HMS K13
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Career | |
---|---|
Ordered: | August 1915 |
Laid down: | |
Launched: | 11 November 1916 at Fairfield Shipbuilders, Glasgow |
Commissioned: | |
Decommissioned: | |
Fate: | sold for scrapping 16 December 1926 in Sunderland |
Struck: | |
General Characteristics | |
Displacement: | 1980 tons surfaced, 2566 tons dived |
Length: | 339 ft (103 m) |
Beam: | 26 ft 6 in (8.1 m) |
Draught: | 20 ft 11 in (6.4 m) |
Propulsion: | Twin 10 500 shp (7.8 MW) oil-fired Yarrow boilers each powering a Brown-Curtis or Parsons geared steam turbines, Twin 3 blade 7 ft 6 in (2.3 m) screws Four 1440 hp (1.1 MW) electric motors. One 800 hp (600 kW) Vickers diesel generator for charging batteries on the surface. |
Speed: | 24 knots (44 km/h) surfaced, 8 knots (15 km/h) dived |
Range: | Surface: 800 nautical miles (1500 km) at maximum speed, 12500 nautical miles (23,200 k) at 10 knots (19 km/h) Dived: 8 nautical miles (15 km) at 8 knots (15 km/h), 40 nautical miles (74 km) at 4 knots (7 km/h) |
Complement: | 59 (6 officers and 53 ratings) |
Armament: | 4 x 18 in (457 mm) beam torpedo tubes, 4 x 18 in (457 mm) bow tubes, plus 8 spare torpedoes, 2 x 4 in (102 mm) guns, 1 x 3 in (76 mm) gun. Twin 18 in (457 mm) deck tubes originally fitted but later removed. |
HMS K13 was a steam-propelled First World War K class submarine of the British Royal Navy. She sunk in a fatal accident during sea trials in early 1917 and was salvaged and recommissioned as HMS K22.
She had previously suffered another accident when heavy seas had damaged one of the funnels and water had nearly flooded her engine room. The damage had been repaired but the next one was far more serious.
[edit] The accident
She sank in Gareloch on 19 January 1917 just after noon, having signalled to HMS E50 that she was about to dive. She had 80 people onboard - 53 crew, 14 employees of the shipbuilders, five sub-contractors, five Admiralty officials, a River Clyde pilot, and the captain and engineering officer from the still-completing K14.
As she dived, seawater entered her engine room through openings which failed to close properly and flooded it along with the after torpedo room. As the submarine sunk, a 10 ton ballast weight was dropped but this did not arrest the descent. Two men were seen on the surface by a maid in a hotel a mile or so away but her report was ignored. The crew of E50 became concerned when the submarine did not surface again, and found traces of oil on the surface.
The first rescue vessel, Gossamer, arrived at around 22:00 and divers were sent down at daybreak. The divers were delayed since Gossamer had a diver but no suit, and the first diver to attempt to contact the submarine had a damaged suit which nearly flooded.
Morse code signals were exchanged between them and the trapped crew of the submarine. Despite the lack of proper escape apparatus, the captain Lieutenant-Commander Godfrey Herbert, and the captain of K14, Captain Goodhart attempted an escape to the surface by using the space between the inner and outer hatches of the conning tower as an airlock. Herbert reached the surface alive but Goodhart's body was later found trapped in the superstructure.
Later that afternoon an airline was connected which allowed the ballast tanks to be blown and with the aid of a hawser and by midday on 21 January the bows had been brought to just above the surface and supported by a barge on each side. A hole was cut through her pressure hull and at 22:00 the final survivor was rescued from the submarine, 57 hours after the accident. At 6 p.m. the following day, she tore the bollards out of the barges and sunk again, flooding through the hole.
The submarine was finally salvaged on 15 March, repaired and recommissioned as HMS K22. 32 crew died in the accident and 48 were rescued. 31 were expected to be still on the submarine, but only 29 were found and it was concluded that the maid had indeed seen two people escaping from the engine room. One of their bodies was recovered from the Clyde two months later.
The court of enquiry found that four of the 37 inch (940 mm) diameter ventilators had been left open during the dive, and that indicators lights in the control room had actually showed them as open. The engine room hatch was also found to be open.
The HMS K5 was lost with all hands in January 1921, also due to problems with the air intakes that ventilate the boiler rooms.
There is a memorial to the disaster in Carlingford, New South Wales, Australia, paid for by the widow of Charles Freestone, a leading telegraphist on K13 who survived the accident to later emigrate and prosper in Australia. The memorial was unveiled on 10 September 1961 and has the inscription "This memorial has been created in memory of those officers and men of the Commonwealth who gave their lives in submarines while serving the cause of freedom. It is called the "K13" memorial in particular memory of those lost in HM Submarine K13."
[edit] HMS K22
A year after the accident, as part of the 13th Submarine Flotilla, K13, now renamed K22 was involved in the "Battle" of May Island on 31 January 1918. This was during a night exercise in the Firth of Forth involving the flotilla, 8 capital ships and numerous cruisers and destroyers, and was a series of collisions which led to the loss of two K boats, serious damage to three others (including K22) and the deaths of a further 105 submariners.
[edit] References
British K-class submarine |
K1 | K2 | K3 | K4 | K5 | K6 | K7 | K8 | K9 | K10 | K11 | K12 | K13 | K14 | K15 | K16 | K26 |
List of submarines of the Royal Navy |
List of submarine classes of the Royal Navy |