HMS Dryad (1893)

HMS Dryad was the name ship of the Dryad-class torpedo gunboats. She was launched at Chatham Dockyard on 22 November 1893,[2] the first of the class to be completed. She served as a minesweeper during World War I and was broken up in 1920.

HMS Dryad underway in wartime grey paint
History
United Kingdom
Name: HMS Dryad
Builder: Chatham Dockyard
Laid down: 15 April 1893[1]
Launched: 22 November 1893
Commissioned: 21 July 1894[1]
Renamed: HMS Hamadryad in 1918
Fate: Broken up in 1920
General characteristics [1]
Class and type: Dryad-class torpedo gunboat
Tons burthen: 1070 tons
Length: 262 ft 6 in (80.0 m)
Beam: 30 ft 6 in (9.3 m)
Draught: 13 ft (4.0 m)
Installed power: 3,500 ihp (2,600 kW)
Propulsion:
  • 2 × 3-cylinder vertical triple-expansion steam engines
  • Locomotive boilers
  • Twin screws
Speed: 18.2 kn (33.7 km/h)
Complement: 120
Armament:
  • 2 × QF 4.7-inch (12 cm) guns
  • 4 × 6-pounder
  • 1 × Nordenfelt machine gun
  • 5 × 18-inch torpedo tubes
  • On conversion to a minesweeper in 1914 two torpedo tubes were removed

Design

Ordered under the Naval Defence Act of 1889, which established the "Two-Power Standard", the class was contemporary with the first torpedo boat destroyers. With a length overall of 262 ft 6 in (80.01 m),[1] a beam of 30 ft 6 in (9.30 m)[1] and a displacement of 1,070 tons,[1] these torpedo gunboats were not small ships by the standard of the time; they were larger than the majority of World War I destroyers. Dryad was engined by Maudslay, Sons & Field with two sets of vertical triple-expansion steam engines, two locomotive-type boilers, and twin screws. This layout produced 3,500 indicated horsepower (2,600 kW),[1] giving her a speed of 18.2 knots (33.7 km/h).[1] She carried between 100 and 160 tons of coal and was manned by 120 sailors and officers.[1]

Armament

The armament when built comprised two QF 4.7-inch (12 cm) guns, four 6-punder guns and a single 5-barrelled Nordenfelt machine gun. Her primary weapon was five 18-inch (450-mm) torpedo tubes,[Note 1] with two reloads.[1] On conversion to a minesweeper in 1914 two of the five torpedoes were removed.[1]

Service history

Mediterranean service

Dryad deployed to Crete in February 1897 to operate as part of the International Squadron, a multinational force made up of ships of the Austro-Hungarian Navy, French Navy, Imperial German Navy, Italian Royal Navy (Regia Marina), Imperial Russian Navy, and Royal Navy that intervened in the 1897-1898 Greek uprising on Crete against rule by the Ottoman Empire. On 21 February 1897, she joined the British battleship HMS Revenge and torpedo gunboat HMS Harrier, the Russian battleship Imperator Aleksandr II, the Austro-Hungarian armored cruiser SMS Kaiserin und Königin Maria Theresia, and the German protected cruiser SMS Kaiserin Augusta in the International Squadron′s first direct offensive action, a brief bombardment of Cretan insurgent positions on the heights east of Canea (now Chania) after the insurgents refused the squadron′s order to take down a Greek flag they had raised.[3][4]

Commander Francis Goodyere Dineley was appointed in command in December 1899, as Dryad was commissioned for more service on the Mediterranean Station. On 14 January 1900 Dryad left Chatham for the Mediterranean in order to relieve Hussar, which returned to Devonport to pay off.[5] She was stationed at Souda Bay until March 1900, when she returned to the station garrison at Malta.[6] Lieutenant Charles Coode was appointed in command on 15 January 1902.[7] From June that year she was lent to the East Indies Squadron for special service in the Gulf of Aden,[8] returning back at Malta in late September.[9]

Tender to the Navigation School

In 1906 she was chosen as the tender to the Navigation School, conducting navigation training of officers at sea. In due course her name came to be used for the Navigation School itself, and then for HMS Dryad, the shore establishment at Southwick House in Hampshire.

On 20 June 1907, Dryad rescued the crew of HM Torpedo Boat 99 after the torpedo boat sank without loss of life during afternoon steam trials in the English Channel off Torquay, England, when her propeller shaft broke and punctured her hull.[10]

Wartime service as a minesweeper

By 1914 Dryad had been converted to a minesweeper and was operating in the North Sea from the port of Lowestoft.

HMS Dryad Floated at Chatham, 25 November 1893, by Miss Cecil Heneage, Daughter of Sir Algernon C F Heneage, KCB

Gunner Ernest Martin Jehan and three other gunners from Dryad were assigned to the Q-ship Inverlyon, with Jehan in command.[11] On 15 August 1915 they sank the German submarine UB-4 with gunfire.[11] Jehan was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for his part in the action.[12]

Disposal

She was renamed Hamadryad in 1918 and was sold to H Auten & Co on 24 September 1920 for breaking.[1]

Notes

  1. British "18 inch" torpedoes were 17.72 inches (45.0 cm) in diameter
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References

Citations

  1. Winfield (2004), p.307.
  2. "Battleships-cruisers.co.uk". Retrieved 13 May 2008.
  3. McTiernan, p. 17.
  4. McTiernan, Mick, "Spyros Kayales – A different sort of flagpole," mickmctiernan.com, 20 November 2012.
  5. "Index of 19th Century Naval Vessels". Retrieved 13 May 2008.
  6. "Naval & Military intelligence". The Times (36078). London. 1 March 1900. p. 6.
  7. "Naval & Military intelligence". The Times (36667). London. 17 January 1902. p. 9.
  8. "Naval & Military intelligence". The Times (36785). London. 4 June 1902. p. 9.
  9. "Naval & Military intelligence". The Times (36885). London. 29 September 1902. p. 8.
  10. Anonymous, "Torpedo Boat Sunk," Poverty Bay Herald, Volume XXXIV, Issue 11045, 10 August 1907.
  11. Perkins, Hugh (September 2008). "The gunner and the U-boat". Sea Classics. Canoga Park, California: Challenge Publications. OCLC 60621086. Retrieved 5 March 2009.
  12. "No. 32114". The London Gazette. 5 November 1920. p. 10754.

Bibliography

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