Tientsin was ordered by Horatio Nelson Lay, Inspector General of the Qing Dynasty Chinese Maritime Customs Service as part of an effort to bolster the Qing Dynasty naval force in response to the ongoing Taiping Rebellion.
[4] Upon her arrival in China, the Qing government ordered the ship to be renamed as San Wei (Chinese: 三衛; pinyin: Sānwèi).
[5][6] Disagreements between the Qing government and Lay over the command and composition of the Lay-Osborn Flotilla led to its disbandment in 1863, and Tientsin returned to the United Kingdom.
[7] When the American Civil War ended in 1865, she, along with China and Pekin, were sold in an auction to Egypt on 30 December 1865 for £20,500.
Richard Wright speculated that Tientsin was eventually (or alternatively) acquired by the Imperial Maritime Customs Service in Britain, 1868.