The Latest from David C Wallace, author /historian. Writer of the British Chronology Series.
Friday, 14 November 2014
1941 November 14. Sinking of Ark Royal.
HMS Ark Royal (91)
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For other ships of the same name, see HMS Ark Royal.
HMS Ark Royal in 1939, with Swordfish of 820 Naval Air Squadron passing overhead
Career (United Kingdom)
Name: HMS Ark Royal (91)
Ordered: 1934 build programme
Builder: Cammell Laird and Company Ltd.
Laid down: 16 September 1935
Launched: 13 April 1937
Commissioned: 16 December 1938
Motto: Desire n'a pas Repos – "Zeal Does Not Rest"
Honours and
awards:
Norway 1940
Spartivento 1940
Mediterranean 1940–41
Bismarck 1941
Malta Convoys 1941
Fate: Sank 14 November 1941
after being torpedoed by U-81 on 13 November 1941
General characteristics
Type: Unique aircraft carrier
Displacement: 22,000 long tons (22,000 t) standard
27,720 long tons (28,160 t) loaded
Length: 800 ft (240 m) overall
721 ft 6 in (219.91 m) waterline
Beam: 94 ft 9.6 in (28.895 m)
Draught: 27.8 ft 9.6 in (8.717 m)
Propulsion: 3 × Parsons geared turbines
6 × Admiralty 3-drum boilers
3 × shafts
Speed: 30 kn (35 mph; 56 km/h) as designed
31 kn (36 mph; 57 km/h) actual
Range: 7,600 nmi (8,700 mi; 14,100 km) at 20 kn (23 mph; 37 km/h)
Complement: 1,580 officers and sailors
Armament: 16 × 4.5 in (110 mm) dual purpose guns (8×2)
32 × 2-pounder (40 mm (1.57 in)) "Pom-pom" anti-aircraft guns (4×8)[1]
32 × .50 in (12.7 mm) anti-aircraft machine guns (8×4)
Armour: Belt: 4.5 in (11.4 cm)
Deck: 3.5 in (8.9 cm) over boiler rooms and magazines
Aircraft carried:
72 (designed)
50–60 (actual)
1939–40: 26 × Fairey Swordfish, 24 × Blackburn Skuas
1940–41: 30 × Fairey Swordfish, 12 × Blackburn Skuas, 12 × Fairey Fulmars
1941: 36 × Fairey Swordfish, 18 × Fairey Fulmars
Aviation facilities: 2 × catapults
HMS Ark Royal (pennant number 91) was an aircraft carrier of the Royal Navy that served during the Second World War.
Designed in 1934 to fit the restrictions of the Washington Naval Treaty, Ark Royal was built by Cammell Laird and Company Ltd. at Birkenhead, England, and completed in November 1938. Her design differed from previous aircraft carriers. Ark Royal was the first ship on which the hangars and flight deck were an integral part of the hull, instead of an add-on or part of the superstructure. Designed to carry a large number of aircraft, she had two hangar deck levels. She served during a period that first saw the extensive use of naval air power; a number of carrier tactics were developed and refined aboard Ark Royal.
Ark Royal served in some of the most active naval theatres of the Second World War. She was involved in the first aerial and U-boat kills of the war, operations off Norway, the search for the German battleship Bismarck, and the Malta Convoys. Ark Royal survived several near misses and gained a reputation as a 'lucky ship'. The Germans incorrectly reported her as sunk on multiple occasions.
She was torpedoed on 13 November 1941 by the German submarine U-81 and sank the following day. Her sinking was the subject of several inquiries; investigators were keen to know how the carrier was lost, in spite of efforts to save the ship and tow her to the naval base at Gibraltar. They found that several design flaws contributed to the loss, which were rectified in new British carriers.
Her wreck was discovered by a BBC crew in December 2002, approximately 30 nmi (35 mi; 56 km) from Gibraltar.
Contents
Design
Construction
Armament and aircraft
Service history
With the hunter-killer groups
Another near miss
Hunting the Graf Spee
Return to the fleet
Norwegian campaign
Mediterranean deployment
Searching for Scharnhorst and Gneisenau
Malta convoys and Operation Tiger
Hunting the Bismarck
Escorting the Malta convoys
Final voyage and sinking
Investigation
Rediscovery
Notes
Citations
References
External links
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