Difference between revisions of "H.M.S. Viper (1899)"

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|name=Viper
 
|name=Viper
 
|launch=6 Sep, 1899{{Conways1860|p. 98}}
 
|launch=6 Sep, 1899{{Conways1860|p. 98}}
|builder=[[Parsons]]<br>hull: [[Hawthorn Leslie]]{{Conways1860|p. 98}}
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|builder=[[C. A. Parsons & Company]]<br>hull: [[Hawthorn Leslie & Company]]{{Conways1860|p. 98}}
 
|laid=1898{{Conways1860|p. 98}}
 
|laid=1898{{Conways1860|p. 98}}
 
|fate=Stranded
 
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==Service==
 
==Service==
''Viper'' ran aground on rocks in thick fog on 3 August, 1901 while participating in the annual manoeuvres.  A Court Martial found that Lieutenant and Commander [[William Speke]] had not kept an accurate record of courses and had failed to take suitable precautions in the fog, and his navigating Sub-Lieutenant [[Alan James Mackenzie-Grieve]] was found to have of inserting courses into the ship's log after the fact, which incurred Their Lordships' displeasure.{{HepperLosses|p. 16}}
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''Viper'' ran aground on rocks in thick fog on 3 August, 1901 while participating in the [[Annual Manoeuvres of 1901]].  A Court Martial found that Lieutenant and Commander [[William Speke]] had not kept an accurate record of courses and had failed to take suitable precautions in the fog, and his navigating Sub-Lieutenant [[Alan James Mackenzie-Grieve]] was found to have inserted courses into the ship's log after the fact, which incurred Their Lordships' displeasure.{{HepperLosses|p. 16}}
  
 
==Captains==
 
==Captains==

Latest revision as of 15:59, 31 December 2019

H.M.S. Viper (1899)
Builder: C. A. Parsons & Company
hull: Hawthorn Leslie & Company[1]
Laid down: 1898[2]
Launched: 6 Sep, 1899[3]
Commissioned: 1900[4]
Stranded: 1901[5]

H.M.S. Viper was one of forty "C" class destroyers built for the Royal Navy — a "30 knotter".

Service

Viper ran aground on rocks in thick fog on 3 August, 1901 while participating in the Annual Manoeuvres of 1901. A Court Martial found that Lieutenant and Commander William Speke had not kept an accurate record of courses and had failed to take suitable precautions in the fog, and his navigating Sub-Lieutenant Alan James Mackenzie-Grieve was found to have inserted courses into the ship's log after the fact, which incurred Their Lordships' displeasure.[6]

Captains

Dates of appointment are provided when known.

See Also

Footnotes

  1. Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860–1905. p. 98.
  2. Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860–1905. p. 98.
  3. Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860–1905. p. 98.
  4. Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860–1905. p. 98.
  5. Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860–1905. p. 98.
  6. Hepper. British Warship Losses in the Ironclad Era: 1860-1919. p. 16.

Bibliography


"C" Class Destroyer
Star Whiting Bat Chamois Crane
Flying Fish Fawn Flirt Bullfinch Dove
Violet Sylvia Lee Avon Bittern
Otter Leopard Vixen Brazen Electra
Recruit Vulture Kestrel Cheerful Mermaid
Greyhound Racehorse Roebuck Gipsy Fairy
Osprey Leven Falcon Ostrich Thorn
Tiger Vigilant Albatross Viper Velox
<– "B" Class Destroyers (UK) "D" Class –>