HMS Nottingham (1913)

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Career Royal Navy Ensign
Class and type: Town-class light cruiser
Name: HMS Nottingham
Ordered: under 1911 Naval Estimates
Builder: Pembroke Dockyard
Laid down: 13 June 1912
Launched: 18 April 1913
Commissioned: April 1914
Fate: Sunk 19 August 1916 by U 52
General characteristics
Displacement: 5,440 tons
Length: 457 ft (139 m) Overall
Beam: 50 ft (15 m)
Draught: 15.75 ft (4.80 m)
Propulsion: Parsons turbines
Four screws
Twelve Yarrow boilers
25,000 hp
Speed: 25.5 knots (47 km/h)
Range: carried 1165 tons maximum coal
235 tons fuel oil
4,680 miles at 10 knots
Complement: 433
Armament: 9 × 6 inch guns
1 × 3 inch AA gun
4 × 3 pdr guns
2 × machine guns
2 × 21-inch (533 mm) torpedo tubes
Armour: 3 inch side amidships
1½ inch side (forward)
1¾ inch side (aft)

The fifth HMS Nottingham was launched in 1913 and commissioned in 1914. A light Town class cruiser of 5,440 tons, 430 feet (131 m) in length and a complement of 401 men, she had 2 inch thick armour plating and was armed with nine six-inch (152 mm) guns, one thirteen-pound anti-aircraft gun and two twenty-one inch torpedo tubes. Seeing action for the first time off Heligoland on the 28 August 1914 as one of eight British light cruisers supported by destroyers and submarines, she entered the Heligoland Bight to intercept German vessels employed on coastal protection duties, an action that developed into the Battle of Heligoland Bight.

The ship then saw action in the Yorkshire Raid on 16 December and shortly after that at the Battle of Dogger Bank on 23 January 1915. On the 31 May came the Battle of Jutland, where the Nottingham was attached to the Second Light Cruiser Squadron. Two and a half months later on 19 August 1916 she was engaged in a sweep of the North Sea in thick mist 120 miles (193 km) south-east of the Firth of Forth when, at 0600, she was hit by two torpedoes from U boat U 52, and another just 25 minutes later. At 0710 she eventually sank with the loss of only a few hands.

In December 1993, during a ceremony at Emden, Admiral Otto H Cilax of the Federal German Navy presented the Commanding Officer of the sixth and current HMS Nottingham with a Plaque, Cap Ribbon and the Ensign from the fifth Nottingham as a gesture of goodwill and reconciliation. Admiral Cilax's grandfather was the Captain of U52; he recovered these items off a boat from the ship while picking up survivors and they currently reside in the Captain's Cabin Flat.

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