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  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> ...onnel</u> in view of the 1000 in the {{DE-Derfflinger}} & the 885 in the {{DE-Blucher}} &c..<br>Yours truly<br>Fisher<br>25.1.15<br>I asked Crease to see
    28 KB (4,383 words) - 20:44, 13 September 2021
  • ...n chose to specialise in a variety of areas dealing with innovations: from ship design to electricity to submarines (he conducted the first Royal Navy tria .... 264}}|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Dudley Rawson Stratford de Chair|Dudley R. S. de Chair]]'''}}
    14 KB (2,133 words) - 12:44, 17 February 2022
  • {{Tenure|rank=Captain|name=Charles Martin-de-Bartolomé|nick=Charles Bartolomé|appt=1 December, 1908<ref>Bartolomé Ser ...NA|ADM 196/43.}} f. 459.</ref>|note=and as Flag Captain from Vice-Admiral de Robeck hoisting his flag}}
    32 KB (4,764 words) - 18:02, 11 October 2022
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> {ship
    6 KB (811 words) - 16:21, 1 September 2021
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{DE-Siegfried}}
    4 KB (421 words) - 09:33, 9 May 2018
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{DE-Brandenburg}}
    3 KB (286 words) - 20:37, 26 April 2018
  • ...ated as part of the [[British Adoption of the Director#Early Orders|twelve ship order]] to receive a director along the lines of that developed in [[H.M.S. In October 1914, the ship was to be given 8 Pattern 1582 Electric Radiators to warm cabins whose stov
    9 KB (1,255 words) - 07:48, 9 June 2022
  • .... After many years in this duty she ended up as a decoy and anti-aircraft ship during the Mediterranean campaign of the Second World War. Towards the end The ship's machinery was constructed by Hawthorn, Leslie & Co.{{UKDockyardExpenseAcc
    15 KB (2,063 words) - 07:52, 9 June 2022
  • ...8 August, 1911, by Captain [[Dudley Rawson Stratford de Chair|Dudley R. S. de Chair]] for service in the Second Division of the {{HomeFleet}}.<ref>"The N ...at least December 1912, she served in the {{UK-BS|1}} alongside her sister ship, {{UK-Hercules|f=p}}.
    8 KB (1,034 words) - 04:22, 26 September 2022
  • ..."Neptune" carried out 11th March 1912 at Tetuan." Docket in {{UK-Lion}}'s ship's cover. SC 251. Brass Foundry Out-Station, National Maritime Museum.</re ...the battle. She suffered no damage and contributed to fire against the {{DE-Wiesbaden|f=tp}}.
    20 KB (2,920 words) - 09:16, 9 June 2022
  • The ship was one of seven which tested [[Willis and Robinson Electric Revolution Tel In 1910, ''Temeraire'' was the best gunnery ship of the 15 tested of the Home Fleet's FIrst Division and {{UK-CS|1}}, scorin
    9 KB (1,238 words) - 11:37, 28 November 2021
  • ...anish ships approaching and fired the first shot in the Battle of Santiago de Cuba. In a 20-minute battle with Spanish cruisers ''[[Infanta Maria Teresa ...as placed in limited commission 28 April, 1917. After serving as Receiving Ship at Philadelphia for 6 months, she was sent to Hampton Roads, Va., and remai
    8 KB (1,062 words) - 10:49, 25 February 2022
  • ''Kearsarge'', the lead ship of her class of battleships, was the first ship of the [[United States Navy]] to be named, by act of Congress, in honor of ...rwegian barque ''Nordhav'' which had been sunk by the German Submarine ''{{DE-U117}}''. The survivors were landed in Boston.
    8 KB (1,215 words) - 19:24, 30 January 2022
  • ...Roosevelt as a unit in the 2d Squadron. After calling at Trinidad and Rio de Janeiro, the warships passed in order through the Straits of Magellan to vi ...d War I. She arrived at Yorktown, Virginia on 2 May for duty as a training ship and trained recruits on cruises in Chesapeake Bay and along the Atlantic co
    9 KB (1,265 words) - 19:25, 30 January 2022
  • .... Tuesday, 16 January, 1912. Issue '''39796''', col B, p. 13.</ref> The ship was launched on 12 October on a sunny Saturday before a crowd estimated to The ship re-commissioned at Portsmouth 24 October, 1923.{{NLApr25|p. 248}}
    16 KB (2,225 words) - 07:28, 5 January 2022
  • The ship was commissioned at Portsmouth on 20 September 1927.{{NLFeb29|p. 261}} In July 1914, the ship was appropriated 42-foot motor launch No. 248, though the boat was not yet
    10 KB (1,413 words) - 20:14, 22 March 2021
  • ...etary to the First Lord]], [[Dudley Rawson Stratford de Chair|Dudley R. S. de Chair]]; Sir James Marshall, Director of Dockyards; [[George Le Clerc Egert ...declined to admit his involvement with the incident in his history of the ship.
    14 KB (1,873 words) - 10:27, 20 October 2021
  • In 1924, she replaced the battlecruiser {{UK-Tiger}} as Turret Drill Ship at Portsmouth, having undergone a refit at a cost that had been projected t The ship was re-commissioned at Singapore on 10 December, 1935.{{NLJul37|p. 279}}
    5 KB (593 words) - 10:50, 17 March 2022
  • ...>{{ShipCareer|fullname=H.M.S. ''Raglan'' (1915)|fate2={{DE-Breslau}} and {{DE-Goeben}}{{DittColl|p. 102}} ...required either in the Grand Fleet or on patrol duties, so a new class of ship, with a shallow draught for inshore work and a requisite small number of bi
    8 KB (1,285 words) - 17:58, 6 November 2019
  • {{Footer Odin Class Coast Defence Ship (1894)}} {{CatShipCoastDefenceShip|DE}}
    1,014 B (117 words) - 12:22, 29 April 2018
  • {{Footer Siegfried Class Coast Defence Ship (1889)}} {{CatShipCoastDefenceShip|DE}}
    551 B (67 words) - 09:40, 4 November 2015
  • {{Footer Siegfried Class Coast Defence Ship (1889)}} {{CatShipCoastDefenceShip|DE}}
    963 B (110 words) - 15:31, 8 May 2018
  • {{Footer Siegfried Class Coast Defence Ship (1889)}} {{CatShipCoastDefenceShip|DE}}
    1 KB (196 words) - 12:41, 29 April 2018
  • {{Footer Siegfried Class Coast Defence Ship (1889)}} {{CatShipCoastDefenceShip|DE}}
    751 B (92 words) - 12:44, 29 April 2018
  • {{Footer Siegfried Class Coast Defence Ship (1889)}} {{CatShipCoastDefenceShip|DE}}
    737 B (88 words) - 12:39, 29 April 2018
  • {{Footer Siegfried Class Coast Defence Ship (1889)}} {{CatShipCoastDefenceShip|DE}}
    684 B (85 words) - 16:06, 7 May 2016
  • The ship was one of seven which tested [[Willis and Robinson Electric Revolution Tel In July 1914, the ship was appropriated 42-foot motor launch No. 261, though the boat was not yet
    8 KB (1,098 words) - 17:24, 29 April 2022
  • ...''Invincible''''' was a [[battlecruiser]] of the [[Royal Navy]], the lead ship of [[Invincible Class Battlecruiser (1907)|her class]] of three, and the fi ...went to superintend these gun trials, I was especially warned that if the ship failed to get through them a sum of about half a million pounds would be lo
    20 KB (3,166 words) - 21:11, 6 November 2021
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{DE-KaiserBarbarossa}}
    2 KB (284 words) - 18:40, 17 May 2018
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{Template:DE-Braunschweig}}
    7 KB (1,091 words) - 11:17, 9 June 2013
  • ...dbot:career>{{ShipCareer|fullname=S.M.S. ''Hessen'' (1903)|fate2=to target ship {{CatShipPreDreadnought|DE}}
    777 B (92 words) - 22:16, 10 July 2017
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{DE-Deutschland}}
    3 KB (356 words) - 10:44, 2 March 2021
  • ...g/wiki/SMS_Pommern German Wikipedia].</ref>|end=October, 1908<ref>[https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMS_Pommern German Wikipedia].</ref>|precBy=New Command} ...g/wiki/SMS_Pommern German Wikipedia].</ref>|end=January, 1910<ref>[https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMS_Pommern German Wikipedia].</ref>}}
    2 KB (309 words) - 11:36, 2 March 2021
  • As of 1901, while serving as a Port Guard ship,. she was slated to receive a [[Wireless Telegraphy Apparatus Mark II|"1 to ...re|rank={{CommRN}}|name=Carlton Valentine de Mornay Cowper|nick=Carlton V. de M. Cowper|appt=25 February, 1910<ref>Cowper Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/
    6 KB (834 words) - 10:22, 5 September 2019
  • In the [[Annual Manoeuvres of 1901]] the ship was part of Fleet "B", loosely representing the British side. ...ded by new construction. In 1906 she was fitted out as a gunnery training ship and used in that capacity until 1911, when she was stricken and towed to th
    9 KB (1,183 words) - 10:49, 29 December 2019
  • ...our times sequentially, starting with the tube loaded and the bar out, the ship's crew was able to do this in 5 minutes, 45 seconds. The best time was ach ...uary, 1915<ref>[http://www.naval-history.net/OWShips-WW1-01-HMS_Caesar.htm Ship's Log Book.]</ref>}}
    9 KB (1,275 words) - 12:29, 9 June 2022
  • In mid-July, 1914, the ship was ordered to take up station in the Humber as part of a force of four [[M ...our times sequentially, starting with the tube loaded and the bar out, the ship's crew was able to do this in 5 minutes, 50 seconds. The best time was ach
    10 KB (1,273 words) - 17:35, 1 April 2021
  • ...ard Wells]], [[Commander-in-Chief at the Nore]]; Captain [[Charles William de la Poer Beresford, First Baron Beresford|Lord Charles Beresford]], Captain The ship's 6-in gunnery trials were conducted on 5 October, and her 12-in on 18 Octo
    12 KB (1,592 words) - 12:11, 7 September 2021
  • ...fredbot:career>{{ShipCareer|fullname=H.M.S. ''Majestic'' (1895)|fate2=by {{DE-U21}} off Helles ....M.S. ''Majestic''''' was a battleship of the [[Royal Navy]], and the lead ship of the [[Majestic Class Battleship (1894)|''Majestic'' class]]. She served
    14 KB (1,949 words) - 09:38, 1 January 2020
  • In 1910, ''Mars'' was the best gunnery ship of the 27 tested in the [[Home Fleet]]'s Third Division (and cruisers), sco In mid-July, 1914, the ship was ordered to take up station in the Humber as part of a force of four [[M
    9 KB (1,190 words) - 16:31, 14 December 2021
  • She was the fourth ship of the [[Royal Navy]] to bear the name. On 1 April 1905, ''Prince George'' collided with the German {{DE-FriedrichCarl|f=t}} near Gibraltar.<ref>[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMS_
    10 KB (1,350 words) - 12:31, 9 June 2022
  • ...edbot:career>{{ShipCareer|fullname=H.M.S. ''Formidable'' (1898)|fate2=by {{DE-U24}} off Portland{{Conways1860|p. 36}} '''H.M.S. ''Formidable''''' was the lead ship of the [[Formidable Class Battleship (1898)|''Formidable'' Class]] of [[bat
    9 KB (1,239 words) - 15:44, 30 December 2022
  • ...s|Edward M. Phillpotts]], acting Flag Captain to Admiral [[Charles William de la Poer Beresford, First Baron Beresford|Lord Charles Beresford]]. In May, 1905, Captain [[Osmond de Beauvoir Brock|Osmond de B. Brock]] was appointed in command. Paid off in March, 1907, ''Bulwark''
    11 KB (1,591 words) - 15:41, 30 December 2022
  • ...ant was [[Frederic Charles Dreyer|Frederic Dreyer]], whose comments on the ship's then-current state of fire control equipment is found in the notes for th In 1910, ''Exmouth'' was the best gunnery ship of the thirteen tested from the [[Mediterranean Fleet]] and {{UK-CS|6}}, sc
    8 KB (1,075 words) - 12:00, 14 July 2019
  • ...ptain [[William Bowden-Smith]] until she was sunk by a minefield laid by {{DE-U73}} off Malta in April, 1916. The {{UK-Nasturtium|f=t}} and the hired ya ...ord. {{TNA|ADM 196/20.|D7590321}} f. 345.</ref>|end=20 February, 1911<ref>De Salis Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/20.|D7590321}} f. 345.</ref>}}
    6 KB (791 words) - 11:47, 4 January 2019
  • ...vy)]] for details on her service in 3BS.</ref> She became an accommodation ship in Chatham-Sheerness that same month.{{SMNLApr18|pp. 13,19}} She kept layi ...ervice Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/42.}} f. 128.</ref>|end=25 January, 1910<ref>de Robeck Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/42.}} f. 128.</ref>}}
    7 KB (905 words) - 07:27, 9 June 2022
  • ...ndee. Judging that time was critical, Bingham went right in to the larger ship, and men jumped in batches when the time seemed right. Bingham took on abo ...losely to another vessel and without indicating his intentions to the next ship astern before so doing.<ref>Bingham Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/46/117.|
    11 KB (1,549 words) - 12:45, 2 April 2024
  • '''H.M.S. ''King Edward VII''''' was the name ship of a [[King Edward VII Class Battleship (1903)|class of eight]] late pre-dr ...e first to generally be fitted with [[Service Gear Mark II]], in 1906, the ship was one of ten ships and two shore stations slated to receive [["C" Tune Ge
    6 KB (879 words) - 18:04, 14 April 2020
  • ...'' and ''Bogatyr''. At five minutes to four, Lady Loreburn christened the ship with a bottle of Australian wine. She then severed a ceremonial cord and t ...th the {{UK-Indomitable|f=p}}, shadowed the German {{DE-Goeben|f=t}} and {{DE-Breslau|f=t}} on 4 August, 1914 after the German ships had bombarded the Fr
    6 KB (759 words) - 03:42, 26 September 2022
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> {ship
    2 KB (229 words) - 09:19, 17 March 2019
  • ...bg=crimson}}</div name=fredbot:career>'''H.M.S. ''Renown''''' was the lead ship in her [[Renown Class Battlecruiser (1916)|class]] of "large light cruisers ...ure|rank={{CommRN}}|name=Edward Glyn de Styrap Jukes Hughes|nick=Edward G. de S. Jukes Hughes|appt=21 December, 1922<ref>Jukes Hughes Service Record. {{
    8 KB (1,023 words) - 21:43, 4 April 2024
  • ...incourt''''' was a dreadnought battle built in England for Brazil as ''Rio de Janeiro'' featuring seven twin 12-in turrets on her centre line. She was r ...aunched on 22 January, 1913 by Mme. Huet de Bacellar, wife of Admiral Huet de Bacellar, the Chief of the Brazilian Naval Commission. The Brazilian Minis
    25 KB (3,838 words) - 09:25, 12 April 2024
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{DE-Nassau}}
    2 KB (235 words) - 18:40, 17 May 2018
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{DE-Helgoland}}
    5 KB (677 words) - 20:29, 31 January 2021
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{DE-FriedrichDerGrosse}}
    3 KB (298 words) - 09:22, 9 May 2018
  • ''König Albert'' was the final ship of five which comprised the Kaiser class. It was the only vessel of the Imp ...ships, although it was the only one to miss the [[Battle of Jutland]]. The ship was interned at Scapa Flow until the scuttling of the fleet on 21 June, 191
    4 KB (610 words) - 12:23, 2 March 2021
  • ...by Princess Therese, daughter of the Prince Regent of Bavaria for whom the ship was named. In attendance at the Germania yards in Kiel were the Kaiser Wil {{CatShipDreadnought|DE}}
    2 KB (338 words) - 12:24, 2 March 2021
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{DE-GrosserKurfurst}}
    3 KB (368 words) - 18:40, 17 May 2018
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{DE-Baden}}
    4 KB (470 words) - 14:10, 8 May 2018
  • A ship's bell from ''Baden'' is in the possession of the Imperial War Museum, Cata ...yhow on balance the <u>Baden</u> was markedly in advance of any comparable ship of the Royal Navy. Possibly the British Constructors and others, understand
    6 KB (969 words) - 21:34, 3 June 2023
  • The ship was never completed, and thus never had a captain. {{CatShipDreadnought|DE}}
    966 B (124 words) - 12:32, 2 March 2021
  • The ship was never completed, and thus never had a captain. {{CatShipDreadnought|DE}}
    909 B (116 words) - 12:32, 2 March 2021
  • *[http://www.u54.suedholland-ferienhaus.de/html/heimat__-hafen.html photos from aboard her] {{CatShipBattlecruiser|DE}}
    3 KB (459 words) - 20:57, 26 April 2018
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{DE-Moltke}}
    8 KB (1,239 words) - 11:31, 10 July 2019
  • '''S.M.S. ''Moltke''''' was the lead ship of a [[Moltke Class Battlecruiser (1910)|class]] of [[battlecruiser]] of th {{CatShipBattlecruiser|DE}}
    2 KB (332 words) - 17:15, 1 November 2021
  • |nat=DE {{CatShipBattlecruiser|DE}}
    3 KB (366 words) - 17:24, 21 November 2023
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{Template:DE-Derfflinger}}
    6 KB (835 words) - 10:37, 25 July 2013
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> |[[Arsenal de Brest]]
    3 KB (338 words) - 11:01, 9 April 2018
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> |[[Arsenal de Brest]]
    2 KB (212 words) - 10:59, 9 April 2018
  • ...ruiser ''[[Cristóbal Colón (1896)|Cristobal Colon]]'', forcing the enemy ship to retire into the inner harbor of Santiago. The battleship remained on pat ...Squadron. From 27 May to 30 August, 1904, the warship served as a training ship for [[United States Naval Academy]] midshipmen off New England and then ent
    7 KB (955 words) - 21:56, 1 March 2022
  • ...t was to become one of the most historic voyages ever undertaken by a Navy ship. Both ships coaled and departed on the 21st for Rio de Janeiro, keeping their guns manned all the while for a Spanish torpedo boat
    10 KB (1,532 words) - 18:07, 23 February 2022
  • ...=fredbot:career>{{ShipCareer|fullname=U.S.S. ''Texas'' (1892)|fate2=Target ship ...to Guantanamo Bay. For the next five weeks, she patrolled between Santiago de Cuba and Guantanamo Bay. On 16 June, the warship joined [[U.S.S. Marblehead
    7 KB (1,066 words) - 21:27, 28 March 2022
  • ...eet. During the circumnavigation, ''Louisiana'' visited Port-of-Spain; Rio de Janeiro; Junta Arenas and Valparaiso, Chile; Callao, Peru; San Diego and Sa ...and, until the United States entered World War I, she served as a training ship for midshipmen and naval militiamen on summer cruises.
