HMS Loch Dunvegan (K425)
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Template:Infobox ship imageTemplate:Infobox ship careerTemplate:Infobox ship careerTemplate:Infobox ship characteristicsHMS Loch Dunvegan was a Template:Sclass2 frigate of the British Royal Navy, named after Loch Dunvegan in Scotland. Launched in 1944, the ship saw service in the Second World War, and in the Mediterranean Fleet in the early 1950s, before being broken up in 1960.
Design and constructionEdit
The Loch class was designed to meet the requirement for large numbers of long-range escorts for the Royal Navy. They were a development of the earlier Template:Sclass2, but designed for mass production, with pre-fabricated sections to be built by general engineering companies and assembled at shipyards.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Anti-submarine armament and sonar was also significantly improved.Template:Sfn
The ships were Template:Convert long overall and Template:Convert between perpendiculars, with a beam of Template:Convert,Template:Sfn and a draught of Template:Convert.Template:Sfn Displacement was Template:Convert standard and Template:Convert deep load.Template:Sfn The ships were powered by two 4-cylinder triple expansion steam engines fed with steam from two Admiralty 3-drum boilers and rated at Template:Convert. This gave a speed of Template:Convert.Template:Sfn Sufficient fuel was carried to give a range of Template:Convert at Template:Convert in tropical waters.Template:Sfn
The ships' main gun armament was a single QF 4-inch (102 mm) Mk V gun forward, with an anti-aircraft armament of a quadruple 2-pounder (40 mm) pom-pom aft and at least six Oerlikon 20 mm cannon (two twin powered mountings and at least two single mounts). Two Squid anti-submarine mortars were fitted, with 120 rounds carried, backed up by 15 conventional depth charges.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Type 147B and Type 144 sonars were fitted, while Type 277 radar detected surface and air targets.Template:Sfn As built, the ship had a complement of 114 officers and men.Template:Sfn
The ship was ordered on 19 January 1943 as the third of her class,Template:Sfn and was laid down at Charles Hill & Sons' Bristol shipyard on 29 September 1943. Loch Dunvegan was launched on 25 March 1944 by the wife of the shipyard owner,Template:Sfn as the first ship of her name to serve with the Royal Navy.Template:Sfn The ship completed fitting out on 25 June 1944, with a construction time of 274 days.Template:Sfn
Service historyEdit
Second World WarEdit
Commissioning in June 1944 with the pennant number K425,<ref name="naval-history.net">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> the ship was allocated for service in the 10th Escort Group based on the Clyde.Template:Sfn In August she was attached to the 20th Escort Group to prepare for Russian convoy duty,<ref name="naval-history.net"/> but on 12 August 1944<ref group="lower-alpha">English states that the collision happened on 20 August,Template:Sfn but both Boniface and Ruegg & Hague state that Loch Dunvegan formed part of the escort of convoy JW 59 from 15 August.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn</ref> was in collision with the destroyer Template:HMS.Template:Sfn While Loch Dunvegan was quickly repaired, Bulldog was more severely damaged, and did not return to service until September that year.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn On 15 August Loch Dunvegan left Loch Ewe as part of the close escort for Convoy JW 59 to Murmansk.Template:Sfn On 24 August Loch Dunvegan, together with the destroyer Template:HMS and the sloops Template:HMS and Template:HMS took part in the sinking of the Template:GS.Template:Sfn The next day the convoy arrived at Kola Inlet and Loch Dunvegan was detached to prepare for the return convoy, and left the Kola Inlet on 28 August with Convoy RA 59A for the return journey.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
On 5 September 1944 Loch Dunvegan rejoined the 10th Escort Group based at Londonderry Port, to serve in convoy and anti-submarine operations in the North Atlantic.Template:Sfn<ref name="naval-history.net"/> From 11 December 1944, the ship was refitted on the Tyne, resuming operations in the North Atlantic on completion of the refit in January 1945.Template:Sfn In February 1945, the 10th Escort Group was deployed to patrol the Faroe–Shetland Channel to stop German submarines using it as a transit route to the Atlantic.Template:Sfn On 14 February 1945, the Escort Group was patrolling north of Shetland when the frigate Template:HMS detected a submarine using sonar. Baynton, Template:HMS, Loch Dunvegan and Template:HMS carried out a series of attacks, with wreckage and two survivors coming to the surface after Loch Dunvegan carried out three attacks with her Squid motor. The survivors died shortly after being picked up but confirmed that Template:GS had been sunk.Template:Sfn Loch DunveganTemplate:'s commanding officer was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross as a result of this action.Template:Sfn In March the Group was transferred to the English Channel to continue operations against U-boats.<ref name="naval-history.net"/>
Post-warEdit
After the German surrender in May 1945 the ship was transferred to the Rosyth Escort Force where she was employed in Air-Sea Rescue duty in the Atlantic, and in June 1945 supported re-occupation operations in Norway.Template:Sfn In August 1945 Loch Dunvegan was transferred to the 1st Anti-Submarine Training Flotilla based at Londonderry. In late 1945, the frigate ran aground in Lough Foyle and was under repair in Belfast until April 1946 when she returned to service with the 4th Training Flotilla at Londonderry.Template:Sfn Loch Dunvegan was decommissioned and placed in reserve at Devonport in April 1947.Template:Sfn
In 1948 the ship's pennant number was changed from K425 to F425.<ref name="naval-history.net"/> Loch Dunvegan was refitted at Penarth in Wales from January to May 1949, before returning to reserve.Template:Sfn
Mediterranean Fleet, 1950sEdit
After a refit Loch Dunvegan was recommissioned on 1 May 1950 for service in the 2nd Frigate Flotilla of the Mediterranean Fleet, arriving at Malta on 26 June. The usual programme of exercises and visits followed, and including a period as Guard ship at Aqaba. While under repair at Gibraltar on 27 April 1951 she gave assistance after the destruction of the ammunition ship RFA Bedenham in an explosion. In May 1951 she returned to Malta to rejoin the 2nd Frigate Flotilla, but when entering Mellieħa, she grounded, sustaining extensive damage, including the loss of propeller blades. Further repairs took until September, and on her arrival at Sliema the ship was involved in a series of collisions, including one with the destroyer Template:HMS. In January–February 1952 Loch Dunvegan was deployed as Guardship at Port Said, and provided shore parties in support of the military authorities after widespread anti-British riots. Flotilla duties and exercises then occupied her until November 1952 when she returned to the UK, was decommissioned and put into reserve at Devonport and then Penarth.<ref name="naval-history.net"/>
Loch Dunvegan remained in reserve at Penarth until 1960 when she was sold for scrapping at Thos. W. Ward of Briton Ferry, where the ship arrived under tow on 24 August 1960.<ref name="naval-history.net"/>
NotesEdit
ReferencesEdit
BibliographyEdit
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|_exclude=case, year, _debug | last1 = Colledge | first1 = J. J. | author-link1= J. J. Colledge | last2 = Warlow | first2 = Ben | date = 2006 | orig-date = 1969 | title = Ships of the Royal Navy: {{#if:|The Complete Record of All Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy|The Complete Record of all Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy}} | edition = Rev. | location = London | publisher = Chatham Publishing | isbn = 978-1-86176-281-8
}}
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External linksEdit
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