HMS Phoenix (N96) explained

HMS Phoenix was a of the Royal Navy, launched in 1929. She was the eighteenth warship of the Royal Navy to use the name Phoenix. She served on the China Station from her commissioning until the start of the Second World War. Phoenix was then relocated to the Mediterranean Sea and was sunk by the Italian torpedo boat Albatros on 16 July 1940.

Design

The Parthian class was designed as an improvement of the earlier ; the new class was larger, built with a raked stem, and given a shield to cover the 4-inch gun. The class had a design flaw in that the riveted external fuel tanks leaked, leaving an oil trail on the surface. Phoenix was fitted with a four-cycle blast-injection eight-cylinder diesel engine,[1] which provided 4640hp; submerged propulsion was provided by a 1635hp electric motor.[2] Phoenix was 289feet long with a breadth of 30feet and displaced 2040LT of water while submerged.

All submarines of the Parthian-class were outfitted with eight 21-inch torpedo tubes, one QF 4-inch (102 mm) Mk XII deck gun, and two machine guns.[3] The class was the first to be outfitted with the Mark VIII torpedo.[4] Phoenix had six tubes in the bow and two tubes at the stern. Submarines of the Parthian class were designed for a complement of 53 officers and men. Phoenix had a crew of 56.

History

Phoenix was laid down at Cammell Laird shipyard in 1928. The ship was the 18th in a series of British warships named after the mythical phoenix, and had the motto Resurgam (Latin for "I will rise again"[5])[6] Phoenix was originally deployed on the China Station as part of the 4th submarine flotilla. Ships of the China Station were tasked with trade protection and were used as a symbol of British power.[7] In later September 1935, Phoenix,,,, and the depot ship were ordered to travel to the Mediterranean.[8] While in the Mediterranean, the ships participated in naval exercises including the crash dive manoeuvre. Eight months later, the small group was ordered back to Hong Kong. In April 1940, the flotilla, along with Medway, was ordered to the Mediterranean Sea to support naval operations there and the 1st submarine flotilla was established.[9]

Service in the Second World War

Phoenix was stationed in Alexandria and patrolled the Aegean Sea and waters around the Dodecanese from 14 June to July 1940.[10] In July 1940, Phoenix, under the command of Lt Cdr Gilbert Hugh Nowell,[11] and were given the task of screening a convoy of British ships bringing supplies from Malta to Alexandria. Phoenix made a contact report on 8 July after sighting the Italian battle fleet.[12] Admiral Andrew Cunningham ordered his ships to cut off the Italian fleet from their base at Taranto, which led to the Battle of Calabria. Phoenix fired torpedoes at two Italian battleships, Giulio Cesare and Conte di Cavour, but missed both targets. While off the coast of Augusta, Sicily, Phoenix fired torpedoes at the Italian torpedo boat, but missed her. counter-attacked and sank Phoenix with depth charges.[13] All hands were lost.[14]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Parthian Class. Submariners Association. 29 July 2011. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120314125402/http://www.rnsubs.co.uk/Boats/BoatDB2/index.php?id=2&BoatID=305&flag=class. 14 March 2012.
  2. Book: Brown, David K. Nelson to Vanguard: Warship Design and Development, 1923–1945. 2000. Chatham Publishing. London. 109. 9781591146025.
  3. Web site: Parthian Class. Britsub.net. 30 July 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20120805233406/http://www.britsub.net/html/parthian_class.html. 5 August 2012. usurped.
  4. Book: Ward, John. Submarines of World War II. 2001. Brown Partworks Limited. St. Paul. 0-7603-1170-6. 35.
  5. Encyclopedia: Merriam-Webster. Resurgam . 2 August 2011. 2011. Merriam Webster, Incorporated.
  6. Web site: Mason. Geoffrey. Service Histories of Royal Navy Warships in World War 2 – Summary. Naval-History.net. 26 July 2011.
  7. Book: Jackson, Ashley. The British Empire and the Second World War. 2006. Continuum International Publishing Group. New York. 1-85285-417-0. 448.
  8. Book: Blamey, Joel C.E.. A submariner's story: the memoirs of a submarine engineer in peace and in war. 2002. Periscope Publishing. Cornwall. 1-904381-02-2. 63–65.
  9. Book: McCartney, Innes. British Submarines 1939–45. 2006. Osprey Publishing. Oxford. 1-84603-007-2. 23.
  10. Book: Rohwer, Jürgen. Chronology of the War at Sea, 1939–1945: The Naval History of World War Two. 1972. Chatham Publishing. London. 1-59114-119-2. 22, 27, 32.
  11. Web site: Helgasun. Guðmundur. Allied Warship Commanders. uboat.net. 13 August 2011.
  12. Book: Ballantyne, Iain. Warspite. 2001. Leo Cooper. South Yorkshire. 1-55750-988-3. 107.
  13. Web site: Phoenix (N96). Submariners Association. 31 July 2011. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110202141833/http://www.rnsubs.co.uk/Boats/BoatDB2/index.php?BoatID=304. 2 February 2011.
  14. Web site: Eric Benjamin Barnes. bergh apton. 26 August 2011. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20111001084820/http://www.berghapton.org.uk/index.php/parinfo/warmemorial/124-ebb. 1 October 2011.