    7 KB (907 words) - 19:25, 30 January 2022
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> {ship
    9 KB (1,124 words) - 16:29, 26 April 2018
  • ...redbot:career>{{ShipCareer|fullname=H.M.S. ''M.24'' (1915)|fate2=as target ship ...n oil tanker. Having served in the Dutch Antilles, she was sunk as target ship in 1936.
    4 KB (520 words) - 17:05, 25 April 2022
  • |builder=[[Arsenal de Brest]] The Ship was a 42 gun battleship from 1911 to 1937.
    3 KB (388 words) - 16:52, 17 March 2019
  • ...d as part of the [[British Adoption of the Director#Early Orders|seventeen ship order]] to receive a director, but installation seemed delayed for a consid {{Tenure|rank={{CaptRN}}|name=Osmond de Beauvoir Brock|nick=Osmond de B. Brock|appt=1 August, 1912<ref>Brock Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/43.}}
    8 KB (1,094 words) - 19:30, 11 April 2024
  • ...edbot:career>{{ShipCareer|fullname=''Suffren'' (1899)|fate2=Torpedoed by {{DE-U52}} |builder=[[Arsenal de Brest]]{{CaresseSuffren|p. 10}}
    2 KB (245 words) - 22:47, 10 July 2017
  • |builder=[[Arsenal de Brest]]{{Conways1860|p. 296}} {ship
    1 KB (160 words) - 10:59, 9 April 2018
  • |builder=[[Arsenal de Lorient]]{{Conways1860|p. 294}} {{Tenure|rank=Captain|name=Henri de Faubournet|nick=Henri de Faubournet|appt=20 August, 1906|end=16 August, 1907}}
    3 KB (336 words) - 19:58, 2 April 2019
  • ...operated out of Norfolk throughout the war, serving as a gunnery training ship and patrolling the waters of the eastern seaboard from the Virginia Capes t ...ion on 12 December to rendezvous with the transport George Washington, the ship carrying President Woodrow Wilson to the Paris Peace Conference. ''Arizona'
    15 KB (2,204 words) - 19:25, 30 January 2022
  • ...ning to New York received President Pessoa of Brazil for the voyage to Rio de Janeiro. Departing 6 July with her escort, the battleship arrived Rio 17 Ju ...ny more years of useful naval service. After completion 9 October 1934 the ship conducted shakedown in the Caribbean before returning to her home port, San
    4 KB (533 words) - 21:41, 26 March 2022
  • ...was a highly accomplished officer, though he found little favour with the ship's company …"<ref>Fremantle. ''My Naval Career''. p. 68.</ref> He was appointed a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to King Edward VII on 1 March, 1908, vice [[Alexander Edward Bethell
    11 KB (1,616 words) - 12:47, 31 October 2022
  • ...ttle interest in the Service outside his immediate functions, and when our ship was at Malta distinguished himself as a member of the naval polo team.<ref> ...d to have said, "What &mdash; court martial my David? I'll buy them a new ship."<ref>Quoted in Roskill. p. 41.</ref> The story is supported by [[Arthur M
    33 KB (4,761 words) - 18:06, 6 April 2022
  • ...was an officer of the 78th Regiment of Foot (Highlanders) serving as Aide-de-Camp to the Governor of Ceylon. In 1841 he decided to leave the army, and ...on's own niece, and she asked Sir William for me, and, curiously, my first ship of war was the ''Victory'', Nelson's flagship.<ref>Quoted in Mackay. p. 4.
    48 KB (7,708 words) - 14:56, 27 June 2022
  • ...First Baron Hood|Sir Arthur W. A. Hood]], she was constructed as a turret ship, the last of its type to be built for the Royal Navy. She was sunk as a bl ...iterranean Station]] from 1893 to 1900, before a brief spell as port guard ship at Pembroke, following which she returned to the Mediterranean until Decemb
    7 KB (947 words) - 10:15, 25 February 2020
  • ...important one, as the loss in 1870 of the {{UK-Captain}}, a sailing turret ship of special design, had caused great anxiety as to the stability of such ves ...l) and in the relief of Echowe (3 April). He was appointed a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to Queen Victoria dated 15 June, vice [[Anthony Hiley Hoskins|Hoskin
    16 KB (2,629 words) - 21:12, 8 March 2023
  • ...y. Thus requalified, on 5 January, 1884, he was appointed to the barbette ship {{UK-Temeraire|y=1876}} in the Mediterranean<ref>{{TNA|ADM 196/39}}. f. 11 ...) the battleship [[H.M.S. Triumph (1870)|''Triumph'']] for service as flag ship on the [[Pacific Station (Royal Navy)|Pacific Station]]. The Commander-in-
    29 KB (4,431 words) - 02:26, 11 April 2022
  • ...</ref> He was appointed to the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] at Dartmouth on 15 July, 1877. He left on 24 July, 1879, ...emyss. p. 33.</ref> On 12 October he was appointed to the torpedo depôt ship [[H.M.S. Hecla (1878)|''Hecla'']] in the Mediterranean. He was promoted t
    29 KB (4,511 words) - 12:46, 7 April 2022
  • ...examination and passed into the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] as a naval cadet on 15 July, 1872.<ref>Bacon. ''Earl Jell ...], which took him to such foreign destinations as China, Port Stanley, Rio de Janeiro, South Africa and St. Helena over three years. He proved himself i
    18 KB (2,637 words) - 14:55, 27 June 2022
  • ...time Museum. JAC 1, 2.</ref> Jackson joined [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|H.M.S. ''Britannia'']] on 23 January, 1869. He was entitled to a First Cl ...also, for the purposes of working out the many small details required for ship fittings of the Marconi apparatus, and establishing a course of instruction
    34 KB (5,086 words) - 12:42, 17 November 2023
  • The operation had to be postponed because repairs to the battlecruiser {{DE-Seydlitz|f=p}}, damaged by a mine in the [[Second Raid on Yarmouth]], took ...in the dockyard and the new dreadnought {{DE-Baden|f=p}}, the first German ship with 15-inch guns, was still working up.{{MarderFDSFII| p. 437}}
    15 KB (2,495 words) - 18:27, 11 March 2022
  • ...a proficiency in classical learning unusual at his early age. In his first ship, the ''Conway'', he is said, probably with some exaggeration, to have acted ...stralian waters. On 22 January, 1877, Hoskins was appointed a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to Queen Victoria, vice Stirling.{{Gaz|24413|502|2 February, 1877}}
    8 KB (1,137 words) - 11:15, 7 April 2022
  • | With approval of First Lord:<br>Ship Movements.<br>Orders to Captains and Admirals. {{Tenure|rank=Captain|name=Charles Martin-de-Bartolomé|nick=Charles Bartolomé|appt=15 December, 1911<ref>Bartolomé Se
    32 KB (4,649 words) - 07:48, 30 July 2023
  • ...yal (1911)|''Princess Royal'']] (Captain [[Osmond de Beauvoir Brock|Osmond de B. Brock]]) was ordered detached from the Grand Fleet. ...DE-Gneisenau}} and the light cruisers {{DE-Dresden}}, {{DE-Leipzig}} and {{DE-Nurnberg}} arrived at the Falkland Islands on the morning of 8 December, a
    24 KB (3,729 words) - 14:25, 10 October 2020
  • | 3.&mdash;Ship-building. {{Tenure|rank=Rear-Admiral|name=Charles Martin-de-Bartolomé|nick=Charles Bartolomé|appt=17 June, 1918{{UKNavalStaff|p. 126}
    32 KB (4,694 words) - 08:51, 1 September 2023
  • In 1908, the ship was one of just nine equipped with the [["C" Tune Gear]], capable of transm {{Tenure|rank=Captain|name=John de Mestre Hutchison|nick=John de M. Hutchison|appt=8 May, 1907<ref>Hutchison Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/
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  • The ship completed to full complement at Devonport on 18 June, 1907.{{NLJan08|p. 291 ...ervice Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/42.}} f. 128.</ref>|end=25 January, 1908<ref>de Robeck Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/42.}} f. 128.</ref>}}
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  • ...the incident, which is somewhat unusual. That same month, command of the ship was being turned over from Captain [[Somerset Arthur Gough-Calthorpe|The Ho ...in Plymouth Sound, £500 of public money was found to be missing from the ship. A forensic inquiry into her books was so extensive that she was unable to
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  • {{Tenure|rank=Captain|name=Cunningham Robert de Clare Foot|nick=Cunningham R. de C. Foot|appt=25 August, 1913<ref>Foot Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/42.}} * [http://www.naval-history.net/OWShips-WW1-05-HMS_Donegal.htm Transcribed Ship Logs at naval-history.net]
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  • ...rvice Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/20.}} f. 657.</ref>|end=11 November, 1907<ref>de Horsey Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/20.}} f. 657.</ref>}} ...tember, 1916<ref>[http://www.naval-history.net/OWShips-WW1-05-HMS_Kent.htm Ship's Logbook.]</ref>|note=in command at the [[Battle of the Falkland Islands]]
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  • ...vy]] [[Admiral|admiral]] known for his victory in the [[Battle of Santiago de Cuba]] during the [[Spanish-American War]]. ...ved in the screw sloop ''Congress''. He then commanded ''Alert'', practice ship ''Mayflower'', and ''Swatara'' while on duty at the Naval Academy.
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  • ...n the Western United States prior to the First World War, and thus had a ''de facto'' monopoly on major warship construction contracts on the Pacific coa ...machinery in California, Union Iron Works, led by I.M. Scott, entered the ship building business and relocated to Potrero Point where its shipyards still
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  • |'''Ship'''||'''Type'''||'''Launched'''||'''Fate''' |{{US-Vestal|f=p}}||repair ship||9 May, 1908||Sold 28 Jul, 1950
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  • {{Tenure|rank=Captain|name=Charles William de la Poer Beresford, First Baron Beresford|nick=The Rt. Hon. Lord Charles Ber |'''Ship'''||'''Type'''||'''Launched'''||'''Fate'''
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  • ...icht'' was ordered to steam to Swakopmund and relieve Okahandja. When the ship reached Swakopmund on 18 January, Gygas, with another officer, a physician {{CatPerson|DE|1872|1963}}
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  • ...on 25 January, 1878, joined the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] at Dartmouth, as a Colonial Cadet.<ref>Gaunt Service Recor He was appointed a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to King George V on 16 May, 1913, vice [[Mark Edward Frederic Kerr|K
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  • ...on 31 December, 1883, and reappointed to the ''Flirt'' from that date. The ship paid off on 29 February, 1884, and he went on a month's full pay leave. ...K. Wilson]], Senior Officer in command of the squadron. Stoddart left the ship on 5 October, 1901, and went on half pay. On 9 January, 1902, he was appoin
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  • ...24 August, 1881, and on 19 December, 1882, he was appointed to her sister-ship ''Audacious''. On 25 July, 1884, he was appointed to the battleship ''Sult Alexander-Sinclair was appointed [[First and Principal Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to King George V on 23 May, 1930.{{Gaz|33608|3233|23 May, 1930}} He
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  • ...line of Anglo-Irish families. He entered the [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] as a naval cadet on 15 January, 1875<ref name=Record83>Mad ..., breadth of view, health, & is looked up to by every officer & man in the ship." He gave up command of ''Good Hope'' on 5 November and on 11 November was
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  • Kiddle was appointed to the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] at Dartmouth on 15 July, 1879.<ref>ADM 196/42. f. 382.</r <blockquote>There was a general mess, about 40 officers, the ship was filthy, the Captain was mad, there was no poop or forecastle. The juni
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  • ...came, despite not having the requisite qualifying service in command of a Ship of War at Sea.<ref>Order in Council of 4 September, 1918.</ref> On 10 Sept [[Category:Naval Aides-de-Camp to King George V]]
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  • Bethell was born in London. He joined the central ironclad battery ship [[H.M.S. Hercules (1868)|''Hercules'']] as a Sub-Lieutenant on 10 June, 187 ...2751''', col F, p. 3}}|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Lionel de Lautour Wells|Lionel de L. Wells]]'''}}
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  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> |[[Sociedad Española de Construction Naval|S.E.C.]], Ferrol
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  • ...use School]], Fareham, Hampshire, and entered [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|H.M.S. ''Britannia'']] in January, 1885. He was commissioned a Sub-Lieute ...dered to transfer to [[H.M.S. Invincible (1907)|''Invincible'']] when that ship was detached following the [[Battle of Coronel]].<ref>''Naval Staff Monogra
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  • Hamilton was appointed in command of the torpedo school ship [[H.M.S. Defiance (Torpedo Training School)|''Defiance'']] at Devonport on ...arch 1901, he assumed command of the {{UK-1Furious|f=t}}, remaining in the ship for one year.{{MackieRNW}}
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  • ...ying Branch and was appointed to {{UK-1Stork|f=tp}} on 15 August, to which ship he was reappointed on 13 November. He attempted to qualify in Gunnery, but ...yer]] wrote to Admiral [[Dudley Rawson Stratford de Chair|Sir Dudley R. S. de Chair]]:
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  • ...ion]]. At some point Poë's flag was transferred to ''Hyacinth's'' sister ship, {{UK-1Hermes}}. He was superseded in command on 20 August, 1908.<ref>Nich ...sRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Dudley Rawson Stratford de Chair|Sir Dudley R. S. de Chair]]'''|'''[[Third Battle Squadron (Royal Navy)|Vice-Admiral Commanding,
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  • ...Navy]] and was appointed to the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] at Dartmouth on 15 January, 1875, having scored 592 marks, ...flag in the commissioned escort ship ''Quernmore'', but she was sunk by {{DE-U82}} northwest of Ireland on 31 July, thankfully with the loss of just one
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  • ...in British naval history. He passed into the [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] first in his term.<ref>Temple Patterson. ''Tyrwhitt of th ...[Guy Reginald Archer Gaunt|Guy R. A. Gaunt]], over a collision between the ship with the {{UK-Majestic}} in 1912.<ref>"The Centurion Collision" (News). ''
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  • ...ined, but by 1888 it seemed to have promise. It was to be retained in the ship, contingent upon further refinements proving successful.{{ARTS1888|p. 45-6} ...aff during the 1897 jubilee celebrations. He was appointed a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to Queen Victoria dated 7 May, 1899, vice [[John Pakenham Pipon|Pipo
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  • ...encer Bacon|Reginald Bacon]] and recently commissioned as the first parent ship for submarines, of which the Holland boats were just entering for service a In 1903 Sueter married Elinor Mary de Winton (d. 1948), only daughter of Sir Andrew Clarke; they had two daughter
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  • ...tin-de-Bartolome, NPG x163935.jpg|thumb|right|350px|Admiral Charles Martin-de-Bartholomé as a Captain in 1918.<br><small>Portrait: © National Portrait {{AdmRN}} {{SIR}} '''Charles Martin-de-Bartolomé''', K.C.M.G., C.B., Royal Navy, Retired (26 November, 1871 &ndas
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  • ...Gneisenau}}, while the rest of the German squadron bar the light cruiser {{DE-Dresden}} was destroyed by the rest of the British squadron. {{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Charles Martin-de-Bartolomé|Charles Bartolomé]]'''|'''[[First Sea Lord|Naval Assistant to t
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  • ...al Japanese Navy]]. Upon his return he spent a year on the cadet training ship {{UK-1Britannia}}, before serving as the junior member of a committee appoi ...ay for this. On 5 March, 1881, he was appointed to the new torpedo depôt ship {{UK-Hecla}} in the Mediterranean,<ref>Wilson Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 19
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  • In December, 1884 Shelford passed out of [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|H.M.S. ''Britannia'']], having qualfied for entrance as a Colonial Cadet f ...to the rank of {{CommRN}} while in the ship on 30 June, 1903, leaving the ship in October 1905.{{Gaz|27572|4187|3 July, 1903}}<ref>Shelford Service Record
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  • ...in command of H.M.S. Charybdis on the China Station in February 1877. The ship returned to England and was paid off at Devonport on 9 November 1880.<ref>{ On 18 January, 1886, Hotham was appointed a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to Queen Victoria, vice [[James Elphinstone Erskine|Erskine]].{{Gaz|
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  • ...M. Wilson]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Impregnable (Training Ship)|Captain of Training Ship H.M.S. ''Impregnable'']]'''<br>1 Apr, 1886{{NLMar92|p. 248}} &ndash; 18 Sep ...}} f. 30.</ref> &ndash; 15 Jul, 1893|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Charles William de la Poer Beresford, First Baron Beresford|The Rt. Hon. Lord Charles Beresfor
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  • ...e commanded the {{UK-2Ajax|f=t}} in the [[Annual Manoeuvres of 1890]], his ship acting as part of Fleet Number 2 which represented a hypothetical Hostile F Boyle was appointed a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to the Queen dated 4 August, 1890, vice [[Henry Frederick Stephenson
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  • ...pher Cradock]]. He entered the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] on 15 January, 1875, and left on 21 December, 1876. He la ...29.</ref> On 9 December he was given command of ''Commonwealth's'' sister-ship, {{UK-Britannia}}.<ref>{{TNA|ADM 196/42}}. f. 65.</ref>
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  • ...und out and sent him the money.<ref>Oliver. '''I'''. f. 2.</ref> Of the ship's Naval Instructor Oliver recalled, "He never tried to teach us."<ref>Olive On 8 January, 1889 he was appointed to the Training Ship ''Lion''.<ref>{{TNA|ADM 196/42}}. f. 319.</ref>
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  • ...antle (1765-1819), a friend of Nelson who had commanded ''Neptune'', third ship in the weather division at Trafalgar. Sir Thomas died in 1819 while in com ...''Balmoral Castle'', which chanced to be passing, and in which the ''suite de luxe'' provided the only cabins available." Upon returning to Britain, he
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  • ...y, 1866, being appointed to the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|H.M.S. ''Britannia'']] at Dartmouth as a {{NavCadRN}}. He left ''Britanni ...' on the East Indies station on 14 June. During this commission one of the ship's boats capsized in the Irrawady, and Callaghan earned the commendation of
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  • ...''Victory'' on 20 June, 1916, for command of the converted German merchant ship {{UK-Lucia}} (ex-''Spreewald''), and the {{UK-SF|10}}. ...</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Malcolm Kingsford de Monçy Burgess|Malcolm K. de M. Burgess]]'''}}
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  • ...A, p. 14.</ref> He entered the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] at Dartmouth on 15 July, 1877 and left on 24 July, 1879. ...which Sir Robert went to as well. So he came down early to get off to the ship. He found the Admiral's barge waiting there, and said "The Admiral's still
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  • ...keep the "DREADNOUGHT" in Thames, but if not I could send her as a private ship to you to reinforce 4th. B.S.<ref>{{TNA|ADM 137/1898}}, f. 19.</ref></block ...Vice-Admiral Sir Dudley de Chair signalled him on 20 April: "Flag of V.A. de Chair struck in "DREADNOUGHT" sunset today Saturday and 3rd. B.S. abolished
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  • {{UK-Begonia}}, damaged by a torpedo from {{DE-U44}} on 29 March, has been replaced by {{UK-Myosotis}}, keeping the flotil ...y {{DE-UC78}} on 5 May and {{UK-Tulip}} by {{DE-U62}} while serving as a Q ship on 30 April, reducing the formation's strength to seventeen sloops.{{SMNLJu
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  • ...ond Highlanders. Christopher Cradock entered [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] on 15 January, 1875 which he left with Third Class passes. ...ce, being chosen by the Governor-General of the Red Sea to act as his Aide-de-Camp.
