In mid-1916, the British Admiralty placed orders for 23 destroyers based on the five V-class leaders that had been ordered earlier that year. Two of these ships, Vanoc and, were ordered from the Clydebank shipyard John Brown & Company in June that year.[1] [2] Vanoc was 312feet long overall with a beam of 29inchesft6inchesin (ftin) and a draught of between 10feet and 11feet depending on load. Displacement was 1090LT standard[2] and up to 1490LT under full load.[3]
Three oil-fed Yarrow boilers raising steam at fed Brown-Curtis geared steam turbines which developed 27000shp, driving two screws for a maximum designed speed of 34kn.[2] [4] Vanoc reached an average speed of during sea trials on 10 August 1917, with her engines generating 28136shp and deep load displacement about 1430LT.[5] The ship carried 368LT of oil giving a range of 3500nmi at .[2]
Vanocs main gun armament consisted of four 4-inch Mk V QF guns in four single mounts on the ship's centerline. These were disposed as two forward and two aft in superimposed firing positions. A single QF 3-inch (76 mm) 20 cwt anti-aircraft gun was mounted aft of the second funnel. Aft of the 3-inch gun, she carried four 21 inch (533 mm) torpedo tubes mounted in pairs on the center-line.[2] [3] It was decided in January 1917 to modify Vanoc as a minelayer. As such, the aft set of torpedo tubes and one 4 inch gun could be removed to accommodate up to 66 mines, although the rated capacity was 44. The ship could be converted back to a fleet destroyer, with full armament, in about 12 hours.[6] [7]
Vanoc was laid down at John Brown & Company's Clydebank shipyard on 20 September 1916 and was launched on 14 June 1917.[8] She was commissioned on 15 August 1917 with the pennant number H33.[9] The vessel's name is that of an Arthurian knight in Sir Walter Scott’s The Bridal of Triermain.[10]
Between the wars, modifications to the V-class destroyers were relatively limited, with the twin torpedo mounts generally being replaced by triple mounts as in the W class. As a minelayer, only the forward bank of tubes was replaced, giving Vanoc a five torpedo-tube outfit, while the 3 inch gun was replaced by a 2-pounder "pom-pom".[11]
After the Norwegian campaign, it was decided to strengthen the anti-aircraft armament of Royal Navy destroyers, with the V class being modified by removing the aft bank of torpedo tubes and replacing it by a single 12-pounder anti-aircraft gun, with Vanoc modified by October 1940.[12] Other early modifications included the removal of one 4-inch gun ("Y"-mount) to allow the carrying on a heavy depth charge battery, with 50 charges carried, with the ship fitted to allow 10-charge patterns to be laid,[13] while Type 286M radar was fitted in early 1941.[14] A major problem with the use of destroyers for escort work in the North Atlantic was their lack of endurance,[15] [16] and Vanoc was converted to a long-range escort at Thornycroft's Southampton shipyard between April and November 1943.[17] The long-range escort conversion involved removal of one boiler (and its associated funnel), to allow fitting of additional oil bunkers and extra accommodation to help solve a chronic overcrowding problem that had only got worse as crews had increased as the war progressed.[18] While power dropped to 18000shp, cutting speed to, the ship's range increased by as much as .[16] One 4-inch gun (in "A"-mount) was removed to accommodate a Hedgehog forward-throwing anti-submarine projector, while the remaining set of torpedo tubes and the 12-pounder gun was removed to allow the ship's depth charge armament to be increased again to as many as 150 charges. Radar was changed to a Type 271 surface search radar mounted on the ship's bridge, with a Type 291 air search radar on the mainmast.[18] [19]
Following commissioning, Vanoc joined the Thirteenth Destroyer Flotilla, attached to the Battle Cruiser Force of the Grand Fleet.[20] [21] [22] In October 1917, Vanoc was part of a large scale operation involving 30 cruisers and 54 destroyers deployed in eight groups across the North Sea in an attempt to stop a suspected sortie by German naval forces. Despite these countermeasures the two German light cruisers and managed to evade the patrols and attacked the regular convoy between Norway and Britain, sinking nine merchant ships and two destroyers, and, before returning safely to Germany.[23] Vanoc remained with the Thirteenth Destroyer Flotilla, which formed part of the Battlecruiser Force of the Grand Fleet, until June 1918, when she joined the Twentieth Destroyer Flotilla.[24] [25] [26] The Twentieth Flotilla was a specialised minelaying flotilla, based at Immingham on the Humber,[27] which laid up to 20,000 mines during 1918, as well as carrying out its share of convoy escort and patrol duties.[7] Vanoc herself laid 965 mines during the First World War.[28]
