HMS Cricket (1915)
Royal Navy Insect-class gunboat
A 1915 postcard drawing of HMS Cricket and a Zeppelin airship
History
United Kingdom
Name HMS Cricket
Builder Barclay Curle
Launched 17 December 1915
Fate Crippled in an air attack, 12 July 1941. Declared constructive loss, 30 June 1942. Used for spare parts and hull sunk as target by RAF.
General characteristics
Class and type Insect-class gunboat
Displacement 625 long tons (635 t)
Length 237 ft 6 in (72.39 m)
Beam 36 ft (11 m)
Draught 4 ft (1.2 m)
Propulsion 2 shaft VTE engines, 2 Yarrow type mixed firing boilers 2000 IHP
Speed 14 knots (16 mph; 26 km/h)
Complement 55
Armament
Armour Improvised
HMS Cricket was a Royal Navy Insect-class gunboat . She was built by Barclay Curle and launched on 17 December 1915.
During the First World War , Cricket took part in the Mesopotamian Campaign as part of the gunboat squadron operating on the Euphrates and Tigris rivers. During the Russian Civil War , Cricket served as part of the British intervention forces fighting in support of White Russian forces on the Dvina River during 1919-1920.
During the Second World War , Cricket was in China until 1940 then transferred to the Mediterranean Fleet's Inshore Squadron. On 12 July 1941 she was crippled in an air attack by Regia Aeronautica unit 97 Gruppo (Group) and its 239 Squadriglia (Squadron), led by Major Giuseppe Cenni. One of Cenni's crew took a picture of her during the attack.[ 1]
She was declared a constructive total loss on 30 June 1942 and stripped for spares at Alexandria , Egypt in 1942. Her hull was towed to Cyprus and used as a target for Royal Air Force training off Dhekelia where the sunken hull is an attraction for scuba divers.
References
^ Smith 2011, pp. 217–218.
Bibliography
Lenton, H. T. and Colledge, J.J. (1973) Warships of World War II , 2nd ed., Shepperton : Ian Allan, 653 p., ISBN 0-7110-0403-X
Smith, Peter C. The Junkers Ju 87 Stuka: A Complete History . London: Crécy Publishing, 2011. ISBN 978-0-85979-156-4 .
Zolandez, Thomas (2004). "Question 6/01: Japanese WW II Spy". Warship International . XLI (1): 33– 34. ISSN 0043-0374 .
External links
Shipwrecks and maritime incidents in June 1941
Shipwrecks Other incidents
Shipwrecks and maritime incidents in June 1942
Shipwrecks
1 Jun: HMAS Kuttabul , Malmö
2 Jun: U-652
3 Jun: USS Bunting , Iron Chieftain , Northwestern
4 Jun: Iron Crown , Kaga , Sōryū
5 Jun: Akagi , C.O. Stillman , Hiryū
6 Jun: USS Hammann , Mikuma
7 Jun: Coast Trader , Edith , USS Gannet , USS Yorktown
8 Jun: Agios Georgios IV , Said
10 Jun: Abkhazia , Empire Clough
12 Jun: HMS Grove
13 Jun: Gruziya , Supetar , U-157
15 Jun: HMS Airedale , HMS Bedouin , City of Oxford , HMS Hasty , Thurso , Trento
16 Jun: Argo , HMS Hermione , ORP Kujawiak , Managua , HMAS Nestor , Port Nicholson
17 Jun: HMS Wild Swan
18 Jun: Macdhui
19 Jun: USS S-27 , Shch-214 , USS YP-389 , Nissan Maru
20 Jun: Fort Camosun
21 Jun: HMS P514 , HMSAS Parktown
22 Jun: Rio Tercero
23 Jun: USAT Major General Henry Gibbins , Resolute
25 Jun: Yamakaze
26 Jun: Putney Hill
27 Jun: Las Choapas , Tuxpam
29 Jun: Diana , Everalda , Thomas McKean , William Rockefeller
30 Jun: Express , USS Hornbill , HMS Medway , U-158
Other incidents