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  • Scott was appointed to the screw ship-of-the-line {{UK-VictorEmanuel}} on 19 November, 1873, which served on the ...by devising and building land service mountings for 4.7-inch guns from his ship, which played a critical role in the defence of Ladysmith. He also provide
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  • ...he Navy as a Naval Cadet in the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] at Dartmouth on 15 July, 1871. ...oys' training ships. On 17 October, 1906, he was appointed a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to King Edward VII, vice [[Robert Swinburne Lowry|Lowry]].{{Gaz|2795
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  • ...ate ''Serapis'' in battle against John Paul Jones and the Continental Navy ship ''Bonhomme Richard''. Evan-Thomas was one of eight children and although t ...A, p. 6.</ref> and entered the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] on 15 January, 1876.<ref name=Record105/> In his final te
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  • ...and he was replaced by [[John Michael de Robeck, First Baronet|Sir John M. de Robeck]], latterly commanding the {{UK-BS|3}}. Attached: {{UK-1Boadicea|f=t}}, repair ship ''Assistance''.
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  • ...able, were rewarded with a civil C.B. In 1869 he commanded the new turret ship [[H.M.S. Monarch (1868)|''Monarch'']] (the first of her kind), which in Dec [[Category:Naval Aides-de-Camp to Queen Victoria]]
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  • ...'Malaba'' until 1 February 1890. An extended stint in the central battery ship ''Alexandra'' of a series of appointments followed, lasting from 8 Septembe ...dent of Naval Reserves]], and in January, 1895 was appointed a Naval Aide-de-Camp to Queen Victoria.<ref name=Obit/>
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  • ...say you weren't going to do it because you had put your helm over and the ship had begun to move the wrong way. Many years afterwards, when he was the Po ...n;" and on 18 January, 1886 was appointed [[First and Principal Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to the Queen.
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  • ...a'', flagship of [[John Hay|Lord John Hay]] in the Mediterranean, in which ship he served two years. ...|}} f. 175.</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Francis Grassie De Lisle|Francis G. De Lisle]]'''}}
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  • ...in command of the {{UK-1Crescent|f=t}} in January 1895, remaining in that ship until March.{{MackieRNW}} Arbuthnot was appointed a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to King Edward VII on 9 September, 1901, vice [[Edmund Samuel Poë|P
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  • ...15 January, 1880, he joined the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] at Dartmouth. He left on 23 December, 1881, with two month {{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Lawrence de Wahl Satow|Lawrence de W. Satow]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Espiegle (1900)|Captain of H.M.S. ''Espiegle'']]'
    14 KB (1,929 words) - 19:04, 6 April 2022
  • ...st and resulted in him receiving a severe reprimand and dismissal from his ship on the 20th.<ref>Adair Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/42.|D7601957}} f. 8.< ...601957}} f. 8.</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[William Fane De Salis|William F. De Salis]]'''}}
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  • ...ohn Hext|John Hext]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. St. Vincent (1815)|Captain of Training Ship H.M.S. ''St. Vincent'']]'''<br>21 Jun, 1884{{NLSep85|p. 255}} &ndash; 10 Ja {{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Charles William de la Poer Beresford, First Baron Beresford|The Rt. Hon. Lord Charles Beresfor
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  • Corry was appointed a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to King Edward VII on 23 July, 1901, vice [[Assheton Gore Curzon-How ...tson|Burges Watson]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. St. Vincent (1815)|Captain of Training Ship H.M.S. ''St. Vincent'']]'''<br>25 Jun, 1887{{NLFeb88|p. 252}}|Succeeded by<
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  • ...eans he was a late arrival for the [[::Category:H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship) Entrants of December, 1859|first intake term of December, 1859]]. Drury was appointed a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to Queen Victoria on 23 August, 1897, vice [[Lewis Anthony Beaumont|
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  • {{CaptRN}} '''Lawrence de Wahl Satow''', C.B.E., Royal Navy (23 June, 1865 &ndash; 23 October, 1948) ...s appointed in command of H.M.S. ''Espiegle'' on 30 June, 1904 leaving the ship when she paid off on 18 January, 1905.<ref>Satow Service Record. {{TNA|ADM
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  • ...the {{UK-Bulwark}} as Chief of the Staff to Vice-Admiral [[Charles William de la Poer Beresford, First Baron Beresford|Lord Charles Beresford]], Commande ...te well except that in opening the engine full out to take off abreast the ship my best new cap flew off and was cut to bits by the airscrew."<ref>Longmore
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  • ...pr, 1938<ref>[https://www.navy.gov.au/hmas-australia-ii R.A.N. page on the ship].</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Robert Ross Stewart|Robert R. Stewart]]'''}} [[Category:Naval Aides-de-Camp to King George V]]
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  • Dewar was appointed to the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] on 15 July, 1893. ...|ADM 196/45}}. f. 59.</ref> Rear-Admiral [[John de Mestre Hutchison|John de M. Hutchison]], commanding Devonport Naval Barracks, wrote of Dewar:
    10 KB (1,504 words) - 18:43, 6 April 2022
  • ...ointed as a {{NavCadRN}} to the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] at Dartmouth on 15 January, 1876.<ref name=sr135>ADM 196/4 ...15 August he was appointed to command {{UK-Ariadne|f=tp}}, a nucleus crew ship at Portsmouth, which command he held until 6 November, 1906.<ref>ADM 196/42
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  • ...tune|f=t}} on 11 February, 1916,{{NLDec16|p. 396''ee''}} and commanded the ship through the [[Battle of Jutland]] and submitted [[H.M.S. Neptune at the Ba On 3 July, 1917, Bernard was appointed a Naval Aide-de-Camp to King George V, vice [[Allen Thomas Hunt|Hunt]].{{Gaz|30168|6707|6 J
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  • ...fell ill in April, 1896, Bruce was made Acting Commander in Command of the ship. Maconochie died at year end, and it is not clear whether Bruce ever relin ...82}} f. 107.</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Oscar Valentin de Satgé|Oscar V. de Satgé]]'''}}
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  • He joined the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|H.M.S. ''Britannia'']] in 1891, and passed out seventh out of fifty-seven ...36504, p.8}}|Succeeded by<br>'''[[John Gilbert de Odingsells Coke|John G. de O. Coke]]'''}}
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  • ...tecting German interests there during the Mexican Revolution. The third, {{DE-1Nurnberg|f=p}}, was on her way to relieve ''Leipzig''. ...the supply ship ''Markomannia'', to operate in the Indian Ocean. One fast ship could raid commerce and obtain its coal supplies from prizes. ''Emden'' car
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  • ...ed to guard that squadron's patrol area off Finisterre and dispatch a fast ship to join the {{UK-1Glasgow|f=t}} in South American waters. His orders were
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  • ...anded the {{UK-1Narcissus|f=t}} in the [[Annual Manoeuvres of 1890]]. His ship acted as part of Fleet Number 1 which was itself playing the role of the Ro ...'''[[First and Principal Naval Aide-de-Camp|First and Principal Naval Aide-de-Camp]]'''<br>25 Jan, 1911<ref>Beaumont Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/36/226
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  • On 1 May, 1888, he was appointed a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to the Queen, vice [[Robert Henry More Molyneux|Molyneux]].{{Gaz|258 ...owden-Smith]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|Captain of Training Ship H.M.S. ''Britannia'']]'''<br>17 Sep, 1886<ref>Bedford Service Record. {{TN
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  • [[File:Lord Charles de la Poer Beresford.JPG|thumb|right|300px|Admiral Lord Beresford.]] [[Admiral (Royal Navy)|Admiral]] '''Charles William de la Poer Beresford, First Baron Beresford''', G.C.B., G.C.V.O., Royal Navy (
    51 KB (7,917 words) - 17:13, 30 October 2022
  • ...od on half pay, on 15 June, 1887, he was appointed in command of the troop ship ''Assistance''. He was superseded in command on 21 June, 1890. On 22 July [[Category:Naval Aides-de-Camp to Queen Victoria]]
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  • ...a very popular man in the Service. Billy would have preferred a seagoing ship to life in a 'Stone Frigate'.{{FleetMyLife|p. 286}} ...oted to the rank of {{AdmRN}} on 10 February, 1911, vice [[Charles William de la Poer Beresford, First Baron Beresford|Beresford]].<ref>''The London Gaz
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  • ...fore joining the [[Royal Navy]], entering the [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] in September, 1861. In June, 1867 he became a {{SubRN}} a ...Sir) [[Albert Hastings Markham|Albert H. Markham]]. In October, 1880 the ship was ordered from Vancouver to Callao to protect British interests while the
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  • ..., far above high-water mark. When the sea returned to its usual level, the ship was dry to within a few feet of her stern-post, and imbedded in the sand to ...a C.B. In 1857 he went out to China in command of the screw line-of-battle ship ''Sanspareil'', in which he was at once sent with a detachment of marines t
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  • {{SIR}},—I have the honour to report that on May 31, 1916, H.M. Ship under my command, flying your flag, was in action with the enemy under the ...Lion'' was firing at the leading ship, which was either {{DE-Lutzow}} or {{DE-Derfflinger}}.
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  • After the Battle-Cruisers had passed, an enemy cruiser, probably the {{DE-Roon}}, was observed in a disabled condition. The {{UK-IronDuke}} opened f About 7.15 p.m. the enemy's Battle-Cruisers were sighted, the leading ship being only just clear of the bows of the {{UK-Colossus}}. ''Temeraire'' op
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  • ...rom 12 to 6 miles; wind west, force 3; sea calm. I gave the target as 4th ship from the right. At 3.46 the range-finders gave a first range of 21,300 yar ...small spread. 3.50 ''Lion'' opened fire, and we opened fire. Target 4th ship from right, range 18,500. Our first salvo missed for deflection, second sa
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  • On 12 February, 1910, he was appointed in command of the repair ship [[H.M.S. Cyclops (1905)|''Cyclops'']].<ref>"Naval and Military Intelligence ...ref>HMS BACCHANTE – June 1917 to April 1919, Central and South Atlantic [ship's log]. Available at https://www.naval-history.net/OWShips-WW1-05-HMS_Bacch
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  • ...ces suggest that, given slight superiority of speed and good handling, one ship can, without much difficulty, be made to ram another, even when the other i ...ence of the collision. In the seventh column I have indicated whether the ship intended to be rammed was at that moment under steam (S.), at anchor (A.),
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  • Markham was born at Bagnères-de-Bigorre, Hautes Pyrénées, France, on 11 November, 1841, the fifth of six ...Triumph'' off on 24 October, 1882, and was appointed to the torpedo school ship at Portsmouth, [[H.M.S. Vernon (Torpedo Training School)|H.M.S. ''Vernon'']
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  • ...assumed command of the vessel. Similarly, if a captain re-commissions his ship and is re-appointed in command, his date in an ensuing Navy List may show t | A.E. || Assistant Engineer. || AdC. || Aide-de-Camp to the Queen.
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  • ...r was Marianne Catherine Emily, youngest daughter of Admiral Sir John Poo de la Poer Beresford. ...d more to his widow; and pay for a suitable tombstone myself. Dismiss the ship's company.<ref>Lowis. p. 197.</ref></blockquote>
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  • ...the hope of saving him, and struck out for the ship. In the meantime the ship's course was stopped, and two boats were lowered, by one of which Mr. MONTG ...898, he assumed command of the {{UK-Bonaventure|f=t}}. He remained in the ship until May 1900.{{MackieRNW}}
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  • Warrender entered the [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|training ship ''Britannia'']] on 15 January, 1873.<ref name=Record1383>{{TNA|ADM 196/39.} ...nt and Gunnery Officer of {{UK-1Amphion}} for service in the Pacific. The ship paid off three years later, on 25 January, 1892. On 2 April he was reappoi
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  • ...ated that the service adopt a more flexible command philosophy which would de-emphasise central command in favour of independent command initiative harmo ...p, but it has been overcome, and I&mdash;still having the ''Imaum'' for my ship&mdash;am permanently lent to the ''Wellesley''. Lieutenant Cochrane was ve
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  • ...orge W. Hunt. On 1 April, 1876, he was appointed in command of the turret ship [[H.M.S. Monarch (1868)|''Monarch'']]. On 8 July, 1877, he was appointed t On 4 January, 1879, he was appointed a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to the Queen.{{Gaz|24666|53|7 January, 1879}}
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  • He and the ship participated in the [[Battle of Jutland]] on 31 May, 1916. As part of the p ...pected, shy of publicity, and has been credited with introducing an esprit de corps into the Navy that the young service had been lacking.
