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词条 HMS Gipsy (H63)
释义

  1. Description

  2. Service

  3. Notes

  4. Footnotes

  5. References

  6. External links

{{other ships|HMS Gipsy}}{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2017}}{{Use British English|date=February 2017}}{{Infobox ship image
Ship image = HMS Gipsy (H63) IWM FL 13465.jpg Ship caption = HMS Gipsy in June 1936
}}{{Infobox ship career
Hide header = Ship country = United KingdomUnited Kingdom|naval}} Ship name = HMS Gipsy Ship owner = Ship namesake = Ship ordered = 5 March 1934 Ship builder = Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company, Govan, Scotland Ship laid down = 5 September 1934 Ship launched = 7 November 1935 Ship completed = 22 February 1936 Ship commissioned = Ship decommissioned = Ship in service = Ship out of service = Ship struck = Ship reinstated = Ship motto = Trust your luck Ship identification = Pennant number: H63 Ship honours = Atlantic 1939 Ship fate = Mined, 21 November 1939 Ship status = Ship notes = Ship badge = On a Field Green a female gipsy's head Proper
}}{{Infobox ship characteristics
Hide header =Header caption=as builtShip class=G-class destroyer1350|LT|t}} (standard)
  • {{convert|1883|LT|t}} (deep load)
323|ft|m|1|abbr=on}}33|ft|m|1|abbr=on}}12|ft|5|in|m|1|abbr=on}}34000|shp|lk=in|abbr=on}}Ship propulsion=*2 shafts, Parsons geared steam turbines
  • 3 Admiralty 3-drum water-tube boilers
36|kn|lk=in}}5530|nmi|lk=in|abbr=on}} at {{convert|15|kn}}Ship complement=137 (peacetime), 146 (wartime)Ship sensors=ASDICShip armament=*4 × 1 - QF 4.7-inch (120 mm) Mk IX guns
  • 2 × 4 - .50 cal machine guns
  • 2 × 4 - 21 inch (533 mm) torpedo tubes
  • 20 × depth charges, 1 rail and 2 throwers
Ship notes=Pennant number H63
}}

HMS Gipsy was a G-class destroyer built for the Royal Navy during the 1930s. She spent most of the pre-war period as part of the Mediterranean Fleet. The ship was transferred to the British Isles to escort shipping in local waters shortly after the beginning of World War II. Less than a month after her arrival she struck a mine outside Harwich and sank with the loss of 30 of her crew. Her wreck was salvaged and slowly scrapped over the course of the war.

Description

Gipsy displaced {{convert|1350|LT|t}} at standard load and {{convert|1883|LT|t}} at deep load. The ship had an overall length of {{convert|323|ft|m|1}}, a beam of {{convert|33|ft|m|1}} and a draught of {{convert|12|ft|5|in|m|1}}. She was powered by Parsons geared steam turbines, driving two shafts, which developed a total of {{convert|34000|shp|lk=in}} and gave a maximum speed of {{convert|36|kn|lk=in}}. Steam for the turbines was provided by three Admiralty 3-drum water-tube boilers. Gipsy carried a maximum of {{convert|470|LT|t}} of fuel oil that gave her a range of {{convert|5530|nmi|lk=in}} at {{convert|15|kn}}. The ship's complement was 137 officers and men in peacetime.[1]

The ship mounted four 45-calibre 4.7-inch (120 mm) Mark IX guns in single mounts. For anti-aircraft defence Gipsy had two quadruple Mark I mounts for the 0.5 inch Vickers Mark III machine gun. She was fitted with two above-water quadruple torpedo tube mounts for {{convert|21|in|adj=on|0}} torpedoes.[1] One rail and two depth charge throwers were fitted; 20 depth charges were originally carried, but this increased to 35 shortly after the war began.[2]

Service

Gipsy was laid down by the Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company, at Govan, Scotland on 4 September 1934, launched on 7 November 1935 and completed on 22 February 1936. Excluding government-furnished equipment like the armament, the ship cost £250,364.[3][4] Aside from a brief period assigned to the 20th Destroyer Flotilla of the Home Fleet after her commissioning, Gipsy spent the pre-war period assigned to the 1st Destroyer Flotilla with the Mediterranean Fleet. She was refitted at Devonport Dockyard between 2 June and 30 July 1938.[5]

On the outbreak of war in September 1939, Gipsy was deployed with the 1st Destroyer Flotilla for patrols and contraband control in the Eastern Mediterranean, based at Alexandria. Gipsy and her entire flotilla were transferred to the Western Approaches Command at Plymouth in October. On 12 November she collided with her sister ship, {{HMS|Greyhound|H05|2}}, en route to Harwich, and her new assignment with the 22nd Destroyer Flotilla, but she was only slightly damaged. The ship rescued three German airmen outside Harwich harbour on 21 November and returned to port to turn them over the army.

