Greek destroyer Pindos explained
Pindos (Greek, Modern (1453-);:
ΒΠ Πίνδος) was a Type III that was originally built for the British
Royal Navy as
HMS Bolebroke but never commissioned. Before her completion, she was transferred to the
Royal Hellenic Navy and commissioned on 27 June 1942 as
Pindos in order to relieve heavy losses of ships sustained by the Royal Hellenic Navy during the
German invasion of 1941.
Pindos served in the
Mediterranean Theatre throughout the
Second World War. On 22 August 1943, along with, she sank the German
U-boat off
Pantelleria.
Konstantinos Engolfopoulos served as executive officer during this period.
The crew of the Pindos were involved in the 1944 Greek naval mutiny. They elected a Revolutionary Commission and circulated a petition demanding that the Greek government-in-exile be expanded to include members of the Revolutionary committee of the National Liberation Front (EAM).[1]
Pindos served during the Greek Civil War, was returned to the Royal Navy in 1959 and broken up for scrap in Greece in 1960.[2]
External links
- Web site: RHS Pindos (L 53)]. Helgason. Guðmundur. German U-boats of WWII - uboat.net.
Notes and References
- Web site: Grigorios Mezeviris . Grigorios Mezeviris . theitalianattack . www.mezeviris.gr . 13 June 2018 . 13 June 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180613112348/http://www.mezeviris.gr/mutiny.html . dead .
- Book: Raymond V B Blackman . Jane's Fighting Ships 1963-4 . Sampson Low, Marston & Co. Ltd . London . 112.