HMS Marlborough (1912)

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HMS Marlborough
Career RN Ensign
Ordered: 1911
Laid down: 25 January 1912 at Devonport dockyard
Launched: 24 October 1912
Commissioned: June 1914
Decommissioned:
Fate: Sold for scrap 27 June 1932
Struck: 1932
General Characteristics
Displacement: 25,000 tons (normal), 29,500 deep load
Length: 622 feet 9 inches
Beam: 90 feet
Draught: 32 feet 9 inches
Propulsion: 4 shaft Parsons steam turbines, driving four propellers, 18 Babcock & Wilcox or Yarrow boilers delivering 29,000 hp
Speed: 21.25 knots
Range: 14,000 nm at 10 knots
Complement: 925
Armament: Main battery: ten 13.5"/45 guns in five twin turrets

Secondary battery: twelve 6"/45 guns in single casemate mountings; two 3"/20 anti-aircraft guns
Four 21" submerged beam torpedo tubes

HMS Marlborough was an Iron Duke-class battleship of the Royal Navy, named in honour of John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough, and launched in 1912. In World War I she served in the 1st Battle Squadron of the Grand Fleet based at Scapa Flow. She fought at the battle of Jutland, 31 May 1916, where she was hit by a torpedo, killing two and injuring two.

In 1919, during the Russian Civil War the Marlborough was on duty in the Black Sea and on orders of King George V rescued his aunt Dagmar of Denmark and other members of the Russian Imperial Family, including Grand Duke Nicholas and Felix Yusupov.

See HMS Marlborough for other ships of this name.

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Iron Duke-class battleship
Iron Duke | Marlborough | Benbow | Emperor of India
Preceded by: King George V class - Followed by: Queen Elizabeth class

List of battleships of the Royal Navy
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