Divers working on the wreck of the 'Royal Adelaide'
History
NameRMS Royal Adelaide
OwnerCity of Dublin Steam Packet Company
Launched1838
FateWrecked on 30 March 1850
General characteristics
Class and typePaddle steamer
Tonnage450 GRT
Length184 ft (56 m)
Installed power140 nhp
PropulsionDiagonal compound engine
Speed11 kn (13 mph)

RMS Royal Adelaide was a paddle steamship owned and operated by the City of Dublin Steam Packet Company. Its principal route ran between London and Cork.

Final journey

The Royal Adelaide, captained by John Batty, left Cork fully laden with cargo and about 250 passengers on Wednesday, 27 March 1850, touching off at Plymouth on the Thursday evening. By the time the ship left Plymouth for London at 3.00 am on Friday, there were almost 300 deck passengers.

The ship was lost at about 11.00 pm on Saturday, 30 March 1850 on Tongue Sands north of Margate, with the loss of all on board. News only reached London late on Sunday as the river pilot waiting for the ship happened to meet a Deal pilot (Charles Gillham) who reported seeing a ship of a similar description in distress the previous evening (London Illustrated News 6 and 13 April 1850).

The dead included more than 150 deck passengers from Ireland, during a time when the Great Famine was at its height.

The Royal Adelaide at the Royal Naval Hospital, Greenwich

51°29.5′N 01°20.9′E / 51.4917°N 1.3483°E / 51.4917; 1.3483

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