HMS Antelope (H36)

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Career (UK) RN Ensign
Name: HMS Antelope (H36)
Operator: Royal Navy
Builder: Hawthorne Leslie
Laid down: 11 July 1928
Launched: 27 July 1929
Commissioned: 20 March 1930
Fate: Scrapped 1946
General characteristics
Class and type: A class destroyer
Displacement: 1,350 tons standard
Length: 323 feet (98 m)
Beam: 32 feet (10 m)
Draught: 12.2 feet (4 m)
Propulsion: 3 x Admiralty 3-drum boilers steam turbines, 2 shafts, 34,000 shp
Speed: 35 knots
Range: 4,800 nm at 15 knots
Complement: 138
Armament:

(As designed)

4 × 4.7 in (119 mm) guns Mark IX on mountings CP Mk.XIII
2 × 2 pdr Mk.II anti-aircraft
2 × 4 tubes for 21 in torpedoes Mk.IX

HMS Antelope was a British A-class destroyer. She was completed March 20, 1930 and assigned to the 18th Destroyer Flotilla, Channel Force, Home Fleet.

In February 1940, Antelope sank U-41 in the South Western Approaches. The U-boat had attacked an outward-bound convoy on February 5 and sunk Beaverburn. It was the only U-boat at sea at the time in the area and was the first to be sunk underwater by a single destroyer.

In April 1940, the destroyer escorted the French cruiser Emile Bertin, flagship of Admiral Derrien, to Scapa Flow after it had been damaged in action off Namsos, Norway.

On June 13, 1940, Antelope collided with Electra off Trondheim, Norway, and had to return to the Tyne for repair. She then returned to her base at Harwich.

In August 1940, Antelope sailed in convoy to take part in Operation Menace, the attack on Dakar, but after HMS Fiji was torpedoed on September 1, 1940, she escorted her back to the Clyde, Scotland.

On October 31, 1940, Antelope sank U-31 off northwestern Ireland. She rescued 43 survivors and returned them to the Clyde.

In May 1941, in the chase for the German battleship Bismarck after the battle of the Denmark Strait, Antelope searched for survivors from the sinking of HMS Hood, and later was escort to HMS Victorious.

In August 1941, Antelope took part in Operation Gauntlet, an operation that succeeded in destroying the coaling facilities on Spitsbergen, thus denying the coal to the enemy.

In 1942 and 1943, Antelope participated in various operations to resupply Malta, including Operation Pedestal in August 1942. In March 1943, she escorted the Empress of Canada, but the liner was sunk on March 13. In 1944, she conducted numerous patrols and anti-submarine operations. In August 1945, she returned to the United Kingdom.

In 1946, she was sold and broken up by Hughes, Bolkow.

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