Vanoc was reduced to 3/5th complement in January 1919, while remaining part of the Twentieth Flotilla. She returned to a full complement on 19 June that year.[22] The Twentieth Flotilla, including Vanoc, was deployed to the Baltic as part of the British intervention in the Russian Civil War. She was off Riga in October 1919 when British and French naval gunfire helped the Latvian army to drive off an attack by the pro-German West Russian Volunteer Army, which was attempting to set up a German-dominated puppet state.[29]
Vanoc was attached to the Second Destroyer Flotilla in November 1919,[30] but was reduced to reserve at Devonport on 5 February 1920.[31] Vanoc was recommissioned in October 1923, serving as a special trials vessel at Portsmouth. In November that year, Vanoc, together with sister ship carried out rough-weather trials. Vanoc was then used for torpedo trials at, the Royal Navy's torpedo establishment. From January 1926, she was permanently attached to Vernon.[22]
On 29 June 1927, Vanoc, together with, and escorted the battlecruiser, carrying the Duke and Duchess of York into Portsmouth at the end of the royal couple's tour of the Commonwealth.[32]
Vanoc was part of the British Mediterranean Fleet during the Spanish Civil War.[33] Activities during Britain's attempt to enforce non-intervention included ferrying an inspection team to Spanish Morocco in January 1937 to investigate German activities.[34] In June 1938, Vanoc was sent to Alicante in response to Nationalist air attacks on British shipping,[35] while on 30 December 1938, after the Republican destroyer ran aground at Catalan Bay following an engagement with Nationalist warships, Vanoc patrolled to prevent the Nationalists attacking while José Luis Díez was towed into Gibraltar to be interned.[36] [37]
Vanoc was commanded by Lieutenant Commander James Godfrey Wood Deneys from 9 February 1939 to 15 December 1941.[38] At the outbreak of the war, the ship was assigned to the 11th Destroyer Flotilla, based out of Plymouth, and in the early stages of hostilities undertook patrols in the English Channel and South Western Approaches areas. In February 1940, Vanoc accompanied escorting a Gibraltar bound convoy, before escorting two Liverpool bound convoys in March. In mid April, she accompanied Chrobry into Namsos in Norway.[39] On 29 April 1940, she deployed with the destroyers,, and to evacuate troops from Mo and Bodø to Harstad.[40] Later, in June 1940, Vanoc took part in Operation Aerial, the evacuation of British and Allied troops from ports in western France, escorting a convoy of 10 ships from St Nazaire on 18June.[41]
In early March 1941, Vanoc was assigned to the 5th Escort group[42] and on 15 March the group joined Convoy HX 112 as escort.[14] On the night of 15/16 March, the German submarine, commanded by Fritz-Julius Lemp, sighted the convoy, and made a surface attack, torpedoing the tanker Erdona, which did not sink. The destroyer spotted U-110 and summoned Vanoc and . Together, the three destroyers attacked U-110 with depth charges, and Vanoc and Scimitar were assigned to keeping the submarine submerged while the convoy sailed away. Despite this, Lemp evaded the destroyers and re-sighted the convoy later that night, sending location signals that helped to direct more U-boats against the convoy.[43]
At about 10:00 pm on the night of 16/17 March under the command of Otto Kretschmer infiltrated the convoy and fired U-99s remaining eight torpedoes, hitting six merchant ships and sinking five of them. At 01:30, Walkers sonar detected a submerged submarine, and after an initial attack by Walker and Vanoc, Walker left to rescue survivors from U-99s attack, leaving Vanoc to continue the attack. The depth charges caused serious flooding aboard the German submarine,, under the command of Joachim Schepke, and Schepke, fearing the submarine would sink, and hoping that he could torpedo the British destroyer, ordered U-100 to the surface. Vanoc spotted U-100 on the recently fitted but primitive Type 286M radar, the first confirmed British surface ship radar sighting of a U-boat, and rammed the German submarine, sinking her. Only six of U-100s crew, not including Schepke, survived. Shortly afterwards, U-99, which was trying to slip out of the convoy on the surface, spotted Walker and dived. Walker picked up U-99 on her sonar and attacked with depth charges, forcing the submarine to the surface. Vanoc spotted the surfaced U-99, and both destroyers opened fire on the stricken U-boat, which was scuttled by her crew as they abandoned ship.[44] [45]
From March 1942 she joined the Escort Group B-5 team of destroyers, Caldwell,, frigate, and corvettes,,, and .[46] [47] Escort Group B-5 was reassigned to Caribbean trade convoys from March 1942; and returned to the Mid-Ocean Escort Force a year later to escort Convoy SC 122.[46]
On 16 March 1944, in the Straits of Gibraltar at position 35.9167°N -46°W she co-operated with the frigate and three 3 US Catalina aircraft (VP 63) to sink the submarine with a hedgehog attack, resulting in 52 dead (all hands) from U-392. On 21 January 1945, Vanoc collided with, and sank, the naval trawler off Normandy. (49.7°N -37°W).[48]
In June 1945, the ship was placed into reserve before being sold for scrap to T.W. Ward the following month. She was broken up sometime after mid-1946 in Falmouth.[49]