See main article: S-class destroyer. Tribune was one of thirty-three destroyers ordered by the British Admiralty on 7 April 1917 as part of the Twelfth War Construction Programme. The design was a development of the introduced as a cheaper and faster alternative to the . Differences with the R class were minor, such as having the searchlight moved aft.
Tribune had a overall length of 276feet and a length of 265feet between perpendiculars. Beam was 26feet and draught 9feet. Displacement was 1075LT normal and 1220LT deep load. Three White-Forster boilers fed steam to two sets of Brown-Curtis geared steam turbines rated at 27000shp and driving two shafts, giving a design speed of 36kn at normal loading and at deep load. Two funnels were fitted. The ship carried of fuel oil, which gave a design range of 2750nmi at .
Armament consisted of three QF 40NaN0 Mk IV guns on the ship's centreline. One was mounted raised on the forecastle, one on a platform between the funnels and one aft. The ship also mounted a single 2-pounder 401NaN1 "pom-pom" anti-aircraft gun for air defence. Four 210NaN0 tubes were fitted in two twin rotating mounts aft. The ship was designed to mount two 180NaN0 torpedo tubes either side of the superstructure to be controlled by the officer in charge directly, but this required the forecastle plating to be cut away. This made the vessel very wet, so they were removed. The weight saved enabled the heavier Mark V 21-inch torpedo to be carried. Four depth charge chutes were fitted aft. The ship had a complement of 90 officers and ratings.
Ordered on 7 April 1917, Tribune was laid down by J. Samuel White at East Cowes on the Isle of Wight with the yard number 1506 on 21 August, and launched on 28 March the following year. The ship was completed on 16 July. The vessel was the fifth to carry the name, which recalled the tribunes of ancient Rome. On commissioning, Tribune joined the Aegean Squadron of the Mediterranean Fleet.[1]
With the First World War closing, the destroyer saw no action before the Armistice, and remained in the Mediterranean Sea as part of the Sixth Destroyer Flotilla.[2] By this time, the increasingly belligerent Russian Civil War led the Royal Navy to send ships into the Black Sea to support the White Russian forces and manage the refugee crisis that arose from the conflict, including the evacuation of the Crimea. Tribune was sent to Karkinit Bay in the Crimea in January 1920. At the same time, the war between Greece and Turkey was escalating and the Turkish War of Independence had broken out. On 27 March, the destroyer accompanied the seaplane carrier and the battleship on a visit to Constantinople.[3] The Allies had taken over the running of the city, and much of the force supporting the White Russians was now diverted to this new threat.
On 8 December 1921, Tribune was dispatched to Mykolaiv in one of the last naval operations in the Russian conflict. Although there is a lack of contemporary evidence for how Tribune was involved in the actual evacuation, the operation was considered a success by contemporaries. On 1 December the follow year, the destroyer was again stationed in Constantinople.[4] The recent Chanak Crisis had shaken the British ruling class and, along with the Carlton Club meeting, led to the fall of the government of David Lloyd George. The destroyer was sent to Chanak on 2 December, but saw no action and returned to Malta the following day.[5]
January 1923 found Tribune still in the Mediterranean.[6] Soon afterwards, the destroyer returned to the UK and was decommissioned. On 21 September, Tribune was recommissioned and subsequently joined the Seventh Destroyer Flotilla of the Atlantic Fleet.[7] The ship then served for a further eight years based at Portsmouth. On 8 August 1929, Tribune took part in a war game around Telscombe, which involved simulated amphibious warfare, combining units from the Royal Navy and the London Regiment of the Territorial Army.[8] On 26 June 1930, the destroyer transported attendees to the Imperial Press Conference to see a demonstration of naval power. The destroyer launched a torpedo at the target ship and was attacked by the submarine . The torpedoes ran under their targets, leaving them unharmed but simulated hits.[9] On 7 October, the ship carried some of the coffins of the victims of the R101 disaster back to Britain from France.[10]
On 22 April 1930, the United Kingdom had signed the London Naval Treaty, which limited the total destroyer tonnage that the navy could operate. The S class was deemed out of date and ripe to be replaced with more modern ships, including the C and D-class destroyers. In July 1931, Tribune was replaced as emergency destroyer at Portsmouth, with Tribunes crew transferring to sister ship .[11] On 17 December, the destroyer was sold to Cashmore of Newport, Wales, and broken up.
F9A | November 1918 |
F33 | January 1919 |
D16 | January 1922 |