Later that evening, Gipsy set out with the destroyers {{HMS|Griffin|H31|2}}, {{HMS|Keith|H06|2}}, {{HMS|Boadicea|H65|2}}, {{ORP|Burza||6}} and {{ORP|Grom|1936|6}} to hunt for U-Boats thought to be minelaying in the North Sea. Just outside the harbour boom she triggered one of the two magnetic mines dropped about 2 hours earlier by two German seaplanes, and, almost broken in half, sank on the edge of the deepwater channel. 31 of her crew, including the captain, Lt-Cdr Crossley, were killed or fatally injured, 115 were rescued by the other destroyers and by harbour launches.[5] The inquiry determined that, though the harbour defences had been on alert (UK National Archive 248 Heavy AA Battery War Diary WO 166/2529), and had actually seen and plotted both the seaplanes and their mines, their reporting had been inaccurate. Though the Harwich admiral had told the destroyers to hug the side of the channel opposite to where the mines fell, he had not stipulated why, nor that the ships were in any particular danger. Apart from those on the bridge, Gipsy's crew were unaware of any danger at all as a result some had gone to sleep below decks, and no contingency plan had been made to ready lifeboats.

(sources—Admiralty Board of Inquiry Minutes and Report—UK National Archive ADM 1/22793, logs of Keith and Boadicea ADM 53/109431 and 107799; correspondence with Captain R D Franks, Gipsy's 1st Lieutenant, and his article in "Highlight" Harwich Society magazine).

There was controversy at the time, and later, about this lack of warning, and also about the failure of the local defences to fire on the German seaplanes (Nore Command War Diary ADM 199/375; 6 Anti-Aircraft Division War Diary WO 166/2168l Captain R D Franks; Highlight). It turned out that their failure to fire had been due to an Army Anti-Aircraft Command order that unidentified aircraft should not be engaged, though the defenders had, at the time, recognised their nationality, if not their type—and seen their mines. (ADM 1/22793, 515 Coast Artillery Regiment War Diary WO 166/1718).

The wreck remained upright on the seabed with only the bridge and forward gun visible at high tide. Only buckled plating amidships held the two main sections of the wreck together and they were cut by explosives when salvage began shortly after her sinking. The two halves were raised by pontoons, and were subsequently broken up separately {{convert|750|LT|t}} of ferrous scrap and {{convert|38|LT|t}} of non-ferrous metals were recovered between June 1940 and February 1944.[5]

Notes

1. ^Whitley, pp. 107–08
2. ^English, p. 141
3. ^English, pp. 89–90
4. ^Adjusted for inflation to 20{{CURRENTYEARYY}} pounds, £{{formatnum:{{Inflation|UK|250364|1934}}}}.
5. ^English, p. 95

Footnotes

{{reflist|2}}

References

  • {{cite book|last=English|first=John|title=Amazon to Ivanhoe: British Standard Destroyers of the 1930s|year=1993|publisher=World Ship Society|location=Kendal, England|isbn=0-905617-64-9}}
  • {{cite book|last=Whitley|first=M. J.|title=Destroyers of World War Two: An International Encyclopedia|publisher=Naval Institute Press|year=1988|isbn=0-87021-326-1|location=Annapolis, Maryland}}

External links

  • HMS Gipsy at naval-history.net
{{coord|51|57|N|1|19|E|display=title}}{{G and H class destroyer}}{{November 1939 shipwrecks}}{{good article}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Gipsy (H63)}}

7 : G and H-class destroyers of the Royal Navy|Ships built in Govan|1935 ships|World War II destroyers of the United Kingdom|Maritime incidents in November 1939|Ships sunk by mines|1939 disasters in the United Kingdom

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