
An engraving from the journal published in 1921.
'HMS ''Hecla''' was a
Royal Navy ''Hecla''-class bomb vessel of 372 tons. Launched on
July 15,
1815, she saw wartime service in an attack on
Barbary pirates at
Algiers in August,
1816. In
1819, she was converted to an
Arctic exploration ship.
The ''Hecla'' made three journeys to the Arctic in search of the
Northwest Passage and one made one attempt on the
North Pole, all under
William Edward Parry or
George Francis Lyon, and spent many winters iced in without serious damage.
On the first journey, ''Hecla'' was commanded by Parry. She and her companion ship, the gun
brig HMS ''Griper'', reached a longitude 112°51' W in the
1819 before backtracking to winter off
Melville Island. No ship was able to travel so far west again in a single season until the 940-foot icebreaker tanker ''Manhattan'' did it in
1969. The second year, the two ships reached longitude 113°46' W before returning to
England.
On her second expedition, in
1821-
1823, ''Hecla'' was commanded by Lyon while Parry led the overall expedition from her sister ship
HMS ''Fury''. The furthest point on this trip, the perpetually frozen strait between
Foxe Basin and the
Gulf of Boothia, was named after the two ships: ''Fury and Hecla Strait''.
''Hecla's third expedition to the Canadian Arctic in
1824-
1825, again in the company of ''Fury'', was frustrated by ice conditions. ''Fury'' was badly damaged and had to be abandoned.
In
1827, Parry used ''Hecla'' for an unsuccessful attempt to reach the
North Pole from
Spitsbergen by boat. Following this voyage, ''Hecla'' was withdrawn from Arctic service and dispatched as a survey vessel to the coast of West Africa. She remained in service there until
1831, when she was sold.
''Hecla'', like many other bomb vessels, was named for a
volcano, in this case
Hekla in
Iceland. For other ships of this name, see the main
HMS Hecla article.
External links
★
Ships of the World: HMS Hecla
★
Naval History of Great Britain
★
Volume I of Parry's "Voyages"
★
Volume II of Parry's "Voyages"