Difference between revisions of "H.M.S. Abercrombie (1915)"
Simon Harley (talk | contribs) (Made changes.) |
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|Pendant Number: | |Pendant Number: | ||
− | | | + | |M.00 (January, 1918) |
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|Builder: | |Builder: | ||
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|Ordered: | |Ordered: | ||
− | | | + | |21 November, 1914 |
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|Laid down: | |Laid down: | ||
− | | | + | |12 December, 1914 |
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|Launched: | |Launched: | ||
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|Commissioned: | |Commissioned: | ||
− | | | + | |12 May, 1915 |
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|Sold: | |Sold: | ||
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|Length: | |Length: | ||
− | | | + | |334 feet 6 inches (oa) |
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|Beam: | |Beam: | ||
− | |90 feet | + | |90 feet 2 inches |
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|Draught: | |Draught: | ||
− | |10 feet | + | |10 feet |
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|Propulsion: | |Propulsion: | ||
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− | '''HMS ''Abercrombie''''' was an [[HMS Abercrombie Class (1915)|''Abercrombie'' class monitor]] of the Royal Navy. Formerly the ''M1'', formerly the ''Admiral Faragut''; her main armament was composed of 14" guns and mounting purchased and constructed in the U.S. for the Greek ship [[Salamis (1914)|''Salamis'']] (ex-''Vasilefs Georgios'') which at the outbreak of war had been building in Germany. | + | '''HMS ''Abercrombie''''' was an [[HMS Abercrombie Class (1915)|''Abercrombie'' class monitor]] of the Royal Navy. Formerly the '''''M1'', formerly the '''''Farragut''''', formerly the '''''Admiral Faragut'''''; her main armament was composed of 14" guns and mounting purchased and constructed in the U.S. for the Greek ship [[Salamis (1914)|''Salamis'']] (ex-''Vasilefs Georgios'') which at the outbreak of war had been building in Germany. The plethora of names indicated the heritage of her guns, and as such she was actually launched as ''Admiral Farragut'', and |
+ | |||
+ | The ship was laid down in December, 1914 as hull 472 at the Queen's Island yard of [[Harland & Wolff, Limited|Harland & Wolff]] and was launched in April of the following year. She was built in berth no. 2 along with [[HMS Havelock (1915)|HMS ''Havelock'']] - the same slipway upon which the White Star Liners ''Olympic'' and ''Britannic'' had been constructed. By June she was ready for active duty. She was the first of 40 monitors to be built for the Royal Navy over the next 30 years, commissioning on 12 May, 1915 under the command of Captain H.M. Doughty, RN. | ||
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After completion she took part in the Gallipoli campaign performing ground bombarment duties. In September 1917 she carried a Sopwith Schneider floatplane and then saw service in the Eastern Mediterranean. In May, 1918 she was refitted and had her two 14" US-made guns replaced with two Woolwich-constructed variants. | After completion she took part in the Gallipoli campaign performing ground bombarment duties. In September 1917 she carried a Sopwith Schneider floatplane and then saw service in the Eastern Mediterranean. In May, 1918 she was refitted and had her two 14" US-made guns replaced with two Woolwich-constructed variants. |
Revision as of 10:13, 9 February 2007
HMS Abercrombie | |
Career | Details |
---|---|
Pendant Number: | M.00 (January, 1918) |
Builder: | Harland & Wolff, Belfast |
Ordered: | 21 November, 1914 |
Laid down: | 12 December, 1914 |
Launched: | 15 April, 1915 |
Commissioned: | 12 May, 1915 |
Sold: | 1927 |
Fate: | Scrapped |
General Characteristics | |
Displacement (normal): | 6,180 tons |
Length: | 334 feet 6 inches (oa) |
Beam: | 90 feet 2 inches |
Draught: | 10 feet |
Propulsion: | |
Speed: | 6 knots |
Range: | |
Complement: | 198 |
Armament: |
|
HMS Abercrombie was an Abercrombie class monitor of the Royal Navy. Formerly the M1, formerly the Farragut, formerly the Admiral Faragut; her main armament was composed of 14" guns and mounting purchased and constructed in the U.S. for the Greek ship Salamis (ex-Vasilefs Georgios) which at the outbreak of war had been building in Germany. The plethora of names indicated the heritage of her guns, and as such she was actually launched as Admiral Farragut, and
The ship was laid down in December, 1914 as hull 472 at the Queen's Island yard of Harland & Wolff and was launched in April of the following year. She was built in berth no. 2 along with HMS Havelock - the same slipway upon which the White Star Liners Olympic and Britannic had been constructed. By June she was ready for active duty. She was the first of 40 monitors to be built for the Royal Navy over the next 30 years, commissioning on 12 May, 1915 under the command of Captain H.M. Doughty, RN.
After completion she took part in the Gallipoli campaign performing ground bombarment duties. In September 1917 she carried a Sopwith Schneider floatplane and then saw service in the Eastern Mediterranean. In May, 1918 she was refitted and had her two 14" US-made guns replaced with two Woolwich-constructed variants.
References
- Moss, Michael and Hume, John R. Shipbuilders to the World: 125 Years of Harland & Wolff, Belfast 1861-1986. The Blackstaff Press. Belfast, 1986.