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  • ...r at Burney's at Gosport, and passed into the [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] on his second attempt, thirty-third out of thirty-four.<re He was promoted to the rank of {{FleetRN}} on 31 July, 1934, vice [[Osmond de Beauvoir Brock|Brock]].{{Gaz|34076|5054|7 August, 1934}}
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  • ...was absorbed into the [[Home Fleet (Royal Navy)|Home Fleet]] in 1909. The ship paid off on 1 June, 1910. Captain [[Cresswell John Eyres|Cresswell J. Eyres ...every major British ship to concentrate fire on the doomed enemy cruiser {{DE-Blucher}} as richer game was allowed to escape.<ref>See [[Battle of Dogger
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  • ...elve months and was rated Midshipman immediately upon leaving the training ship on 15 July, 1883. He was sent to join the ''Achilles'' in the China Squadr On 2 November, 1914, Jackson was appointed a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to King George V, vice [[Robert John Prendergast|Prendergast]].{{Gaz
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  • | The ship's position was Lat. 57° 7' N., Long. 5° 41' E. ; course, 134°; speed, 20 ...course to 45°—thereby deploying into line : "Agincourt" now being rear ship of the line.
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  • ...ander, Lieutenant James St. Clair Bower, were the only two officers on the ship. He was appointed a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to the King on 16 December, 1907, vice [[Arthur Archibald Campbell G
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  • ...n May of 1905 showed her machinery and engine rooms in sad condition. The ship's performance in the heavy gunlayer tests of that year were also noted as b He was appointed a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to the King dated 2 March, 1905, vice [[George Le Clerc Egerton|Eger
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  • ...of the Bath on 10 October, 1912.<br><small>Photo: Bibliothèque nationale de France.</small>]] ...Burney]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Boscawen (Boys' Training Ship)|Captain of Training Ship H.M.S. ''Boscawen'']]'''<br>1 Sep, 1899<ref>Jerram Service Record. {{TNA|A
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  • ...1884.{{Gaz|25393|3994|5 September, 1884}} He was appointed to the turret ship ''Agamemnon'' on the China Station on 16 September.{{NLJun85|p. 191}} Havin ...{{UK-Blake}}, flagship of the North America station, and the torpedo depot-ship {{UK-Vulcan}}. He was promoted to the rank of {{CommRN}} on 1 January, 189
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  • ...d on a shoal off Mutton Island" and severely reprimanded and dismissed the ship.<ref>Carden Service Record. In our PDF for [[Arthur William Carter]]. {{T ...{TNA|ADM 196/38.|D7578800}} f. 185.</ref> being succeeded by Rear-Admiral de Robeck. On that day Fisher noted in a letter to Jellicoe, "Who expected Ca
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  • ...ge|f=tp}} at Devonport at which he was lent for staff duties. He took the ship into the Channel for gunnery practice. After forty-one rounds had been fir ...a "lack of zeal & energy on part of officers." A little more time in the ship seems to have permitted improvement, as Admiral [[Day Hort Bosanquet|Bosanq
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  • ! width=15%; align= center rowspan=2 | Ship Name ! width=15%; align= center rowspan=2 | Ship Class
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  • ...ointed as a {{NavCadRN}} to the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] at Dartmouth on 15 July, 1874. ...459. p. 2063.] 5 June, 1919.</ref>, and [[First and Principal Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to the King on 31 July.{{Gaz|31489|9961|5 August, 1919}} He was plac
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  • '''Arsenal de Toulon''' was a French shipbuilder. |'''Ship'''||'''Type'''||'''Launched'''||'''Fate'''
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  • ...ed in 1869 by the three-decker ''Prince of Wales'', which became the fifth ship to bear the name ''Britannia''. From 1864 onwards the two-decker ''Hindost ..., and a Naval Cadet had to pass an examination before going to a sea-going ship. Three Naval Instructors, including Reverend Inskip, were appointed to the
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  • At 6.38 "''Canada''" fired two salvoes at German Ship, which had apparently suffered heavily, and was much obscured by smoke and ...le, but conditions were such as to make it impossible to be certain. This ship then disappeared in dense smoke, probably a smoke screen.
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  • ...08 he was appointed to command the {{UK-1Achilles|f=t}}. He commanded the ship until being appointed Captain of [[H.M.S. Vernon (Torpedo Training School)| ...in [[H.M.S. Canada at the Battle of Jutland|his after-action report]], the ship fired forty-two main battery rounds during the action, and over 100 6-in sh
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  • ...the [[Royal Navy]] through the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] on 15 January, 1881. ...'''[[First and Principal Naval Aide-de-Camp|First and Principal Naval Aide-de-Camp]]'''<br>4 Oct, 1926{{Gaz|33209|6440|8 October, 1926}}|Succeeded by<br>
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  • ...''" opened fire, followed by "{{UK-RoyalOak}}" and a three-funnelled enemy ship, [[Kolberg Class Cruiser (1908)|"''Kolberg''" class]], was observed steamin ...About this time the Navigating Officer states he saw another large German ship, but not for long. Two of our T.B.Ds. were also seen on fire, one at fore
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  • ...le:Brock, NPG x65615.jpg|thumb|right|350px|Admiral of the Fleet Sir Osmond de B. Brock, 1934.<br><small>© National Portrait Gallery, London.</small>]] [[Admiral of the Fleet (Royal Navy)|Admiral of the Fleet]] {{SIR}} '''Osmond de Beauvoir Brock''', {{Post-Nominals|country=GBR-cats|G.C.B.m|K.C.M.G.|K.C.V.
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  • ...to forward herewith a report on the action of 31st May 1916, in which H.M. Ship under my command flying your flag took part. ...damage from the enemy's shells, and the casualties were fairly heavy, the ship was in a thoroughly efficient fighting condition, and had all guns in actio
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  • ...nuary, 1891}} He was superseded in ''Boadicea'' on 7 May, discharged from ship's books on 31 May, and returned to Britain on 8 June. He was appointed in ...terranean. On the death of Queen Victoria he was reappointed a Naval Aide-de-Camp to King Edward VII on 25 February, 1901.{{Gaz|27289|1417|26 February,
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  • Waistell was appointed a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to King George V on 26 November, 1920, vice [[Maurice Swynfen FitzMa ...eded by<br>'''?'''|'''[[H.M.S. Fisgard (Training Ship)|Captain of Training Ship H.M.S. ''Fisgard'']]'''<br>12 Feb, 1904<ref>Waistell Service Record. {{TNA
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  • ...ke'' class cruisers]] completed in the early 1890s. She served as a depot ship in the Great War. One of the ship's boilers exploded off the Lizard on 24 June, 1896, resulting in the death
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  • ...ions, line ahead to starboard, 19 knots, "{{UK-Collingwood}}" being second ship of "{{UK-Colossus}}" division (No. 5). 9. The hull of one ship, thought to be "Kaiser" class, was seen once in the foretop for a few momen
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  • Ley entered the [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] on 15 January, 1883.{{NLDec84|p. 37}} ...of {{RearRN}} on 5 October, 1917, vice [[Dudley Rawson Stratford de Chair|de Chair]].{{GazSup|30336|10605|16 October, 1917}}
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  • On 22 March, 1908, he was appointed a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to King Edward VII, vice [[Frederic Edward Errington Brock|Brock]].{ .... Bromley]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Impregnable (Training Ship)|Captain of Training Ship H.M.S. ''Impregnable'']]'''<br>4 Nov, 1907{{NLOct08|p. 330}}|Succeeded by<b
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  • In 1905, he assumed command of the {{UK-1Encounter|f=t}},leaving the ship in December to become captain of the {{UK-KingAlfred|f=t}}. ...r|Thomas H. Fisher]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. St. Vincent (1815)|Captain of Training Ship H.M.S. ''St. Vincent'']]'''<br>4 Apr, 1899<ref>Thursby Service Record. {{T
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  • ...-U39}} off Salonika. It was noted that his action "undoubtedly" saved the ship and a portion of its cargo, though she was a complete write-off.<ref>Campbe ...n and Chief of Staff to {{ViceRN}} [[John Michael de Robeck, First Baronet|de Robeck]].{{NLFeb19|p. 825}}
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  • ...Elizabeth (1913)|Queen E.]] & {{UK-Warspite}}, Calibrated 13.5" guns each ship firing 8 rounds ...rely from our fire. 4 leadmost ships firing at {{UK-Lion}} who was leading ship. 1 of enemies[sic] Battle cruisers sinking[.]
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  • In May 1909, he assumed command of the {{UK-1Isis|f=t}}, remaining with the ship until October 1910.{{MackieRNW}} {{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Osmond de Beauvoir Brock|Osmond de B. Brock]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Alacrity (1885)|Captain of H.M.S. ''Alacrity'']]'
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  • He was promoted to the rank of {{ViceRN}} on 31 July, 1924, vice [[Osmond de Beauvoir Brock|Brock]].{{Gaz|32962|5889|5 August, 1924}} ...log. {{TNA|ADM 53/56876.}}</ref> &ndash; 30 Oct, 1914<ref>''Queen Mary'''s ship's log. {{TNA|ADM 53/56876.}}</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Cecil Irby Prowse|C
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  • On 9 August, 1914, Duff's {{UK-1Birmingham}} encountered {{DE-U15}} which had been immobilised by engine trouble and delivered a fatal ra On 3 April, 1915, he was sent to the hospital ship ''Rewa'' to have gall stones removed. He was expected to be fit by 26 Apri
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  • The ship was re-commissioned at [[Hong Kong]] for service with the {{UK-DF|8}} on th ...6/118/105.|}} f. 105.</ref>{{UBAllyWarship|4278}}|end=1 December, 1939<ref>De Winton Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/118/105.|}} f. 105.</ref>{{UBAllyWars
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  • ...1918 he was given command of {{UK-1Hindustan}} when she served as a depot ship to support the operations against Zeebrugge.<ref>"Vice-Admiral A. P. Davids ...ApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Cunningham Robert de Clare Foot|Cunningham R. de C. Foot]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Cornwallis (1901)|Captain of H.M.S. ''Cornwallis''
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  • ...896.<ref>Fawkes Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/86.}} f. 59/118.</ref> The ship touched ground on 3 June 1893, just two days after erecting a monument to t ...olland|Holland]],{{Gaz|27043|298|17 January, 1899}} and became a paid Aide-de-Camp on 30 June.
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  • ...gun-vessel, at the age of ten. He entered the [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] as a cadet in 1884. .... p. 5.</ref> but in battle practice (the more realistic competition) the ship placed fifth just in the 14 participating ships of the Second Division, [[H
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  • ...al Navy]] on 4 December, 1858, appointed as a {{NavCadRN}} to the training ship ''Illustrious'' at Portsmouth. On 1 January, 1859, he transferred to the ' ...e Archibald Bourke|The Hon. Maurice Bourke]], Tryon once pointed to Noel's ship and said, "Oh I wish they were all like that!"<ref>Bourke to Noel. Letter
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  • ! width=15%; align= center | <small>Ship</small> ...-in-Chief, Grand Fleet.)<br>Vice-Admiral Sir [[Osmond de Beauvoir Brock|O. de B. Brock]], K.C.M.G., K.C.V.O., C.B.<br>(Chief of Staff.)<br>Commodore, Fir
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  • ...edecessors, whose records indicate appoints to {{UK-1Britannia}}, training ship. ...inue for another two or three years, would still enter the old "Britannia" ship. About the middle or end of next year it was hoped the new Britannia Colleg
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  • ...eat zeal. A most excellent Capt. of a battleship & knows how to handle his ship." C.-in-C. Home Fleet [[Francis Charles Bridgeman Bridgeman|Sir Francis Bri ...1. Issue '''39496''', col B, p. 8.</ref> He was appointed a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to the King dated 22 September, vice [[Montague Edward Browning|Brow
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  • ...y, 1875, being appointed to the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] at Dartmouth. He missed the Easter term of 1876 on accoun ...1884.{{Gaz|25393|3994|5 September, 1884}} He was appointed to the turret ship ''Agamemnon'' on the China Station on 16 September.{{NLJun85|p. 191}}
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  • ...K-Barham}} from her commissioning in mid-1915 through to April, 1918. The ship was flagship of the {{UK-BS|5}} at the [[Battle of Jutland]].{{UKJutlandOD| [[Category:Naval Aides-de-Camp to King George V]]
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  • ...t," and wasn't appointed to the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] at Dartmouth until 28 August, 1874, nearly a month after h ....</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Carlton Valentine de Mornay Cowper|Carlton V. de M. Cowper]]'''}}
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  • He remained in ''Attentive'' as a {{Com2RN}} after handing over the role as ship's captain..<ref>Johnson Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/43.}} f. 54.</ref> Johnson was appointed a Naval Aide-de-Camp to King George V on 29 January, 1920.{{GazSup|31791|2189|24 February,
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  • {{Tenure|rank=Captain|name=Osmond de Beauvoir Brock|nick=Osmond de B. Brock|appt=12 May, 1904<ref>Brock Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/43.|}} {ship
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  • ...October, 1898 though no clear record exists of his being appointed to that ship.<ref>Hawksley Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/43.}} f. 289.</ref> He was appointed in command of the destroyer depot ship {{UK-Venus}} on 4 April, 1913, supporting the {{UK-DF|1}}.{{NLJul13|p. 390}
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  • ...mmanded the {{UK-2Galatea|f=t}} in the [[Annual Manoeuvres of 1890]]. His ship was part of Fleet Number 1 playing the role of the Royal Navy fending off a [[Category:Naval Aides-de-Camp to Queen Victoria]]
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  • The ship was projected to cost 1,146,133 pounds.{{NMI|27 Nov. 1905, p. 10}} In October 1914, the ship was to be given eleven Pattern 1582 Electric Radiators to warm cabins whose
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  • ''Vesuvius'' was the first ship in the Royal Navy to carry Whitehead torpedoes, being equipped to carry up ...rvice Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/42.|}} f. 275.</ref>|end=22 October, 1897<ref>de Chair Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/42.|}} f. 275.</ref>}}
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  • He was appointed in command of the depot ship {{UK-Blake}} on 12 August, 1912.{{NLJul13|p. 284}} ...ApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Dudley Rawson Stratford de Chair|Dudley R. S. de Chair]]'''|'''[[H.M. T.B. 72 (1885)|Captain of H.M. T.B. 72]]'''<br>18 Jul,
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  • In May 1911, he assumed command of the depot ship {{UK-StGeorge}}. ...February.<ref>[http://www.naval-history.net/OWShips-WW1-01-HMS_Caesar.htm Ship's Log Book.]</ref> In May of 1915, he was thanked for the resource and abi
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  • ...Lieutenant of the battleship [[H.M.S. Victoria (1887)|''Victoria'']], flag ship on the [[Mediterranean Station]], on 14 November, 1889.{{NLMar91|p. 263}} He was appointed a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to the King on 1 June, 1907, vice [[Frederick St. George Rich|Rich]]
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  • ...state "not creditable to him as Comm<small><sup><u>r</u></sup></small> of ship." On 12 December, Custance was appointed to a committee to revise the Gunn ...-de-Camp]] to Queen Victoria on 16 September, 1897, vice [[Charles William de la Poer Beresford, First Baron Beresford|Beresford]].{{Gaz|26892|5162|17 Se
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  • ...at of the despatch vessel {{UK-1Surprise}} on 1 August, 1906. He left the ship in 27 March, 1909.<ref>Francklin Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/43.}} f. 4 ...> &ndash; Aug, 1897|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Oscar Valentin de Satgé|Oscar V. de Satgé]]'''}}
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  • ...g Service'''. Rear-Admiral [[Dudley Rawson Stratford de Chair|Dudley R. S. de Chair]] was appointed as '''Admiral of the Training Service''' on 30 June 1 *[[H.M.S. Impregnable (Training Ship)|''Impregnable'']], 1862 - 1929.
