I have wonderful memories of my dad taking me to The Dolphin as a young boy during holidays or when there were no cadets on board. I vividly remember the tarry, ropey, oily smell mixed with the aroma of the cook’s freshly baked rolls and bread. There were model ships, a ship’s wheel, bells, ropes, pulleys and plenty of other things that kept me occupied while dad did whatever he needed to do.

I have been intrigued by the origins of TS Dolphin. Dad thought she was initially a gunboat used to deter slave ships towards the end of the 18th Century, so I did some research.

TS Dolphin was originally called HMS Dolphin, one of fifteen ships to bear that name. She was a “Composite Screw Sloops” – a wooden hull over an iron frame. A three-masted barque with an auxiliary 2-cylinder 720hp “back-acting” steam engine, driving a single screw propeller, giving a maximum speed of 11.3 knots under power. Forty-seven metres in length (157 feet), a beam of 9.75m (32 feet), a draft of 4.26m (14 feet), and a displacement of 925 tonnes. She was armed with a variety of guns.

  • Breach-loading, six-inch guns (designed by Robert Samuel Fraser of Woolwich Arsenal)
  • Breach-loading five-inch guns
  • Two-barrelled Nordenfelt anti-torpedo boat guns
  • 11.43 Gardner guns
Breach Loading Gun
Nordenfelt machine gun
Gardner Gun

HMS Dolphin was designed by Nathaniel Barnaby. She was laid down in 1881 at Cleveland Dockyard (Sir Raylton Dixon & Co), Middlesbrough. The hull was planked with four-inch mahogany covered by a two-inch layer of teak, with the hull up to the water line, sheathed with heavy gauge copper. The main deck forward was ten inches thick, and the ship was reinforced with cast iron, both fore and aft, ready to accommodate the large-calibre guns. HMS Dolphin was launched on the 9th of December 1882 and was commissioned in 1884 at Sheerness with a complement of 115. Her sister ship, HMS Wanderer, was built in the same yard and launched on the 8th of February 1883. In 1885, she was attached to the Mediterranean Squadron until the end of the 19th Century.

In 1885, members of her crew formed a naval brigade at Suakin in Sudan. They fought in the Battle of Torfek on the 22nd of March 1885, an engagement that narrowly avoided becoming a military disaster. Lieutenant Montague H M Seymour and five of the ship’s company were killed in action when one of the Gardner Guns was overrun.

Between 1888 and 1896, when she was “paid off” at Sheerness, she saw service in Egypt, India, and Australia and dealt with the remnants of the slave trade. On the 21st of January 1893, under the command of Admiral Christopher Craddock, HMS Dolphin rescued the crew of the Brazilian Navy corvette, “Almirante Barroso”, which had wrecked on the coast of the Red Sea near Ras Zeith. Coincidentally, Barroso was launched in the same year as HMS Dolphin.


Just before the turn of the Century, her engine was removed and she was used as a sea-going sail training ship, stationed at Portland, taking naval cadets on four-month sailing trips. In 1907, she was de-rigged and transferred to Portsmouth. In the early years of the submarine branch of the Navy, HMS Dolphin was used as a depot ship, along with HMS Mercury, and was later relocated from Portsmouth to Gosport. HMS Dolphin remained in this role as the first submarine depot ship until 1924, when she was decommissioned, and her name was subsequently given to the “HMS Dolphin Submarine Base” at Gosport.

In March 1925, Dolphin was bought by Lieutenant Commander J. M. Robertson, a Glasgow ship-owner, and Sir Donald Pollock, a physician, industrialist, and philanthropist, with the intention of converting the ship into a nautical museum based in the West Dock next to HMS Claverhouse. They arranged for her to be towed from Portsmouth to Leith, and she set off on her journey north on Tuesday, the 21st of April, towed by the tug “Hullman of Hull”. On Wednesday, 22nd, in heavy gales, they were forced to put into Yarmouth for shelter. The following day, they set off once again, but unfortunately, whilst passing the Farne Islands in heavy seas, Dolphin sprang a leak. They pressed on and, entering the Firth of Forth on the 25th of April, 1925, she encountered terrible weather and started taking on large amounts of water. The following day, in the vicinity of Inchkeith Island and with her stern under water, the tugboat crew decided that for safety’s sake they would beach her off Fisherrow, just seven miles from her destination. She lay here for eight months before eventually being taken to Rosyth for repairs, and in 1928, she was moved to East Old Dock.

In 1944, the Dolphin changed its use once again, becoming a Merchant Navy Training Ship. Captain Salvesen, Mr Tom McPhail, and Mr J. J. Robertson agreed with Leith Nautical College that she should become a pre-training sea school for cadets and deck boys. It was then that she became “Training Ship TS Dolphin”.

As the number of trainees and courses increased, it was decided to establish residential accommodation for boys out of the travelling range of Leith. Up to fifty boys had residential accommodation on the ship. The number of boys on board at any time varied from approximately 80 to 90, with a total complement of 92.

In 1950, the college opened a class for cooks; the ratings who came for this training sat the “Ships’ Cooks and Higher Certificates”. There were three main courses on the ship. One was a course for Cadets, open to boys between 15 and 17. Another course for catering and one for deck boys. The boys who entered those courses must have been educated to a fourth-year Secondary School standard and be physically fit. All the boys, irrespective of their course, were given training in boat work, swimming, and lifesaving. In the latter two, the Dolphin had a long and proud record. The ship gained many trophies and cups for its prowess in the aquatic sphere. Over 240 boys passed through TS Dolphin each year, and the total number of boys who have trained on the ship exceeded 4,000.

In 1969, TS Dolphin was moved to her final berth in the West Old Dock (where a Holiday Inn Express is now built on the spot where she was last tied up). Plans for a new Leith Nautical College and Halls of Residence at Milton Road East were announced in December 1974, and TS Dolphin was deemed surplus to requirements. She was sold, and on Monday, the 4th of July 1977, she was towed to Bo’ness, beached and burned out for the copper cladding and brass. A sad ending for a wonderful old ship.