HMS Danae (I44)
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ORP Conrad |
|
Career | |
---|---|
Ordered | 1916 |
Laid down | December 1, 1916 |
Launched: | January 26, 1918 |
Commissioned | July 22, 1918 (Royal Navy) October 4, 1944 (Polish Navy) |
Decommissioned | October 4, 1944 (Royal Navy) September 28, 1946 (Polish Navy) |
Fate | scrapped March 27, 1948 in Barrow |
Current position | |
General characteristics | |
Displacement: | Standard: 4276 tons Full: 5603 tons After 1924: 4850 tons |
Length | 146.50 m |
Beam | 14.02 m |
Draft | 4.41 m |
Speed | 29 knots ( km/h) |
Complement | 462 |
Armament | 1918: six 152 mm Mk XII guns, two 76,2 mm Mk II AA guns two 40 mm 2 pdr Pom-pom AA guns twelve 533 mm torpedo launchers 1930: six 152 mm Mk XII guns, three 102 mm Mk V AA guns two 40 mm 2 pdr Pom-pom AA guns twelve 533 mm torpedo launchers 1942: six 152 mm Mk XII guns two 102 mm Mk V AA guns six 40 mm 2 pdr Pom-pom AA twelve 533 mm torpedo launchers 1943: five 152 mm guns, one 102 mm gun, 8 x 40 mm 2 pdr Pom-pom AA guns, 12 x 20 mm AA guns, depth charge launcher |
HMS Danae, during World War II known as ORP Conrad, was the lead ship of the Danae class cruisers (also known as the D class), serving with the Royal Navy between the world wars and with the Polish Navy during World War II.
She was laid 1 December 1916 in the Armstrong Whitworth Shipyard in Walker-on-Tyne and launched 26 January 1918. The lead ship of her class, she was one of the fastest cruiser of her times. Propelled by two Brown-Curtis steam turbines of 40,000 HP, 6 cauldrons and 2 propellors, she could travel at 29 knots. With 1,060 tons of oil in its tanks, she had a range of 1480 NM at 29 knots and 6,700 NM at 10 knots. She was also decently-armoured, with the sides and the command deck protected with 76 mm of reinforced steel, the tanks and munition chambers with 57 mm, and the main deck with 25 mm.
Attached to the Harwich-based 5th Light Cruiser Squadron, she took part in several North Sea patrols during the last months of World War I. Between October and November of the following year, she passed to the Baltic Sea, where she supported the Whites in the Russian Civil War, along with her sister ship HMS Dragon and HMS Dauntless. In February of 1920 she was attached to the 1st Light Cruiser Squadron of the Atlantic Fleet. In 1923 she was attached to the Special Service Squadron, a naval fleet created for propaganda purpose. The flotilla consisted of HMS Hood, HMS Repulse and the cruisers HMS Delhi, HMS Dragon, HMS Dauntless and HMS Dunedin, as well as 9 other ships (mostly destroyers), and was bound on a journey around the world. The Squadron left Devonport on 27 November and headed for Freetown in Sierra Leone. Then the task force visited Capetown, Port Elizabeth, East London and Durban, to where she arrived the last day of the year. The following day the Squadron left for Zanzibar, then visited Trincomalee, Singapore, Albany, Adelaide, Melbourne, Hobart and Sydney, from where she left for Wellington in New Zealand. She left the port in May and on 16 May paid a short visit to Suva and Samara on Fiji, then to Honolulu (6 June), Victoria (25 June), Vancouver and then San Francisco (until 11 July. There the Squadron was split and the light cruisers headed for Great Britain through the Panama Canal and various ports in South America, including British Guyana, Antilles and Jamaica.
Transferred to the Mediterranean, between 1927 and 1929 the HMS Danae served as an escort of the 1st Cruiser Squadron, after which she was withdrawn to Great Britain for refurbishment and modernisation. In 1930 she returned to active service and was attached to the 8th Cruiser Squadron stationed in the British West Indies. In 1935, at the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War, she escorted various evacuation convoys from Shanghai to Hong Kong and was fired at by the Japanese Navy. After that in November she was again moved to Great Britain and preserved in reserve. Again mobilized in July 1939, she was attached to the 9th Cruiser Squadron, initially operating in Southern Atlantic and then Indian Ocean (since October). On 23 March 1940 she was attached to the Malaya Force and took part in various patrols in the area of the Dutch East Indies and Singapore. On 20 January she was attached to the China Force and started to escort convoys in the Yellow Sea and between the Dutch Indies and Ceylon, together with HMS Durban, HMS Dauntless, HMAS Canberra and HMS Cornwall. On February 24 she arrived to Batavia and then to Colombo, from where she was withdrawn to Cape Town for refurbishment.
She returned to active service in July 1943, after 11 months in shipyard. In March 1944 she returned to Great Britain and was attached to the 1st Cruiser Squadron. Prior to the Invasion of Normandy she left to the Sword Beach area, where she carried over ground support missions, together with HMS Ramillies, HMS Warspite, HMS Mauritius, HMS Frobisher, HMS Arethusa and ORP Dragon, as well as 10 S class, V class and Hunt class destroyers. In July the squadron moved to the area of Port en Bessin and Ouistreham only to return to Great Britain in August. Withdrawn from active service, she was used as a hulk in the port of Plymouth.
After the loss of ORP Dragon, on 4 October she was leased to the Polish Navy. A sister ship of ORP Dragon, she was manned mostly by the surviving part of her crew. Commanded by Cmdr. Stanisław Dzienisiewicz, she was being refurbished in Southampton and then Chatham until 23 January 1945. Initially the ship was to be renamed to either ORP Wilno or ORP Lwów, after the cities of Wilno (Vilnius) and Lwów (Lvov). Because these cities were in Soviet-occupied Lithuania and the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic respectively — in spite of Polish claims to them — the British authorities objected. It was decided to give the ship a politically neutral name , ORP Conrad, after Józef Konrad Korzeniowski, better known under his English name of Joseph Conrad. In February, the ship moved to Scapa Flow, on 2 April she was attached to the 10th Cruiser Squadron (HMS Birmingham, HMS Bellona, HMS Diadem and HMS Dido), but was again withdrawn for repair of damaged turbine a week later. She left the shipyard only on 30 May, three weeks after war in Europe ended. Attached to the 29th Destroyer Flotilla (HMS Zodiac, HMS Zephyr and HMS Zest), she was briefly stationed in the port of Wilhelmshaven, the main base of the Kriegsmarine recently captured by the Polish 1st Armoured Division.
Until the end of 1945 she served as a transport ship, transporting Polish Red Cross help to Norway and Denmark. In January of the following year she returned to Rosyth for good, from where she carried over training tasks with the remaining ships of the Polish Navy: ORP Błyskawica, ORP Piorun and ORP Garland. On 8 March the ships were decommissioned from the Home Fleet and the Polish crews started preparations to hand them over to the British. By August the ship's crew was reduced to merely 50% and on 28 September she was returned to the Royal Navy. Renamed back to HMS Danae she was taken over by the Care & Maitenance Party and moved to Falmouth. On 22 January 1948 she was sold to T.W. Ward company and scrapped following 27 March 1948 in the Vickers Armstrong shipyard in Barrow-in-Furness.