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  • From 1904 to 1906, he served as flag captain in that ship to {{RearRN}} [[Edmund Samuel Poe]] in the {{UK-CS|1}} in the [[Channel Fle {{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[John de Mestre Hutchison|John de M. Hutchison]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Exmouth (1901)|Captain of H.M.S. ''Exmouth'']
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  • ...from 16 July 1904 through 4 August, 1908. He would record his time in the ship in a photo album and memorabilia book. It is thanks to this that we know t ...mlin Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/44.}} f. 52.</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''Ship sold to Chile'''}}
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  • ...milton]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Boscawen (Boys' Training Ship)|Captain of Training Ship H.M.S. ''Boscawen'']]'''<br>Oct, 1905{{INF}} &ndash; 28 Feb, 1906|Succeeded {{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[John Pratt de Montmorency|John P. de Montmorency]]'''|'''[[Marseilles|Principal Naval Transport Officer, Marseil
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  • In 1911, Warleigh was thanked as one of three officers who invented a "Single Ship Battle & Fire Control Teacher]]. His service record contains a note from V ...nt to England just as he received strong recommendations from Vice Admiral de Robeck. He was not found fit until 7 September, on which date Warleigh was
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  • ...1905, he was appointed to the training ship [[H.M.S. Impregnable (Training Ship)|''Caldonia'']] for one year as first lieutenant. Upon paying her off on 1 Stirling was appointed a Naval Aide-de-Camp to the King on 8 July, 1926,{{Gaz|33182|4634|13 July, 1926}} but cease
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  • ....S. Invincible (1907)|H.M.S. ''Invincible'']] is usually seen as the first ship of the type, though her sister [[H.M.S. Inflexible (1907)|''Inflexible'']] ...t would not be needed by such a fast (and therefore, he felt, hard to hit) ship might give the Royal Navy a type which could lasso enemy cruisers on the hi
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  • ...g to pass between {{UK-PrinceGeorge}} and ''Berwick'' behind. ''Berwick'' ship struck ''Tiger'' amidships and broke her in two. The bow section sank quic ...nvolved in a collision with the {{UK-Dido|f=t}}. The captain of the other ship, [[Robert Henry Coppinger]] was faulted in the encounter.<ref>Coppinger Ser
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  • ...t Scouting Group of three battlecruisers and the armoured cruiser S.M.S. {{DE-Blucher}}, the four light cruisers of the 2nd Scouting Group and two flotil ...Russians had recovered the code books of the German light cruiser S.M.S. {{DE-Magdeburg}} in August 1914 and shared them with their allies.<ref>Dogger Ba
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  • ...in support were {{DE-Stettin|f=p}}, {{DE-Frauenlob|f=p}} and the elderly {{DE-Hela|f=p}}.{{UKNavalOpsI| p. 101-2}} ...ly one man being wounded on any of them. but the old German torpedo boat {{DE-D8}} was badly damaged. {{UKNSMonoIII|pp.120-21}}
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  • ...Admiral [[Franz Ritter von Hipper|Franz von Hipper]] had had to do with {{DE-Blucher|f=tp}} at the [[Battle of Dogger Bank]] in 1915.{{UKNavalOpsV|p.171 ...t cruisers came under from the German battleships {{DE-Kaiser|f=p}} and {{DE-Kaiserin|f=p}}. At this point, Admiral Alexander-Sinclair ordered the ligh
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  • ...yn de Styrap Jukes Hughes|Edward G. de S. Jukes Hughes]], appointed to the ship on 6 January, 1914.{{NLApr14|p. 345''a''}} * [http://www.naval-history.net/OWShips-WW1-05-HMS_Minotaur.htm Transcribed Ship Logs at naval-history.net]
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  • ..." ten seamen. The ''Algerine's'' men were subsequently sent back to their ship, from which they could not well be spared, and were replaced on 4th June by ...s and much British property were there. I informed him that I would send a ship there to protect lives of Europeans and to embark them if necessary, but th
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  • ..._(1811) H.M.S. ''Java''] during the War of 1812. He was killed during his ship's fight with the [[United States Navy]] frigate [http://en.wikipedia.org/wi ...he sea. My father himself went to sea at 12 years of age, and commanded a ship at the age of 21. My ambition was to join the Navy, and a nomination was g
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  • ...the [[Royal Navy]] through the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] on 15 January, 1875. After the customary two years, he wa {{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Charles Martin-de-Bartolomé|Charles Bartolomé]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Dreadnought (1906)|Captain o
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  • ...and William Nicholson, and Vice-Admiral [[Osmond de Beauvoir Brock|Osmond de B. Brock]].<br><small>Photo: Imperial War Museum.</small>]] * kite balloon ship ''Menelaus'', {{CommRN}} [[Charles William Nicoll McCulloch|Charles W. N. M
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  • ...Navy]], being appointed to the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] on 15 July, 1894. He was rated {{MidRN}} immediately on 1 ...(1903)|H.M.S. ''King Edward VII'']], flagship of Admiral [[Charles William de la Poer Beresford, First Baron Beresford|Lord Charles Beresford]], [[Channe
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  • ...quently delayed till mid-December because of machinery problems with the {{DE-VonDerTann|f=t}}.{{GoldrickKing'sShips|p. 191}} ...a potentially suspicious transit through the Kiel Canal. The submarine {{DE-U27}} was sent to reconnoitre Scarborough and Hartlepool, and reported weak
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  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> ...lights when they became available.{{ARTS1907|p. 35. The location for each ship type was placement stipulated in C.N.2 11884/13066, 13.12.1906}}
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  • ...12.</ref><ref>[http://www.naval-history.net/OWShips-WW1-06-HMS_Dunedin.htm Ship's Log]</ref>}} {{Tenure|rank={{CaptRN}}|name=Martin John Coucher de Meric|nick=Martin J. C. de Meric|appt=5 April, 1932{{NLJan33|p. 300}}|end=August, 1933{{MackieRNW}}}}
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  • It was planned that the 7 May christening of the ship was to be performed by Mrs. Austen Chamberlain, but this was changed to the On 9 August, 1914, ''Birmingham'' rammed and sank {{DE-U15}} off Fair Island. This was the first U-boat loss to enemy action in t
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  • ...edbot:career>{{ShipCareer|fullname=H.M.S. ''Nottingham'' (1913)|fate2=by {{DE-U52}} In March 1914, the ship was to carry two red bands on first and third funnel.{{AWO1914|924 of 6 Mar
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  • {{Tenure|rank={{CaptRN}}|name=Stanley Brian de Courcy-Ireland|nick=Stanley B. de Courcy-Ireland|appt=24 July, 1935{{NavAppts|22 July 1935, p. 17}}|end=30 Au ...ng Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/118/23.|}} f. 23.</ref>|note=remained in ship after Musters arrived}}
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  • {{Tenure|rank=Captain|name=Wion de Malpas Egerton|nick=Wion de M. Egerton|appt=January, 1918{{NLFeb19|p. 754}}<ref>Egerton Service Record. {{Tenure|rank={{Com2RN}}|name=Wion de Malpas Egerton|nick=Wion de M. Egerton|appt=1 September, 1926<ref>Egerton Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 19
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  • ...uffered serious damage from the German cruisers {{DE-Frauenlob|f=p}} and {{DE-Stettin}}, but not before she landed a 6-in shell on the bridge of the form The ship was uniquely honoured after the battle by having an engraved brass plate fi
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  • ...nfused action before being torpedoed and seriously damaged by the German {{DE-UC25}} at 1.30pm. She was towed back to harbour for repairs. The ship re-commissioned at Portsmoputh on 1 April, 1927.{{NLJul27|p. 230}}
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  • ...fredbot:career>{{ShipCareer|fullname=H.M.S. ''Falmouth'' (1910)|fate2=by {{DE-U63}} In October 1914, the ship was to be given 4 Pattern 1582 Electric Radiators to warm cabins whose stov
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  • ''Sydney'' sank the {{DE-1Emden}} on 9 November, 1914. .../ref>{{NLOct16|p. 399''p''}}|end=5 February, 1917|note=in action against {{DE-1Emden}} on 9 November, 1914}}
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  • ...rtin J. C. de Meric|appt=October, 1930{{MackieRNW}}|end=c. April, 1931<ref>de Meric Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/51/284.|D7605039}} f. 299.</ref>|note= ...ecord. {{TNA|ADM 196/118/29.|}} f. 29.</ref>|note=vice Farquhar, and upon ship reducing}}
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  • ...-Chief 1916-19: 'C-in-C's (Commander-in-Chief's) Private Record' detailing ship movements Dec 1916-Sep 1917. First Sea Lord, 1919-27: Capital ship versus submarine, papers on the building policy of the navy, 6 Dec 1920-20
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  • ...igating officer did not enable him to handle his men well & look after his ship but she is much improved the last 12 months. Physically strong."<ref>ADM 1 ...Lewis A. Beaumont]], the [[Commander-in-Chief, Portsmouth]], inspected the ship on 17 May, finding a "lack of zeal & energy on part of officers."<ref>ADM 1
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  • ...ve great confidence. Very strict & excellent disciplinarian & handles his ship very ably."<ref>ADM 196/88. f. 1.</ref> He was superseded in command of ' ....</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Carlton Valentine de Mornay Cowper|Carlton V. de M. Cowper]]'''}}
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  • ...arry them out. Rather of the buffoon type, yet well meaning. Handles his ship well."<ref>ADM 196/88. f. 64.</ref> ...{{ViceRN}} on 24 March, 1920, vice [[John Michael de Robeck, First Baronet|de Robeck]], and placed on the Retired List the following day, 25 March.{{Gaz|
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  • ...ion]] of the morning of 6 December, 1917 caused when the French ammunition ship ''Mont-Blanc'' caught fire and exploded following a collision with S.S. ''I {{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Osmond de Beauvoir Brock|Osmond de B. Brock]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Bulwark (1899)|Captain of H.M.S. ''Bulwark'']]'''
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  • ...|2 January, 1903}} He was appointed in command of the ''Warrior'', depôt ship at Portsmouth, on 30 August, 1903.<ref>"Naval & Military Intelligence" (Off ...}} &ndash; 1902{{FC}}|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Osmond de Beauvoir Brock|Osmond de B. Brock]]'''}}
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  • ...7588.jpg|thumb|right|350px|File:Foot, NPG x67588.jpg|Admiral Cunningham R. de C. Foot, 1921.<br><small>Photograph: © National Portrait Gallery, London.< [[Admiral (Royal Navy)|Admiral]] '''Cunningham Robert de Clare Foot''', C.B.E., R.N., Retired (13 June, 1864 &ndash; 17 May, 1940) w
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  • ...gton House School]], Fareham, and entered the [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] in January, 1877. He served as {{MidRN}} in the armoured ...be superseded shortly. Apparently the issue was one of Browne taking the ship to sea in Fyler's absence &ndash; an act which the Admitalty felt was justi
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  • ...r-Admiral Henderson elicited the comment that the "[d]isorganised state of ship shows that executive officer has no aptitude for his duty." A satisfactory ...ed to the rank of {{RearRN}} on 31 January, 1918, vice [[Cunningham Robert de Clare Foot|Foot]].{{Gaz|30522|1946|12 February, 1918}} On 9 March he was a
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  • ...ey, Royal Navy. He entered the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] on 15 July, 1878. ...ApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Dudley Rawson Stratford de Chair|Dudley R. S. de Chair]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Cochrane (1905)|Captain of H.M.S. ''Cochrane'']]'''<
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  • [[Admiral (Royal Navy)|Admiral]] '''John de Mestre Hutchison''', C.M.G., C.V.O., Royal Navy, Retired (4 September, 1864 ...therefore had to wait nine months before being rated {{MidRN}}. His first ship was the ironclad ''Agincourt'' at the Dardanelles, which he joined via the
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  • ...0, Jellicoe was appointed to H.M.S. ''Inconstant'' for service in the flag ship of the Mediterranean Squadron, H.M.S. ''Alexandra'', to which he was appoin ...and returned to the family home at Surbiton in great pain. He was ''hors de combat'' for three months, the only time he was on half-pay in his naval ca
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  • {{Tenure|rank={{LCommRN}}|name=Henry Graham Dudley de Chair|nick=Henry G. D. de Chair|appt=14 August, 1938{{UBAllyWarship|4244}}|end=12 November, 1940<ref> ...hip|4244}}|end=December 1941{{UBAllyWarship|4244}}|succBy=Vessel Lost|note=ship lost under his command}}
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  • ...R. S. de Chair|appt=1 August, 1914{{SMNLFeb16|p. 7}}|end=6 March, 1916<ref>De Chair Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/42.}} f. 259.</ref>|as=Rear-Admiral C {{UK-Hawke}} has been removed, sunk by {{DE-U9}} on 15 October.{{Conways1860|p. 66}} The {{UK-Teutonic|f=t}} has been
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  • ...y of obtaining accurate fire control & consequently accurate shooting in a ship with a mixed armament of 12" and 9.2" or 12" and 10" guns. This difficulty ...27885|1037|13 February, 1906}} On 8 March he was appointed a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to King Edward, vice [[John Locke Marx|Marx]].{{Gaz|27897|2061|23 Ma
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  • |nat=DE ...ough, Hartlepool and Whitby. She attacked [[Hartlepool]] along with the {{DE-Moltke|f=tp}}, and was hit six times by the three 6-in guns in the town's s
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  • ...n the passenger accommodation compartment with coolness as his part of the ship was being badly hit. He later played a leading part in getting the starboa
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  • ...ing struck in the ''Good Hope'' at Portsmouth, Milne's was hoisted in that ship.<ref>"The Mediterranean Command" (News in Brief). ''The Times''. Saturday {{Tenure|rank=Admiral|name=Charles William de la Poer Beresford, First Baron Beresford|nick=The Rt. Hon. Lord Charles Ber
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  • In October 1914, the ship was to be given 24 Pattern 1582 Electric Radiators to warm cabins whose sto In 1910, ''Drake'' was the best gunnery ship of the 11 tested of the [[Atlantic Fleet]] and {{UK-CS|5}}, scoring 67.27 &
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  • ...ommanded the {{UK-1Mersey|f=t}} in the [[Annual Manoeuvres of 1890]]. His ship acted as part of Fleet Number 1 which was itself playing the role of the Ro He was appointed as Captain of the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] on 17 April, 1894.<ref>Moore Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 19
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  • ...883, he was appointed to the Senior Staff of {{UK-Cambridge|f=p}}, gunnery ship at Devonport.{{NLDec84|p. 254}} ...tation described Finnis as "[a]n excellent officer, who has maintained his ship in the highest state of discipline." Stephenson also recommended Finnis fo
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  • ...commanded the {{UK-Forth|f=t}} in the [[Annual Manoeuvres of 1890]]. His ship acted as part of Fleet Number 2 which represented a hypothetical Hostile Fl ...n 11 May, 1898, he was appointed in command of the {{UK-Nile}}, port guard ship. On 30 August he was appointed {{Com2RN}} in command of a squadron compose
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  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{Template:DE-Mecklenburg}}
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  • ...Jamaica", following praise by Captain [[Algernon Frederick Rous de Horsey|de Horsey]]. However, something must have gone seriously wrong, as another no ...fice praised Oxley's conduct on the occasion of the [illeg] of an Emigrant Ship. In July, Oxley received high praise for his military conduct in Jamaica b
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  • ...s (1866)|''Euphrates'']] by negligence or default and he was dismissed the ship &ndash; a sentence the Board Minutes deemed light. ...icers appear to be ignorant of internal arrangements and fittings of their ship."
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  • ...ded the {{UK-1BlackPrince|f=t}} in the [[Annual Manoeuvres of 1890]]. His ship was part of Fleet Number 1 playing the role of the Royal Navy fending off a [[Category:Naval Aides-de-Camp to Queen Victoria]]
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  • [[Admiral (Royal Navy)|Admiral]] {{SIR}} '''Algernon Frederick Rous de Horsey''', K.C.B., Royal Navy (25 July, 1827 &ndash; 22 October, 1922) was De Horsey was promoted to the rank of {{LieutRN}} on 26 July, 1846.
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  • ..., 1891, to assume command when she recommissioned. He assisted the German ship S.S. ''Rheinfels'' when she was stranded near the Ras Gharib lighthouse in ...irting the shore so close, due care was exercised in the navigation of the ship & further that ... the C.O. should not have risked going into Harwich on a
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  • ...d the {{UK-Northumberland|f=t}} in the [[Annual Manoeuvres of 1890]]. His ship was part of Fleet Number 1 playing the role of the Royal Navy fending off a [[Category:Naval Aides-de-Camp to Queen Victoria]]
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  • ...r handing over ''Edgar'', Graham was informed by Admiralty Letter that the ship's engine room was "unfavourable" when inspected by A. Fremantle on 20 March Graham was appointed a Naval Aide de Camp to King Edward VII on 7 December, 1901.<ref>Graham Service Record. {{
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  • ...of {{ViceRN}} on 29 April, 1885, vice [[Algernon Frederick Rous de Horsey|de Horsey]].{{Gaz|25466|1984|1 May, 1885}} ...A. C. Foley]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|Captain of Training Ship H.M.S. ''Britannia'']]'''<br>31 Aug, 1874<ref>Graham Service Record. {{TNA
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  • ...E. Patey]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Impregnable (Training Ship)|Captain of Training Ship H.M.S. ''Impregnable'']]'''<br>4 Feb, 1909<ref>Savory Service Record. {{T ....</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[John Michael de Robeck, First Baronet|John M. de Robeck]]'''}}
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  • Jenkings was appointed Commander of the turret ship [[H.M.S. Inflexible (1876)|''Inflexible'']] on 4 March, 1881, under Captain {{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Charles William de la Poer Beresford, First Baron Beresford|The Rt. Hon. Lord Charles Beresfor
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  • ...ood officer[,] sound physique[,] good judgement[,] wants practice handling ship and Fleet."<ref>Kingsmill Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/87.}} f. 58.</ref ...n March, 1907: "A capable officer[,] through the misfortune of putting his ship on shore I have not seen anything of him since July 06."<ref>Kingsmill Serv
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  • ...by shellfire in a running battle before being torpedoed by the submarine {{DE-UC25}} &ndash; a rare case of a submarine participating effectively in what ...Isonzo (1898)|''Isis'']] has been renamed ''Isonzo'', and submarine depot ship {{UK-1Adamant}} has joined.{{SMNLMar16|p. 21 and Supplements through May}}
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  • ...rmoured cruisers was reduced to one.<ref>Mackay. pp. 386-389.</ref> This ship's design, essentially an enlarged {{UK-Invincible}} (or Design E.), was app ...possible enemies. The value of powerful armament and good protection in a ship of great speed is enormous, but if an opposing vessel has considerably grea
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  • ...to serve under; he was reputed to have disrated every Petty Officer in his ship during the few weeks of the annual manœuvres. He is now forgotten.<ref>Ja He was reappointed a Naval Aide-de-Camp, to King Edward VII, on 25 February, 1901.{{Gaz|27289|1417|26 February
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  • |'''Ship'''||'''Type'''||'''Launched'''||'''Fate''' ...re|rank={{CommRNR}} (retired)|name=Orry Andrew de Lissa Cowin|nick=Orry A. de L. Cowin|appt=21 November, 1918<ref>Cowin Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 240/52
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  • some five or six consecutive rounds nearly a ship's length astern of the target. When we became "leading ship" and after we had separated from ''Invincible'', all
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  • ...s appointed to ''Royal Adelaide'' on 2 September for command of the turret ship ''Agamemnon'', which he commissioned on 16 September for service on the [[C On 28 May, 1886, he was appointed to command {{UK-Vernon}}, torpedo training ship at Portsmouth. On 15 June he was appointed Chairman of the Torpedo Dischar
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  • ...was appointed Commander of the frigate ''Inconstant'', soon to become flag ship of the Detached Squadron for Particular Service under Rear-Admiral [[Richar He was reappointed a Naval Aide-de-Camp, to King Edward VII, on 25 February, 1901.{{Gaz|27289|1417|26 February
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  • ...'', col D, p. 11.</ref> He received a favourable inspection report in the ship, but was faulted for having disregarded regulations in permitting a collisi ...[[H.M.S. Actæon (Torpedo Training School)|''Actæon'']], torpedo training ship at Sheerness, on 13 August, 1907,{{NLOct08|p. 272}} and assumed command fro
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  • ...recommissioned at Chatham on 20 January, 1913 for temporary service as the ship of Captain (D) of the {{UK-DF|9}} while the {{UK-1Diamond|f=tp}} was in doc ...le assigned to the [[Cruiser Squadron (Royal Navy)|Cruiser Squadron]], the ship was noted as having or being slated to receive a [[Wireless Telegraphy Appa
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  • ...it. It was possible, therefore, that the Germans might take it by a ''coup de main''. But they could not hope to capture Huy or Namur or Antwerp in the s | &emsp;SIR JOHN FRENCH pointed out that horses could not be kept on board ship without very rapid loss of condition, and without horses neither guns nor t
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  • ...a family of [[Torpedo Control]] instruments designed by Lt. Cdr. [[Edward de Faye Renouf]] of {{UK-Conqueror}} first described in the ''Annual Report of ...get ship, adjustable by a knob. The instrument always depicted the target ship steaming left to right across the bottom as indicated by an arrow.
