured by J. Penn & Company of Greenwich, gave it a maximum speed of 11.5 knots measured on August 7, 1874, lower than that of its sister ship the ''Chanchamayo''. Its armament consisted of 6 guns: two six-inch
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70 pounders, one to starboard and one to port, and four 4.75 inch Armstrong 40 pounders, two per side. A
Gatling gun The Gatling gun is a rapid-firing multiple-barrel firearm invented in 1861 by Richard Jordan Gatling. It is an early machine gun and a forerunner of the modern electric motor-driven rotary cannon. The Gatling gun's operation centered on a cyc ...
was added shortly before the start of the war.


Construction

Four million sols was budgeted for the purchase of two ironclads and two gunboats, but only the gunboats were eventually bought. These, the ''Chanchamayo'' and the ''Pilcomayo'', were built between 1872 and 1874 by order of the Peruvian government at the Money Wigram shipyards in Blackwall, Great Britain arriving in
Callao Callao () is a Peruvian seaside city and Regions of Peru, region on the Pacific Ocean in the Lima metropolitan area. Callao is Peru's chief seaport and home to its main airport, Jorge Chávez International Airport. Callao municipality consists o ...
on January 11, 1875. The name of this ship was originally supposed to have been the ''Putumayo'', after a river in Peru, but the ship’s painter confused it with the gunboat ''Pilcomayo'' which was being built for Argentina at the
J. and G. Rennie J. and G. Rennie was a British engineering company based in Millwall, London, England. They were involved in manufacture of marine engines, and some complete ships, as well as other diverse onshore engineering projects. An association with railwa ...
shipyard in Greenwich at the same time.


Naval actions

In 1877, it was part of the naval division that the government formed to hunt down the rebel ironclad '' Huáscar''. During the War in the Pacific, on April 7, 1879, it left Callao together with the corvette '' Union'' and took part in the
battle of Chipana The Battle of Chipana took place on 12 April 1879, during the War of the Pacific between Chile and Peru. It was the first naval engagement between both navies and took place in front of Huanillos, off the (then) Bolivian coast, as the Peruvian c ...
under the command of frigate captain Antonio C. de la Guerra, returning to Callao on April 17.


Expeditions off the coast of Bolivia and Chile

It was ordered out to sea again on June 29, 1879, this time under the command of Captain Carlos Ferreyros, setting sail from Callao and arriving in Arica on July 2 with a shipment of 2,000 rifles for the Bolivian army. On July 4, it escorted the transport ship ''Oroya'' to Pisagua, arriving the same day and then continuing its journey south. Frigate captain Carlos Ferreyros now made for Tocopilla; passing at night between the coast and Chilean warships, he entered Tocopilla on July 6 at 9:00. In the port, he surprised the Chilean merchant "Matilde" and three other boats loaded with food and fodder. After sending a delegation ashore to assure the local people that he would not bombard the town, he sank the "Matilde" with five cannon shots and destroyed the other boats. After the Tocopilla action, Commander Ferreyros ordered full speed toward Antofagasta to surprise the Chilean military camp stationed there. But at 12:20 p.m. he sighted the '' Chilean ironclad Blanco Encalada'', accompanied by the corvette ''
Chacabuco Chacabuco is one of the many abandoned nitrate or "saltpeter" towns ("oficinas salitreras" in Spanish) in the Atacama Desert of northern Chile. Other nitrate towns of the Atacama Desert include Humberstone and Santa Laura Saltpeter Works. Unlike ...
'' and the transport ship ''Limarí'', coming from Iquique after bombarding :es:Pabellón de Pica. On spotting the Chilean ships, Ferreyros steered close to the coast to escape and then sped away heading north, pursued by the ''Blanco Encalada'' for almost 20 hours. The ''Pilcomayo'' arrived in Arica on the July 8 at 3:00 am and the Chilean naval division abandoned the pursuit. On July 15 the ''Pilcomayo'' was ordered to
Cobija Cobija is a city in Bolivia, capital of the department of Pando, is located about 600 km (373 mi.) north of La Paz in the Amazon Basin on the border with Brazil. Cobija lies on the banks of the Rio Acre across from the Brazilian ci ...
to capture enemy transports if she found them, on the assumption that the Chilean ironclad ''Almirante Cochrane'' was in Iquique and the ''Blanco Encalada'' in Antofagasta, but on the way she encountered the Cochrane and the ''Chacabuco'', sailing from Iquique to Antofagasta. The ''Cochrane'' pursued the ''Pilcomayo'' between July 17 and 18 without being able to reach her, and the ''Pilcomayo'' arrived in Arica on the 22nd. After a brief tour off Pacocha, she returned to Callao on July 26 carrying 28 prisoners from the captured transport Rímac.


