Chilean transporter Rímac (1872)

The Rímac was a steamer involved in decisive actions of the War of the Pacific (1879-1884) and Thousand Days' War (1899-1902).

After the building of the ship in the United Kingdom 1872, she was purchased by the Compañía Sudamericana de Vapores and arrived to Chile in 1874.

On 5 May 1874 the Chilean government issued a subvention program under which Chilean enterprises supplied Navy with materiel, called "Convenio de subvención". At the beginning of the war and under this agreement the Rímac was handed over to the Navy, together with the ships Loa and Itata.

In May 1879 she towed the Covadonga to Antofagasta after the Battle of Punta Gruesa.

In June 1879 the Peruvian ironclad Huáscar captured the Rímac with 260 men of a cavalry regiment, weapons and ammunition. This lost caused riots in Santiago and lead to the resignation of the Ministry of National Defense (Chile), Basilio Urrutia Vásquez, and the commander-in-chief of the Chilean navy, Juan Williams Rebolledo.

After the defeat of the Peruvian Army in the battles of San Juan and Miraflores, the Secretary of the Navy, Captain Manuel Villar, ordered during the night of January 16, 1881 the destruction of the port defenses and the remaining ships of the Peruvian Navy, including the Rímac, to prevent their (re-)capture by the Chilean troops. The order was executed by the captains Germán Astete and Manuel Villavisencio during the dawn of January 17, 1881. But few months later, in June 1881 she was refloated and auctioned off to CSAV (again) for $36,000.

During the Thousand Days' War in Colombia, the Rímac, then renamed Lautaro, was lend to the Conservative Party and sunk off Panama City on January 20, 1902, fighting against the Admiral Padilla of the Liberal Party.