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  • ...rue that Lord Brassey, in his valuable paper, "On the Future Policy of War-ship Building," read here in 1891, has already treated the subject from a states In order to avoid exaggerating the importance of any class of war-ship and to truly exhibit the functions it is called upon to perform, it must be
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  • ...UK-Laurel}}, {{UK-Liberty}}, and {{UK-Lysander}} torpedoed light cruiser {{DE-Mainz}}. Only ''Lysander'' avoided receiving significant damage.{{March|p. |align=center colspan=4|'''Depot Ship'''
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  • * {{UK-Venus}} (depot ship) |align=center colspan=5|'''Depot Ship'''
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  • |align=center colspan=5|'''Depot Ship''' |align=center colspan=6|'''Depot Ship'''
    30 KB (3,989 words) - 11:49, 30 April 2023
  • ...on 15 December 1914 under leader {{UK-1Aurora}} with ''Dido'' as the depot ship and eight [[Beagle Class Destroyer (1909)|''Beagles'']] and all the [["M" C |align=center colspan=6|'''Depot Ship'''<br>shared with {{UK-DF|3}}
    53 KB (6,692 words) - 11:50, 30 April 2023
  • ...l initial size (a flotilla leader, seven "M" class destroyers, and a depot ship shared with the {{UK-DF|2}}) augurs future growth. The ships all appear to |align=center colspan=6|'''Depot Ship'''<br>shared with {{UK-DF|2}}
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  • ...Cambridge Salter|nick=Jocelyn S. C. Salter|appt=|end=17 February, 1940<ref>De Salis Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/118/74.|}} f. 74.</ref>}} ...e Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/118/74.|}} f. 74.</ref>|end=18 February, 1940<ref>De Salis Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/118/74.|}} f. 74.</ref>}}
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  • ...Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/118/105.|}} f. 105.</ref>|end=18 January, 1941<ref>De Winton Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/118/105.|}} f. 105.</ref>}} ...would started with nine newly constructed "M" class destroyers and a depot ship shared another flotilla.{{SMNLApr16|p. 12}}
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  • In mid-July, 1914, the ship was stationed in the Humber as part of a force of four [[Majestic Class Bat ...our times sequentially, starting with the tube loaded and the bar out, the ship's crew was able to do this in 3 minute, 3 seconds. The best time was achie
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  • ...=fredbot:career>{{ShipCareer|fullname=H.M.S. ''Aboukir'' (1900)|fate2=by {{DE-U9}}{{Conways1860|p. 68}} In mid-July, 1914, the ship was stationed in the Humber as part of a force of four [[Majestic Class Bat
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  • ...e=fredbot:career>{{ShipCareer|fullname=H.M.S. ''Cressy'' (1899)|fate2=by {{DE-U9}} ...our times sequentially, starting with the tube loaded and the bar out, the ship's crew was able to do this in the astonishing time of 50.75 seconds, though
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  • ...me=fredbot:career>{{ShipCareer|fullname=H.M.S. ''Hogue'' (1900)|fate2=by {{DE-U9}} The ship suffered an explosion in [[Devonport Dockyard]] on 26 October, 1909 that ki
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  • ...ent to {{UK-Triumph}}, for temporary service in the {{UK-BS|8}} while the ship took on a crew from Chatham Depot for service with the Third Fleet's {{UK-C {{Tenure|rank=Captain|name=Cunningham Robert de Clare Foot|nick=Cunningham R. de C. Foot|appt=15 July, 1913<ref>Foot Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/42.}} f.
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  • ...when she veered off to ram and sink [[Otto Eduard Weddigen]]'s submerged {{DE-U29}}.{{DawsonFlotillas|pp. 133-5}} ...derson Service Record. {{TNA|196/42.}} f. 455.</ref><ref>Predecessor left ship on 3rd. Harbord-Hamond Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/42.}} Unnumbered fol
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  • Pipon was born at Malta. As a acting {{SubRN}}, he served in the second-rate ship-of-the-line [[H.M.S. Zealous (1864)|''Zealous'']]. Upon making {{SubRN}} o ...or of being relieved at the end of his commission. He took command of the ship on 8 February. In 1895, the Foreign Office and the Admiralty expressed the
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  • '''H.M.S. ''Edgar''''' was completed in 1893, name ship for [[Edgar Class Cruiser (1890)|her class]] of nine first-class protected ...[[Walter Hodgson Bevan Graham]] was informed by Admiralty Letter that the ship's engine room was "unfavourable" when inspected by A. Fremantle on 20 March
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  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{Template:DE-Coln}}
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  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> {ship
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  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> ...ceiver tunable to 8,300 feet. One P.O. telegraphist would be allowed each ship. She had her mast fitted with a 12 foot yard 60 feet above the water and r
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  • ...o 2,000 yards range. Multiple observers felt it may have hit the foremost ship, whose searchlights went out.<ref>Beatty Papers at the National Maritime Mu In October 1914, the ship was to be given 5 Pattern 1582 Electric Radiators to warm cabins whose stov
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  • ...ure|rank=Commander|name=Carlton Valentine de Mornay Cowper|nick=Carlton V. de M. Cowper|appt=18 June, 1909<ref>Cowper Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/42/2 * [http://www.naval-history.net/OWShips-WW1-05-HMS_Argonaut.htm Transcribed Ship Logs at naval-history.net]
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  • ...[[Schichau-Werke]] and [[Germaniawerft]] in Germany, [[Forges et Chantiers de la Méditerranée|FCM]] and [[Chantiers et Ateliers Augustin-Normand|Norman Destroyers, like other ship types, generally grew in size and capability as time went on.
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  • ...entry for S.M.S. ''Gneisenau''.]</ref>|end=30 September, 1908<ref>[http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMS_Gneisenau_%281906%29 German Wikipedia entry for S.M. ...entry for S.M.S. ''Gneisenau''.]</ref>|end=14 September, 1910<ref>[http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMS_Gneisenau_%281906%29 German Wikipedia entry for S.M.
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  • ..., but the first 3 years of such period must be Sea Service in command of a ship of war at sea; such Officers as arrive at their turn for promotion without ...t in Harbour Service, but one year of such period must be Sea Service in a ship of war at sea.
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  • Light cruiser '''H.M.S. ''Amphion''''', completed in 1913, was the first ship of the [[Royal Navy]] lost in the war. In 1913, ''Amphion'' was the best ship in the fleet in the heavy gun laying test (here meaning 4-in or heavier), s
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  • ...edbot:career>{{ShipCareer|fullname=H.M.S. ''Pathfinder'' (1904)|fate2=by {{DE-U21}} in [[North Sea]]{{DittColl|p. 44}} ...onduct of Officers and Crews of Ships recently destroyed", mentioning this ship as one of six whose men displayed "exemplary steadiness and coolness... in
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  • |nat=DE {{CatClassTorpedoBoat|DE}}
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  • ...e=fredbot:career>{{ShipCareer|fullname=H.M.S. ''Hermes'' (1898)|fate2=by {{DE-U27}} off Ruylingen Bank{{DittColl|p. 42}} In 1910, ''Hermes'' was the best gunnery ship of the three tested at the [[Cape of Good Hope Station]], scoring 75.66 &nd
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  • ...ith Ordnance department over contracts for electrical work and Royal Naval ship prices. ...his time at Armstrong Whitworth (Elswick) 1902-12: concerning Royal Naval Ship Design including plans, weights and trial results, of ships unsuccessfully
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  • ...ogue (1900)|''Hogue'']], were torpedoed and sunk by the German submarine {{DE-U9}} in the North Sea. The ships, part of the {{UK-CS|7}} (also known as C ...patched {{DE-U8|f=p}} and {{DE-U24|f=p}} on a reconnaissance mission and {{DE-U9|f=p}}, commanded by Kapitänleutnant [[Otto Eduard Weddigen|Otto Weddige
    24 KB (3,901 words) - 20:13, 12 March 2021
  • ...s Cruiser (1892)|Astræa class cruisers]], but served as a submarine depot ship in the Great War. ''Bonaventure'' was refitted as a depôt ship for submarines by April, 1907, commissioning at Haulbowline on the 2nd of t
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  • ...|Cruiser Force G]], flying his flag in ''Charybdis'', while command of the ship itself was given to a more senior officer, Captain [[Rudolf Miles Burmester {{Tenure|rank={{CommRN}}|name=Lawrence de Wahl Satow|nick=Lawrence de W. Satow|appt=25 March, 1905<ref>Satow Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/42.|D
    7 KB (948 words) - 04:06, 11 January 2024
  • ...round August/September, 1917 in order to transition to service as a parent ship for the {{UK-DF|4}}, which then boasted a strength of 38 destroyers. She k {{Tenure|rank={{CommRN}}|name=Arthur de Kewer Livius May|nick=Arthur de K. L. May|appt=4 August, 1909<ref>May Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/44/120
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  • The ship was paid off at Portsmouth by Captain [[Horatio Nelson Dudding]] on 8 June, ...Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/20.}} f. 657.</ref>|end=10 March, 1902<ref>de Horsey Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/20.}} f. 657.</ref>}}
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  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> {ship
    6 KB (677 words) - 16:28, 6 April 2018
  • ...=Acting {{CaptRN}}|name=Cunningham Robert de Clare Foot|nick=Cunningham R. de C. Foot|appt=23 September, 1903<ref>Foot Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/42. ...re|rank={{CommRN}}|name=Carlton Valentine de Mornay Cowper|nick=Carlton V. de M. Cowper|appt=6 November, 1905{{NLMar07|p. 362}}|end=22 August, 1907<ref>C
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  • ...hael de Robeck, First Baronet|nick=John M. de Robeck|appt=1 June, 1900<ref>de Robeck Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/42.}} f. 64/128.</ref>{{NLJan01|p. 2 * [http://www.naval-history.net/OWShips-WW1-05-HMS_Pyramus.htm Transcribed Ship Logs at naval-history.net]
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  • ...=fredbot:career>{{ShipCareer|fullname=H.M.S. ''Ariadne'' (1898)|fate2=by {{DE-UC65}}{{Conways1860|p. 68}} In March 1913, ''Ariadne'' was converted to a training ship for stokers.
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  • ...me=fredbot:career>{{ShipCareer|fullname=H.M.S. ''Hawke'' (1891)|fate2=by {{DE-U9}} in North Sea{{DittColl|p. 38}} ...on the part of Lieutenant (N) [[Edward Reeves]], who had been lent to the ship just the day before.<ref>Reeves Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/43.}} f. 57.
    9 KB (1,203 words) - 13:58, 13 June 2022
  • ...ss Cruiser (1890)|''Edgar'' class cruisers]], but was converted to a depot ship before the Great War. ''St. George'' completed conversion to depot ship in March, 1910,{{DittColl|p. 293}} commissioning at Chatham on the 15th{{NL
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  • |'''Ship'''||'''Type'''||'''Launched'''||'''Fate''' |{{UK-1Warrior|f=p}}||armoured frigate||29 Dec, 1860||Museum Ship 1979
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  • ...d back to a cruiser. Finally, in 1939-40, she was converted into a repair ship. In light of this meandering identity, we treat her as a distinct class. ...ry, 1925.{{NLApr25|p. 283}} In that year, she became the first Royal navy ship with a catapult for launching aircraft, though by mid 1932, this would no l
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  • |2.52|| Course N 10 W. Opened fire with after 6" guns (4 rounds) at {{DE-Pillau}}. Green 70. Range 14000. Fell short. |valign=top|6.58|| Altered course South. Saw bow and stern of large ship submerged S 80 W on far side of Battle Fleet.
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  • passed the wreckage of a sunken ship. 3-funnelled Light Cruiser, I think " {{DE-Elbing}}," from 9,700 to
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  • ...Signals were successfully conveyed over sixty miles, as long as only one ship was sending at a time.<ref>"The Navy." ''The Times'' (London, England), Sa ...162 feet above the test ship's netting from Portsmouth, and that a second ship 30 miles away also be able to converse with its aerials at 100 feet height.
    25 KB (3,831 words) - 10:28, 10 December 2020
  • ...ommunication|started using wireless telegraphy]] in a network of land- and ship-based installations starting around 1900. Their hardware evolved rapidly a !align=center|Receiving Ship Types||align=center|"D" tune||align=center|"P" tune||align=center|"Q" tune|
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  • ...was also blamed for damaging jetties and tugs at Leith when he backed his ship out of a dock in March, 1915.<ref>Roper Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/44/1 ...some having jumped there in the belief that ''Broke'' was the more viable ship and others having fallen there in the collision.