Other action

On August 23, the ''Pilcomayo'' set sail from Callao escorting the transport ''Chalaco'', arriving at Arica on August 26. On September 13, near Arica, it ran into the ''Blanco Encalada'' carrying :es:Rafael Sotomayor, the Chilean War Minister, and the artillery transport ''Itata'' commanded by Patricio Lynch, evaluating landing points for the planned Chilean invasion. The ''Pilcomayo'' fired 10 shots at them as it attempted to draw them into a fight, but they held their distance and the ''Pilcomayo’s'' was fire was answered by 6 shots from the ''Itata''. On October 5, a Chilean squadron arrived in Arica and at 9:30, the ''Pilcomayo'' set out on the orders of President
Mariano Ignacio Prado Mariano Ignacio Prado Ochoa (December 18, 1825 – May 5, 1901) was a Peruvian army general who served as the 16th (1865 - 1868) and 21st (1876 - 1879) President of Peru. Biography Born in Huánuco on December 18, 1825, he studied in Huanuco an ...
to face them, which it did at 10:00. At 9.50 am, the gunboat ''Covadonga'' and then the corvette '' O'Higgins'' separated from the Chilean convoy. A fight broke out between the ''Pilcomayo'' and the ''O'Higgins'' 6 miles from Arica, between 10:30 and 11:30, in which the ''Pilcomayo'' fired 21 shots and the ''O'Higgins'', 16 shots.


Capture

On November 18, 1879, around 9:00 a.m., the Chilean ironclad ''Blanco Encalada'' was in the vicinity of
Mollendo Mollendo is a town bordering the Pacific Ocean in southern Peru. It is located in the Arequipa Region and is the capital of both the Islay Province and the Mollendo District. Mollendo was the main port in the Peruvian southern coast until Matar ...
when it sighted three columns of smoke to the south that it recognized as the Peruvian corvette ''Union'', the transport ''Chalaco'' and the ''Pilcomayo''. The ''Union'', sailing in the lead of the Peruvian flotilla, then recognized the ''Blanco Encalada'' and turned south to warn the others. The Peruvians agreed the tactic would be for the ''Union'' to draw off the ''Blanco Encalada'', relying on its superior speed and thus avoiding the capture of the other two ships. The ''Union'' therefore headed west at low speed while the ''Pilcomayo'' sailed south at full speed and the "Chalaco" changed its course to the southeast, close to the coast. On board the ''Blanco Encalada'', Chilean commander Galvarino Riveros knew the speed of the Peruvian ships and did not fall into the trap, deciding to hunt down the ''Pilcomayo'' at full speed. When the Commander of the ''Pilcomayo'' realized that the ''Blanco Encalada'' was rapidly closing the distance between them, he gathered his officers and they agreed to sink the ship rather than surrendering. They continued to retreat in order to gain time to execute this plan. When the ''Blanco Encalada'' had closed to 5,000 meters, the ''Pilcomayo'' opened fire, without hitting its target. The Chilean did not return fire until 4,200m, hitting the ''Pilcomayo''‘s foremast. At this time, Commander Ferreyros opened the valves to flood the engine and the magazine, and ordered flammable material to be poured out so the ship could be set on fire. The aft guns were aimed at wardroom hatch to pierce the hull below the waterline. Then he ordered the destruction of all codes, correspondence and documents on the ship. The fire was started, the ship stopped and the boats were lowered to take off the crew. The Chilean Admiral Riveros, seeing white flags raised on the boats, gave the order to cease fire and stop the engines so that Lieutenant Roberto Goñi could board the Peruvian ship. Once the ''Pilcomayo'' was boarded, Goñi replaced the Peruvian emblem with the Chilean one and did everything he could to save the ship, lashing it to the ''Blanco Encalada'' so that its bilge pumps could prevent its sinking while the Chilean crew put out the fires. In two hours, divers had managed to seal the leaks and the fires had been put out. The Chileans towed the ''Pilcomayo'' into the port of Pisagua, arriving on November 20, where the Peruvian prisoners were taken ashore, before heading to Valparaíso which they reached on December 4, to the joy of the population who crowded into the streets to pay tribute to the victorious sailors. The ''Pilcomayo'' remained in Valparaiso while it underwent repairs.


Later service

After the War of the Pacific it was used for hydrographic work, in addition to a training ship for midshipmen. During the Chilean Civil War of 1891, he remained in Buenos Aires. It was in the service of the Chilean Navy until 1909, where it was converted into a pontoon in Talcahuano.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Pilcomayo Ships of the Peruvian Navy Gunboats of the Chilean Navy Ships of the War of the Pacific Ships built in London Captured ships