Difference between revisions of "H.M.S. Gorgon (1914)"

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==In Command==
 
==In Command==
 
*Commander [[Charles Arthur Robertson-Scott|C.A. Scott]]
 
*Commander [[Charles Arthur Robertson-Scott|C.A. Scott]]
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==Footnotes==
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{{reflist}}
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==Bibliography==
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*{{BibBuxton1978}}
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{{Template:HMS Gorgon Class (1913)}}
 
{{Template:HMS Gorgon Class (1913)}}
  
[[Category:Ship]]
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[[Category:Ships|Gorgon]]

Revision as of 04:18, 17 September 2009

H.M.S. Gorgon
Career Details
Pendant Number: N.51
Builder: Armstrong, Elswick
Ordered: 1912
Laid down: 11 June, 1913
Launched: 9 June, 1914
Commissioned: 11 September, 1918
Lost: 16 September, 1918
Fate: Sunk by internal explosion
General Characteristics
Displacement (normal): 4,825 tons
Length: 290 feet
Beam: 74 feet
Draught: 16 feet 4 inches
Propulsion: 2 Shaft Triple Expansion, 4,000 shp. 4 Yarrow boilers
Speed: 13 knots
Range:
Complement: 303
Armament:
  • 2 × BL 9.2"/50 Elswick Pattern 'E' guns in single Mark IX mountings
  • 6 × BL 6"/49 Mark XVIII guns in single Mark IV mountings

H.M.S. Gorgon was an ex-Norwegian coast defence battleship which was purchased while building in Britain by the Royal Navy during the First World War for use as a monitor. Originally to have been named the Nidaros, the Gorgon was so heavily modified and her completion deemed such a low priority that she missed most of the war. To her fell the duty of firing the last rounds on the German-held Belgian coast.

Construction

The Nidaros was ordered from Armstrong's in Elswick in January, 1913. She was launched on 9 June, 1914 by Madame Vogt, the wife of the Norwegian Minister to Great Britain.

In Command

Footnotes

Bibliography

  • Buxton, Ian L. (1978). Big Gun Monitors: The History of the Design, Construction and Operation of the Royal Navy's Monitors. Tynemouth: World Ship Society. (on Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk)

Template:HMS Gorgon Class (1913)