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  • ...d to ram the onrushing enemy but missed, but she succeeded in torpedoing {{DE-G85}}. She then assisted ''Broke'', which had been torpedoed after ramming .... {{TNA|ADM 196/48/164.|D7604068}} f. 568.</ref>|note=temporary, to bring ship to Dover}}
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  • * Classic Ship Models: Number 1 The USS Wilkes-Barre, by Lawrence Sowinski * Technical Topics: Ship's Armament, by N J M Campbell
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  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{DE-Scharnhorst}}
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  • ...nport on 14 November, 1912 under Captain [[Osmond de Beauvoir Brock|Osmond de B. Brock]].<ref>Notes on the event contained in Albert Francis Barclay Brid ...Aug, 1923<ref>[http://www.naval-history.net/OWShips-WW1-06-HMS_Chatham.htm Ship's Logbook].</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Alexander Robert Maule Ramsay|The Ho
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  • ...r his handling of [[H.M.S. Farnborough (1904)|''Farnborough'']], sinking {{DE-U83}} in February 1917. He was appointed in command of the Q-ship [[H.M.S. Pargust (1907)|''Vittoria'']] (which was soon renamed ''Pargust'')
    7 KB (961 words) - 18:22, 6 April 2022
  • ...the {{UK-Venerable|f=t}}, requiring his convalescence aboard the hospital ship ''Maine''. At least one of these was a compound fracture, and he had to re ...d for his "coolness and verve" and for helping sink the German destroyer {{DE-V187}}.<ref>[http://www.worldwar1.co.uk/despatches/tyrwhitt.html Tyrwhitt's
    10 KB (1,467 words) - 11:44, 7 April 2022
  • He was appointed command of the {{DE-Konig|f=t}} on 24 May 1917.<ref>[http://www.gwpda.org/naval/hsfcpco.htm Dav On 5 November 1918, there was a revolution on the ship, and Weniger and several other officers were shot.<ref>Stuart Haller, email
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  • ...21}} ten miles south-east of May Island. A magazine was detonated and the ship sank in four minutes with a large part of her crew. Leake was wounded but ...d then a blue jacket. Then another oar and another blue jacket. Looked for ship found her still on her nose (probably on the bottom) she then fell over and
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  • ...July, 1891. Issue '''33366''', col C, p. 8.</ref> He joined the training ship {{UK-1Britannia}} on 15 July as a {{NavCadRN}}. ...] as Captain of the Fleet to Admiral [[Osmond de Beauvoir Brock|Sir Osmond de B. Brock]], Commander-in-Chief in the Mediterranean.<ref>"Naval and Militar
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  • {{CommRN}} (retired) '''Claude Philip Champion de Crespigny''' (3 August, 1880 &ndash; 28 May, 1939) was an officer in the [[ The son of Sir Claude Champion de Crespigny, Baronet was born in Malden, Essex and gained eight months' time
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  • ...placed in command of {{UK-1Penelope}} on 1 December to commission the new ship.{{NLOct15|p. 396''n''}} ...ApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Cunningham Robert de Clare Foot|Cunningham R. de C. Foot]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Sutlej (1899)|Captain of H.M.S. ''Sutlej'']]'''<br
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  • ...ge Astley Callaghan|Callaghan]], who had just transferred his flag to that ship.<ref>Townsend Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/44/79.}} f. 98.</ref> ...ApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Cunningham Robert de Clare Foot|Cunningham R. de C. Foot]]'''|'''[[Chatham Gunnery School|Captain of Chatham Gunnery School]
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  • {{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[John Gilbert de Odingsells Coke|John G. de O. Coke]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Waveney (1903)|Captain of H.M.S. ''Waveney'']]'''< ...Oliphant]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Impregnable (Training Ship)|Captain of Training Ship H.M.S. ''Impregnable'']]'''<br>21 Mar, 1914<ref>St. John Service Record. {
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  • ...inted in command of {{UK-1Newcastle|f=p}} on 3 September 1916, joining the ship on 22 September, and would receive a C.B.E. (mil) for his valuable services ...ApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Cunningham Robert de Clare Foot|Cunningham R. de C. Foot]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Berwick (1902)|Captain of H.M.S. ''Berwick'']]'''<
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  • {{ViceRN}} '''Wion de Malpas Egerton,''' D.S.O. (Retired) (16 April, 1879 &ndash; 28 December, 19 As a convoy commodore, Egerton's ship ''Empire Shackleton'' was torpedoed and lost. THough Egerton was rescued b
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  • In 1904, he provided a helpful report of the German {{DE-Bremen|f=t}}. ...d of the {{UK-Arrogant|f=t}} on 10 September, 1907.{{NLOct08|p. 279}} His ship skillfully rescued the crew of S.S. ''Leon XIII'' in heavy weather in 1907.
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  • On 21 January, 1905 he was invalided from the training ship {{UK-Gibraltar}} with insomnia.<ref>Glossop Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/ ...Australian {{AU-1Sydney|f=t}} and successfully brought the German raider {{DE-Emden}} to action and destroyed her off the Cocos Islands on 9 November, 19
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  • ...tfitted for raiding in China. After a fairly eventful raiding career, this ship was interned in Newport News, Virginia on 11 March 1915 for overstaying her ...ssion of posts as Torpedo Officer aboard the {{DE-Lutzow|f=t}} and later {{DE-Seydlitz}}. After ''Seydlitz'' was interned, the Kapitän zur See [[William
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  • ...ded by Rear Admiral Madden for having the lowest punishment returns in his ship to be found anywhere in the fleet. His service in her ended on 20 April, 1 [[Category:Naval Aides-de-Camp to King George V]]
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  • ...nt was appointed in command of the ancient {{UK-1Leander|f=t}}, then depot ship for the {{UK-DF|7}} at Devonport.{{NLJan15|p. 346}} ...ur L. Cay]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Impregnable (Training Ship)|Captain of Training Ship H.M.S. ''Impregnable'']]'''<br>14 May, 1912 &ndash; 21 Mar, 1914|Succeeded
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  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{Template:DE-Bremen}}
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  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{Template:DE-Gazelle}}
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  • ...|nick=George M. Skinner|appt=10 July, 1920|end=1 August, 1920|note=to take ship to Portsmouth}} {{CatShipLightCruiser|DE}}
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  • ...ttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMS_Königsberg_(1905) Wikipedia page] on the ship.</ref>|end=11 July, 1915|succBy=Vessel Sunk}} {{CatShipLightCruiser|DE}}
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  • ....org/wiki/SMS_Frauenlob Wikipedia].</ref>|end=September, 1904<ref>[https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMS_Frauenlob_(1902) German Wikipedia.]</ref>|precBy=New ...Frauenlob_(1902) German Wikipedia.]</ref>|end=September, 1905<ref>[https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMS_Frauenlob_(1902) German Wikipedia.]</ref>}}
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  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{Template:DE-VictoriaLouise}}
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  • The ship was reduced to Reserve on 31 March, 1931.{{NLJul31|p. 268}} She was commis ...CommRN}}|name=Raymond George Francis Herault de Caen|nick=Raymond G. F. H. de Caen|appt=27 December, 1921|end=12 April, 1922|note=drowned in bathtub}}
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  • The ship re-commissioned at [[Hong Kong]] on 1 October, 1929 for continued service w ...etermined was a lack of through and consideration on the part of the other ship's commanding officer.<ref>Handley Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/154/331.|}
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  • ...th|Donal S. McGrath]]. ''Speedy{{'}}s'' survivors would also join the new ship.{{NMI|2 Nov. 1922, p. 20}} {{Tenure|rank={{CommRN}}|name=Hubert Henry de Burgh|nick=Hubert H. de Burgh|appt=21 January, 1919|end=March, 1920}}
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  • The ship was reduced to Reserve at Portsmouth on 21 December, 1925.{{NLJul27|p. 275' ...{{TNA|ADM 196/51/284.|D7605039}} f. 299.</ref>|end=30 December, 1925<ref>de Meric Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/51/284.|D7605039}} f. 299.</ref>}}
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  • {{Tenure|rank={{LCommRN}}|name=John de Clare Richards|nick=John de C. Richards|appt=1 December, 1932{{NavAppts|26 Nov. 1932, p. 15}}<ref>Richa ...d=27 April, 1941{{UBAllyWarship|5437}}|succBy=Vessel Lost|note=killed when ship lost under his command}}
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  • The ship was re-commissioned at Portsmouth on 3 May, 1926.{{NLJul27|p. 288}} .../284.|D7605039}} f. 299.</ref>{{NLJan21|p. 899}}|end=29 November, 1921<ref>de Meric Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/51/284.|D7605039}} f. 299.</ref>}}
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  • The ship was re-commissioned at [[Hong Kong]] on 1 October, 1929 for service with th ...d. {{TNA|ADM 196/51/284.|D7605039}} f. 299.</ref>|end=9 January, 1925<ref>de Meric Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/51/284.|D7605039}} f. 299.</ref>}}
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  • ...gh was was determined to be an error in judgement on the part of the other ship's Lt. in Command, [[Hugh Bourchier Wrey]].<ref>Wrey Service Record. {{TNA| .... {{TNA|ADM 196/51/284.|D7605039}} f. 299.</ref>|end=3 November, 1917<ref>de Meric Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/51/284.|D7605039}} f. 299.</ref>|precB
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  • ...me=fredbot:career>{{ShipCareer|fullname=H.M.S. ''Scott'' (1917)|fate2=by {{DE-U71}}<ref>[http://www.uboat.net/wwi/ships_hit/5484.html Uboat.net]</ref> ...to be by mining, by {{DE-UC17}}, but Uboat.net has chosen a torpedo from {{DE-U71}} as the cause of her loss. They are generally the most authoritative
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  • {{Tenure|rank={{LCommRN}}|name=Bernulf Henry de Clegg Mellor|nick=Bernulf H. de C. Mellor|appt=27 March, 1940{{UBAllyWarship|4247}}|end=25 May, 1940{{UBAll ...19 October, 1940{{UBAllyWarship|4247}}|succBy=Vessel Lost|note=killed when ship lost to mine under his command}}
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  • The ship was re-commissioned as '''H.M.S. ''Vimy''''' on 4 September, 1928.{{NLFeb29 {{Tenure|rank={{LCommRN}}|name=Henry Graham Dudley de Chair|nick=Henry G. D. de Chair|appt=20 May, 1941{{UBAllyWarship|5454}}|end=1 December, 1942{{UBAllyW
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  • The ship was transferred to the [[Royal Australian Navy]] on 11 October 1933, becomi {{Tenure|rank={{CommRN}}|name=Henry de Beauvoir Tupper|nick=Henry de B. Tupper|appt=7 January, 1922|end=16 November, 1922}}
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  • ...edbot:career>{{ShipCareer|fullname=H.M.S. ''Ulleswater'' (1917)|fate2=by {{DE-UC17}} off Holland ...TNA|ADM 196/50/272.|D7576687}} ff. 225, 306.</ref>|succBy=Vessel Lost|note=ship lost under his command}}
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  • ...196/118/105.|}} f. 105.</ref>{{NLJul31|p. 288}}|end=30 December, 1931<ref>De Winton Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/118/105.|}} f. 105.</ref>}} ...ange|28 May 1934, p. 21}}|note=relieved by {{UK-Wessex}}, crew went to new ship en masse}}
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  • ''Patriot'' sank the German {{DE-U69|f=t}} on 12 July, 1917. ...n23|p. 905}}|end=2 September, 1922|as=Captain of H.M.C.S. ''Patriot''|note=ship is now H.M.C.S. ''Patriot''}}
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  • ...nquiry determined that a mine may have drifted free from a field laid by {{DE-Moewe}} and set off a magazine in ''Pheasant''. Her wreck, the last of the ...3}} f. 64.</ref>{{KindellROH2|p. 328}}|succBy=Vessel Lost|note=killed when ship lost under his command|precBy=New Command}}
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  • On 15 March, 1918 ''Moresby'' and {{UK-Michael}} helped sink the {{DE-U110|f=t}}. ...C. specifically for his part in destroying the {{DE-U110|f=t}}, which this ship did with {{UK-Michael}}. Navy Lists seem to bolster the view that he did s
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  • ...=fredbot:career>{{ShipCareer|fullname=H.M.S. ''Contest'' (1913)|fate2=by {{DE-U106}}<ref>[http://www.uboat.net/wwi/boats/index.html?boat=106 Uboat.net]</ ...{KindellROH2|p. 403}} The u-boat that fired the torpedo was most likely {{DE-U106}}.<ref>[http://www.uboat.net/wwi/boats/index.html?boat=106 Uboat.net]<
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  • ...n 8 December, 1914 after {{UK-1Kent}} successfully overtook and sank the {{DE-Nurnberg}}. ...ApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[John Michael de Robeck, First Baronet|John M. de Robeck]]'''|'''[[H.M. T.B. 86 (1889)|Captain of H.M. T.B. 86]]'''<br>24 Jul
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  • ...In the night action, she avoided a direct ramming attempt by the German {{DE-Nassau|f=t}}, but collided heavily with the dreadnought, which she wrongly ...al ship ''Rhodesia'' after she'd been torpedoed 160 miles off Fastnet by {{DE-U82}}. Despite the claimed sinking, no known U-boat loss seems to coincide
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  • ...art of war, plans to remove shipping strips under cocoanut matting on this ship and {{UK-Ariel}} were deferred.{{AWO1914|182 of 24 July, 1914}} On 10 March, 1915, while operating out of Rosyth, she attacked and sank {{DE-U12}} off of Fife Ness along with {{UK-Ariel}} and {{UK-Attack}} by repeate
    6 KB (780 words) - 17:17, 31 October 2022
  • ...he manner in which he had handled his destroyer. A July inspection of the ship indicated a "want of attention to detail throughout." He then damaged a pr On 10 March, 1915, while operating out of Rosyth, she attacked and sank {{DE-U12}} off of Fife Ness along with {{UK-Ariel}} and {{UK-1Acheron}} by repea
    5 KB (664 words) - 18:52, 3 May 2020
  • ...p {{UK-Lizard}} were opposed the German-Turkish ships {{DE-Breslau}} and {{DE-Goeben}} in the [[Battle of Imbros]], in which the British lost the monitor
    4 KB (599 words) - 08:36, 4 May 2020
  • In June 1914, planned alterations in [[Portsmouth Royal Dockyard]], when the ship was presumably serving with the {{UK-DF|1}} were to be deferred:{{AWO1914|3 ...boats with the 2nd Division of the First Flotilla and located and rammed {{DE-U19}}. She only damaged the U-boat, but her stem collapsed back to the fir
    5 KB (631 words) - 10:47, 7 April 2018
  • ...art of war, plans to remove shipping strips under cocoanut matting on this ship and {{UK-1Acheron}} were deferred.{{AWO1914|182 of 24 July, 1914}} ...h]],{{UKNavalOpsII|p. 280}} she rammed and delivered the killing blow to {{DE-U12}} off of Fife Ness, along with {{UK-Attack}} and {{UK-1Acheron}}. ''Ar
    5 KB (751 words) - 17:12, 3 May 2020
  • While part of the {{UK-DF|6}}, the ship was one of four of her class undergoing refit in [[Chatham Royal Dockyard]] ...Garth Russell Evans, First Baron Mountevans|Evans]], ''Viking'' sighted {{DE-U8}} on the surface in foggy condition in the Dover Strait, opening fire at
    5 KB (626 words) - 11:24, 3 January 2022
  • Later, while part of the {{UK-DF|6}}, the ship was one of four of her class undergoing refit in [[Chatham Royal Dockyard]] ...nder Barrow and {{UK-Ghurka}} joined ten other destroyers in prosecuting {{DE-U8}} which {{UK-Viking}} had been attacking, successfully blowing the subma
    3 KB (370 words) - 10:48, 7 April 2018
  • |fate2=by {{DE-UC38}}<ref>[http://uboat.net/wwi/boats/index.html?boat=UC+38 Uboat.net]</re ...unch'' was sunk off Gaza along with the {{UK-M15|f=t}} to torpedoes from {{DE-UC38}}.
    3 KB (363 words) - 07:26, 27 May 2018
  • In July, 1914, work to somehow alter the ship's chart table was deferred.{{AWO1914|80 of 3 July 1914}} ...n'' would operate with the [[Dover Patrol]] and be credited with sinking {{DE-UC50}} on 4 February, 1918.
    4 KB (487 words) - 09:10, 16 March 2019
  • |nat=DE ...d Cruiser|armoured cruiser]] '''S.M.S. ''Fürst Bismarck''''' was the only ship of her class, completed in 1900 for the [[Imperial German Navy]].
    3 KB (347 words) - 22:11, 10 July 2017
  • |nat=DE ...ed Cruiser|armoured cruiser]] '''S.M.S. ''Prinz Heinrich''''' was the only ship of her class, completed in 1902.
    1 KB (172 words) - 09:19, 7 April 2018
  • ...t Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/48/41.|}} f. 44.</ref>|note=dismissed the ship following Court Martial for being absent without leave}} ...e|rank={{LieutRN}} & Commander|name=De Courcy Wyndor Plunkett Ireland|nick=De Courcy W. P. Ireland|appt=1 February, 1910{{NLApr10|p. 324}}<ref>Ireland Se
    9 KB (1,303 words) - 13:17, 1 April 2022
  • ...e of {{UK-2Ariel}} in the [[Medway Instructional Flotilla]], as the latter ship had had defects in its machinery..{{NMI|Wednesday, May 10, 1899; pg. 13; Is {{Tenure|rank={{LaCRN}}|name=Guy de Lancy Ormsby Johnson|nick=Guy de L. O. Johnson|appt=1 January, 1900{{NLFeb00|p. 264}}|end=11 January, 1900}}
    7 KB (955 words) - 13:48, 14 February 2022
  • ...6/49/27.|D7604126}} f. 14.</ref>{{NLApr10|p. 340}}|end=15 August, 1910<ref>de la Poer Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/49/27.|D7604126}} f. 14.</ref>}} ...Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/50/19.|D7576678}} ff. 179, 235.</ref>|note=ship lost under his command|succBy=Vessel Lost}}
    7 KB (919 words) - 11:43, 1 January 2020
  • ...e=fredbot:career>{{ShipCareer|fullname=H.M.S. ''Itchen'' (1903)|fate2=by {{DE-UC44}} in North Sea<ref>Apparently not U 99 as paper sources suggest.</ref> ...superseded in command by [[Frederic Graham Schurr]], who would command the ship until late October 1915.
    6 KB (828 words) - 19:54, 3 May 2020
  • ...a young marine from drowning, who had fallen overboard from her Majesty's ship {{UK-1Speedy}} during her trials at Sheerness.{{NMI|Monday, Nov 27, 1893; p ...]] noticed smoke and flames being emitted from the funnel. He ordered the ship anchored and found the stokehold full of steam with men lying on deck &ndas
    5 KB (744 words) - 11:43, 22 September 2021
  • ...as provided for the officer or man to note the particulars of the specific ship the given copy of the Manual was to serve. The following is condensed from ...rea of 28.75 square feet, and the top blade was entirely immersed when the ship drew 8' 8" aft.
