Greek destroyer Ierax

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Destroyer Ierax
Career (Greece) Ensign of the Hellenic Royal Navy
Name: Ierax (ΒΠ Ιέραξ)
Namesake: hawk
Ordered: 1912
Builder: Camell Laird
Laid down: 1911
Launched: March 15, 1911
Commissioned: 1912
Decommissioned: 1946
Fate: broken up
General characteristics
Displacement: 880 tons standard
Length: 89.4 m (293 ft)
Beam: 8.3 m (27 ft)
Draft: 3 m (9.8 ft)
Propulsion: 5 × Foster Wheeler boilers (4 coal-fired and 1 oil-fired), replaced by Yarrow oil-fired boilers in 1925
5 funnels
combined Parsons and Curtis steam turbines
Speed: 31 knots (57 km/h) maximum (32 knots (59 km/h) after 1925)
Complement: 58
Armament: As completed:
4 × Bethlehem 4-inch (102 mm) guns
1 × 75 mm anti-aircraft gun
6 × 21-inch (533 mm)torpedo tubes
3 × electric search lights
1925:
75 mm gun removed
37 mm anti-aircraft gun added
four-barrel 40 mm gun added
2 mortars added
Modified for laying 40 mines
1942:
3rd and 4th stern torpedo launchers removed
1 × 3-inch (76 mm) anti-aircraft gun added
1 × 20 mm Oerlikon gun added
A/S type 123A detection device added

Ierax (Greek: ΒΠ Ιέραξ, "Hawk") served in the Hellenic Royal Navy from 1912–1946.

The ship, along with her three sister ships of Wild Beast class destroyers Aetos, Panthir and Leon, was ordered from England. They were purchased in 1912, ready for delivery, each for the sum of £148,000 from the English shipyards Camell Laird in Liverpool, when the Balkan Wars seemed likely. These ships had originally been ordered by Argentina; Ierax was originally named Santa Fé. Ierax was accepted by Captain Ath. Miaoulis, RHN in Palermo, Sicily. where she arrived manned by foreign crew.

During the Balkan Wars, the Royal Hellenic Navy purchased only the minimum amount of ammunitions, 3,000 rounds of torpedoes. Torpedoes were not available for this class of ship, and for this reason these ships were initially named 'scouts' rather than 'destroyers'. On October 21, 1912, under the command of Commander A. Vratsanos, RHN, Ierax was part of the Greek flotilla that captured the island of Psara from the Ottomans.[1]

During World War I, Greece belatedly entered the war on the side of the Triple Entente and, due to Greece's neutrality the four Beast Class ships were seized by the Allies in October, 1916, taken over by the French in November, and served in the French Navy from 1917-18. By 1918, they were back on escort duty under Greek colors, mainly in the Aegean Sea.

Ierax participated in the evacuation of Greeks from Russia during the Russian Civil War in 1918, and saw action in the Greco-Turkish War (1919-1922) in the Sea of Marmara and the Aegean Sea.

After the war, Ierax was refurbished from 1925–1927. She also participated in the Second World War, after surviving the German invasion of April, 1941, Ierax was based in Alexandria, Egypt. In April, 1944, a wave of mutiny swept through some of the Hellenic Royal Navy, with seamen agitating in favor of the pro-Communist guerillas, ELAS, who were fighting a campaign in Greece against the occupying Nazis. Ierax was one of the ships whose crew mutinied and the mutiny was put down in the early morning hours of April 22, 1944.[2]

After the end of World War II, Ierax was stricken (decommissioned) in 1946.

[edit] References

  1. ^ HELLENIC NAVY - IERAX D-36 (1912-1946)
  2. ^ Vice Admiral G. Mezeviris, "Four Decades in the Service of the Royal Hellenic Navy", Athens, 1971.

[edit] See also

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