    9 KB (1,318 words) - 18:44, 4 February 2022
  • ''Thrasher''{{'}}s Lieutenant & Commander [[Oscar Valentin de Satgé]] and {{GunnerRN}} [[Frank Collins Marston|Frank C. Marston]] were C .... When a man came to his cabin to report the course change signal at 9pm, de Satgé started putting on his sea boots to go check that all was well when
    16 KB (2,217 words) - 09:39, 23 December 2021
  • ...l, 1907 to Cox, Falmouth.<ref>Admiralty to C.-in-C. Nore. 17 January 1906. Ship's Cover 128. f. 175.</ref>{{LyonFirstDestroyers|p. 70}} {{Tenure|rank={{CommRN}}|name=Lionel de Lautour Wells|nick=Lionel de L. Wells|appt=18 August, 1896<ref>Wells Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/39/6
    4 KB (569 words) - 19:35, 30 October 2022
  • ...lost him his dead reckoning. That he had relied on the leadership of the ship ahead seemed right.{{NMI|Saturday, Oct 16, 1897; pg. 10; Issue 35336}} ...e|rank={{LieutRN}} & Commander|name=Oscar Valentin de Satgé|nick=Oscar V. de Satgé|appt=7 November, 1896<ref>"Naval & Military Intelligence" (Official
    8 KB (1,103 words) - 10:58, 25 January 2022
  • There was also a later ship, a battlecruiser, named {{UK-Tiger}}. ...o pass between {{UK-PrinceGeorge}} and {{UK-1Berwick}} behind. The second ship struck her amidships and broke her in two. The bow section sank quickly wi
    5 KB (622 words) - 12:03, 28 September 2021
  • ...starboard. Vexingly, the action of this wheel was the opposite to what a ship's wheel ordinarily delivered. {{Tenure|rank={{LaCRN}}|name=Guy de Lancy Ormsby Johnson|nick=Guy de L. O. Johnson|appt=25 August, 1900|end=13 September, 1900}}
    8 KB (1,118 words) - 09:52, 6 December 2021
  • ...Richardson and {{UK-1Maori}} joined ten other destroyers in prosecuting {{DE-U8}} which {{UK-Viking}} had been attacking, successfully blowing the subma ...{{TNA|ADM 196/51/85.|}} f. 87.</ref>{{KindellROH2|p. 319}}|note=died when ship lost under his command|succBy=Vessel Lost}}
    4 KB (485 words) - 11:36, 14 November 2021
  • ...November, 1914, under the command of {{CommRN}} Wilson, ''Garry'' rammed {{DE-U18}} off Scapa Flow in the Pentland Firth, obligating the submarine's crew On 19 July, 1918, ''Garry'' was among several ships that sank {{DE-UB110}} in the North Sea.{{FC}}
    8 KB (1,029 words) - 08:58, 2 April 2022
  • ...=fredbot:career>{{ShipCareer|fullname=H.M.S. ''Recruit'' (1896)|fate2=by {{DE-UB6}}<ref>[http://uboat.net/wwi/ships_hit/7266.html Uboat.net]</ref> ...ref> near Galloper Lightship, with the loss of 39.{{HardLying|p. 63}} The ship was cut in half and sank immediately.{{UKNavalOpsII|pp. 401-2}}
    7 KB (1,004 words) - 19:07, 28 January 2020
  • {{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Wion de Malpas Egerton|Wion de M. Egerton]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Violet (1897)|Captain of H.M.S. ''Violet'']]''' ...22 Jan, 1915<ref>[http://www.naval-history.net/OWShips-WW1-10-HM_TB_35.htm Ship Log at naval-history.net].</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[William Dion Irvin|Wi
    5 KB (764 words) - 18:14, 6 April 2022
  • ...1899 under command of [[John Michael de Robeck, First Baronet|John Michael de Robeck]].{{ARTS1899|pp. 62-3}} ...nk={{CommRN}}|name=John Michael de Robeck, First Baronet|nick=John Michael de Robeck|appt=20 November, 1897{{NLOct98|p. 224}}|end=|precBy=New Command}}
    8 KB (1,080 words) - 17:08, 3 February 2022
  • |'''Ship'''||'''Type'''||'''Launched'''||'''Fate''' |{{DE-Th2|f=p}}||second-class torpedo boat||23 May, 1884||Fate
    13 KB (1,775 words) - 15:28, 23 December 2019
  • ...2 February, 1894|end=10 February, 1894|note=temporary, had already been in ship}} ...pt=21 May, 1903|end=c. 30 June, 1903|note=temporarily, awaiting arrival of de Salis}}
    4 KB (519 words) - 10:30, 29 November 2021
  • ...eander Class Cruiser (1882)|''Leander'' class]], but she served as a depot ship in the Great War. In June 1904 she completed conversion to a depot ship for destroyers.{{DittColl|p. 293}}
    6 KB (869 words) - 08:56, 18 March 2021
  • |valign=top|7,15.|| One enemy Battle Cruiser ( ? " {{DE-Lutzow}} ") bearing West<br> surrounded by T.B.D.'s steering slowly to N.W. |valign=top|8.30.||" {{UK-Calliope}} " fired a torpedo at leading ship of " Kaiser "<br>division at 6,500 yards—Light Cruisers retired on "King<
    6 KB (888 words) - 09:10, 2 December 2020
  • time practically in line with the rear ship of the 5th battle which were dropping all round the ship.
    30 KB (4,990 words) - 19:35, 4 November 2019
  • ...aid off on 21 May. The following day he was appointed in command of the Q-ship [[H.M.S. Ravenstone (1905)|''Ravenstone'']] (renamed ''Donlevon'' on that s ...e January, 1918. He was in command when she was torpedoed by the German {{DE-UC37|f=t}} while anchored at Stavros on 30 August, 1918. Powell was faulte
    11 KB (1,619 words) - 12:06, 7 April 2022
  • ...9 December, 1916, he was further thanked for his work in salvaging another ship.<ref>Hunt Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/50.|D7604457}} Unnumbered folio.</ ...ApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Carlton Valentine de Mornay Cowper|Carlton V. de M. Cowper]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Ariadne (1898)|Captain of H.M.S. ''Ariadne'']]''
    4 KB (526 words) - 11:17, 7 April 2022
  • ...by default stranding his ship on September 24 last, (2) with hazarding his ship negligently or by default on the same date."<ref name=times4nov1933/> Eger ...V.<ref name=iwmpapers/><ref name=houterman/> In serving as a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]], Egerton was following in his [[George Le Clerc Egerton | father's]]
    14 KB (2,023 words) - 02:53, 25 June 2022
  • ...{LaCRN}} ('''T''')|name=Dudley Rawson Stratford de Chair|nick=Dudley R. S. de Chair|appt=15 June, 1897<ref>"The Naval Review at Spithead". ''The Times'' ...d. {{TNA|ADM 196/51/284.|D7605039}} f. 299.</ref>|end=16 August, 1916<ref>de Meric Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/51/284.|D7605039}} f. 299.</ref>}}
    12 KB (1,641 words) - 09:22, 1 September 2022
  • It has three old "A" class submarines, depot ship {{UK-Pactolus}}, a destroyer and an armed yacht.{{SMNLSep14|p. 13}} ...{{UK-Vanduara}} has joined, bringing strength to three submarines, a depot ship, a destroyer and two armed yachts.{{SMNLDec14|p. 13}}
    37 KB (4,757 words) - 11:10, 19 January 2022
  • |align=center colspan=6|'''Depot Ship''' ...ubmarine Flotilla. The strength is ten submarines, a depot ship and a flag ship.{{SMNLSep16|pp. 15, 17}}
    8 KB (1,108 words) - 15:50, 18 April 2023
  • The flotilla was comprised of a depot ship and six coastal submarines.{{AWO1914|109 of 10 July, 1914}} |align=center colspan=6|'''Depot Ship'''
    31 KB (4,131 words) - 10:31, 5 November 2021
  • ...to spawn the newly instituted {{UK-SF|10}}. The strength is now one depot ship and nine submarines.{{SMNLDec14|p. 14}} |align=center colspan=6|'''Depot Ship'''
    11 KB (1,474 words) - 12:42, 19 January 2022
  • ...'''The Mast and Funnel Question''' are taken from copies contained in the Ship's Cover for the [[Lion Class Battlecruiser (1910)|''Lion'' class]] battle c ...o the top of spotting tower & in consequence the view is shut out when the ship rolls 5° or more.
    6 KB (1,022 words) - 04:45, 9 November 2015
  • ...'Flirt'' sighted the badly damaged drifter ''Waveney''. Kellet stopped his ship nearby and lowered her whaler. Flirt was then overwhelmed by gunfire from s ...research suggests that she attacked but did not sink the homeward bound {{DE-UC72}}.
    8 KB (1,272 words) - 09:49, 24 June 2021
  • The flotilla was created in November or December of 1914, using a depot ship and three submarines pared off of the {{UK-SF|7}}, though it may have exist |align=center colspan=6|'''Depot Ship'''
    25 KB (3,358 words) - 17:50, 24 March 2021
  • ...t which took place on the 8th December 1914 in so far as it concerns H. M. Ship under my command. - At 8.0 a.m. while at anchor in Port William, ship's head W by S, coaling the port side from the collier "Trelawney" a report
    18 KB (3,040 words) - 22:22, 9 November 2021
  • ...ine ceremony, 4 Nov 1910; account of the bombardment of Cobras Island, Rio de Janeiro, 10 Dec 1910; programme for Aladdin in ''Leviathan'', 12 and 13 Sep Papers mainly relating to gunnery matters and ship administration 16 Feb 1906 - 26 Nov 1907 including: letters from W. Ottway
    30 KB (4,307 words) - 09:21, 30 March 2023
  • Bound notes on the general running of a ship, including rigging, watch stations, fire stations and arranging sails. ...Includes a list of the crew attending each of the various stations of the ship (name not mentioned), n.d.
    16 KB (2,174 words) - 09:48, 11 December 2013
  • ...ed Rear-Admiral if they have served three years as Captain in command of a Ship of War at sea. ...t the first three years of such period must be Sea Service in command of a Ship of War at sea: Such Officers as arrive at their turn for promotion without
    6 KB (1,110 words) - 13:04, 18 January 2022
  • ...attenkapitän'' on 16 November, 1898. He then commanded the coast defence ship ''Ägir'' and the cruiser ''Hansa''. He participated in the Boxer Rising, {{CatPerson|DE|1855|1916}}
    4 KB (657 words) - 16:12, 1 September 2022
  • ...ted by destroyers and armed auxiliary steamers. German records show that {{DE-U8|f=p}}, scuttled on 4 March 1915 after being caught in the nets, forced t {{DE-UB10|f=p}} was caught by the nets but worked herself clear after eight. Bac
    21 KB (3,427 words) - 13:57, 21 May 2021
  • ...d Fleet. The German operation was then cancelled after the light cruiser {{DE-Graudenz|f=p}} struck a mine and other German ships reported spotting subma ...mal commander, was indisposed. His force was reduced to four ships after {{DE-Seydlitz|f=p}} struck a mine.{{MarderFDSFII| pp. 424-25}}
    9 KB (1,480 words) - 16:51, 12 May 2020
  • ...eous duties at Hong Kong, her officers being borne either in the receiving ship {{UK-Tamar}} or the battleship {{UK-Triumph}}.{{NLMar13|p. 382}} She would {{Tenure|rank={{LieutRN}}|name=James de Courcy Hamilton|nick=James de C. Hamilton|appt=7 July, 1887<ref>"Naval and Military Intelligence". ''The
    3 KB (485 words) - 11:04, 9 August 2022
  • ...Sentenced|23 Jan. 1912, p. 4}}|as=Captain of H.M. T.B. 042|note=dismissed ship for being AWOL and drunk on board on 15 January}}
    8 KB (1,084 words) - 13:33, 30 August 2022
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> {ship
    5 KB (626 words) - 09:16, 18 June 2019
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> {ship
    23 KB (2,860 words) - 17:59, 24 June 2020
  • ...e sank {{DE-U81}} after the enemy boat surfaced after torpedoing a surface ship at 51deg N., 13deg W..{{UKTH1|pp. 5,13}} The boat was under the command of
    2 KB (312 words) - 09:13, 15 March 2022
  • ..., under {{LCommRN}} [[Cecil Ponsonby Talbot|Cecil P. Talbot]], E 16 sank {{DE-U6}} at 59deg 10' N., 5deg 9' E..{{UKTH1|p. 13}} ...]] was awarded the D.S.O. "for attacking and torpedoing a German auxiliary ship protected by a screen of a torpedo boat, a small sloop, 4 trawlers, several
    2 KB (334 words) - 10:03, 4 September 2018
  • On 16 October, 1918, she sank {{DE-UB90}} at 57deg 55' N., 10deg 27' E..{{UKTH1|p. 13}} ...}s'' lines throughout her uncommanded submergence. Keen was dismissed his ship and severely reprimanded.{{ToL|L 12 at Milford Haven|10 July 1929, p. 16}}{
    5 KB (731 words) - 10:28, 5 November 2021
  • At some point in her service as a Q-ship, ''PC 56'' was fitted with a rather convincing false bow that converted her ''PC 56'' rammed, shelled, and depth charged {{DE-U87}} in the Irish Sea on 25 December, 1917, sinking her with all hands.<re
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  • ...on of [[Submarine|submarines]] of the [[Royal Navy]] named for their depot ship, was established in April 1917 under the command of Vice-Admiral, Queenstow ...h alongside [[Vulcan's Flotilla]]. It is comprised of the eponymous depot ship, and {{UK-D1}}, {{UK-D4}} and {{UK-D6}} from the former {{UK-SF|3}} and {{U
    9 KB (1,235 words) - 19:28, 19 April 2018
  • ...second-class torpedo boat carrier, but was converted to a submarine depot ship before the Great War. After serving as a torpedo depot ship in the Mediterranean, ''Vulcan'' arrived at Spithead under the command of [
    8 KB (1,014 words) - 14:44, 16 October 2021
  • ...ivilian ship, ''British Crown'' purchased on the stocks for use as a depot ship. ''Hecla'' soon proved herself "a very wet ship." During one trial cruise in Bantry Bay in late 1883 the sea "made clean s
    11 KB (1,450 words) - 20:51, 17 February 2024
  • ...at, but was converted along with her sister {{UK-Onyx}} to submarine depot ship before the Great War. ''Hebe'' converted to a depot ship in 1909.{{DittColl|p. 293}}
    5 KB (693 words) - 13:50, 2 August 2021
  • '''H.M.S. ''Adamant''''' was completed to navy order as a depot ship. ...Fleet (Royal Navy)|Atlantic Fleet]]'s {{UK-SF|9}}, being the second depot ship supporting her eight "L" class submarines.
    7 KB (951 words) - 10:53, 3 June 2022
  • ...erchant ''Spreewald'', captured in September 1914 and converted to a depot ship for use in the Royal Navy. ''Lucia'' completed conversion to a depot ship in August, 1916. She served the {{UK-SF|10}} in the Tees from 1916 to 1918
    8 KB (1,013 words) - 12:59, 20 April 2023
  • ...an ship, ''Indrabarah'' purchased on the stocks in 1905 for use as a depot ship. ...re|rank={{CaptRN}}|name=Cunningham Robert de Clare Foot|nick=Cunningham R. de C. Foot|appt=21 October, 1907<ref>Foot Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/42.}}
    7 KB (974 words) - 13:57, 22 May 2022
  • ...fredbot:career>{{ShipCareer|fullname=S.M.S. ''U 1'' (1906)|fate2=as museum ship |nat=DE
    1 KB (189 words) - 09:06, 29 October 2019
  • |nat=DE ...vy design to compare their work with Germaniawerft's, which was building {{DE-U1}}. She was regarded as an experiment, and thus was the only submarine o
    1 KB (195 words) - 09:06, 29 October 2019
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{Template:DE-U3}}
    2 KB (194 words) - 14:39, 6 April 2018
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{Template:DE-U5}}
    2 KB (239 words) - 14:46, 20 August 2013
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{Template:DE-U9}}
    2 KB (262 words) - 14:39, 6 April 2018
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{Template:DE-U13}}
    2 KB (218 words) - 14:39, 6 April 2018
  • |nat=DE {{CatClassSubmarine|DE}}
    1 KB (167 words) - 09:11, 29 October 2019
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{Template:DE-U17}}
    2 KB (186 words) - 14:39, 6 April 2018
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{Template:DE-U19}}
    2 KB (245 words) - 14:39, 6 April 2018
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{Template:DE-U23}}
    2 KB (240 words) - 14:51, 20 August 2013
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    2 KB (246 words) - 14:39, 6 April 2018
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    4 KB (454 words) - 14:51, 20 August 2013
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    3 KB (388 words) - 14:39, 6 April 2018
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{Template:DE-U51}}
    3 KB (313 words) - 14:46, 20 August 2013
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    4 KB (497 words) - 14:28, 25 April 2018
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    2 KB (226 words) - 14:46, 20 August 2013
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    2 KB (286 words) - 14:46, 20 August 2013
  • | colspan=6 align=left|<small>Citations for this data available on individual ship pages</small> | {{Template:DE-UB1}}
    8 KB (1,065 words) - 14:28, 25 April 2018
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    4 KB (462 words) - 12:04, 29 October 2019

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