HMS Sheffield (F96)

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The Chilean Navy's Almirante Williams
Career RN Ensign
Name: HMS Sheffield (F96)
Operator: Royal Navy
Laid down: 29 March 1984
Launched: 26 March 1986
Commissioned: 26 July 1988
Decommissioned: 5 November 2002
Motto: Deo Adjuvante Labor Proficit
("With God's help our labour is successful")
Fate: Sold to Chile
Career Chilean Naval Ensign
Name: Almirante Williams (FF-19)
Operator: Armada de Chile
Commissioned: 4 September 2003
General characteristics
Class and type: Type 22 frigate
Displacement: 5,300 tons
Length: 148.1 m
Beam: 14.8 m
Speed: 33 km/h cruise, 56 km/h sprint
Complement: 250
Armament: 2 x 6 GWS25 Seawolf SAM Launchers
4 x 1 Exocet SSM launchers
2 x Twin 30 mm AA
2 x 20mm AA guns
4 x 7.62mm GPMG
Aircraft carried: Lynx Mk.8 helicopter - as HMS Sheffield; Eurocopter Dauphin helicopter - as Admirante Williams.

HMS Sheffield (F96) was a Type 22 frigate of the Royal Navy of the United Kingdom. She was originally intended to be named Bruiser but was named Sheffield in honour of the previous Sheffield (D80), a Type 42 destroyer sunk in the Falklands War.

Contents

[edit] History

Sheffield was named and launched on 26 March 1986 by Mrs Susan Stanley, wife of the then Armed Forces Minister, and commissioned at Hull on 26 July 1988. There were several members of previous HMS Sheffields present at the launch. A specially minted Sheffield coin was placed in the keel at the keel-laying ceremony on 29 March 1984.

Late 1998 Sheffield provided assistance after Hurricane Georges, visiting the island of St Kitts and also saved a Honduran woman who had been swept out to sea from her home by the force of Hurricane Mitch[1][2].

HMS Sheffield attended the August Bank Holiday 28th - 30th 1999 Navy Days at HMNB Devonport, moored along with HMS Sutherland, HMS Somerset, HMS Monmouth, HMS Montrose, HMS Manchester, HMS Illustrious, HMS Campbeltown, HMS Trafalgar, HMS Triumph and RFA Argus.

May 2000 saw Sheffield deployed on an eight week deployment into the Baltic Sea, which included a two week BALTOPS 2000 - France, Germany, Sweden, Denmark, United States, Poland, Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia and the Netherlands all contributed ships to the exercise, which involved aspects of Search and Rescue as well as military joint exercises. Sheffield later visited Kiel, then Gdynia, the twin city of Plymouth, with the Lord Mayor of Plymouth before visiting St. Petersburg in Russia. Sheffield later visited Kotka in Finland before Klaipeda in Lithuania, as the first major British warship to visit the city. Whilst she was there she gave toys to an orphanage and redecorated a special school. Sheffield returned home on July 26[3].

February 8, 2001 saw HMS Sheffield, under Commander Simon Williams, deployed to the Caribbean for a six-month deployment[4]. Sheffield was deployed to assist the US Coastguard, Dutch, French and Venezuelan navies in anti-drug operations and exercises. There were visits to the USA as well as Barbados, Trinidad, Antigua, St Lucia, Curacao and the Bahamas. Sheffield took part in Exercise Tradewinds, which promoted interoperability between coastguards and law enforcement agencies in the area. Other ships in the exercise included TTS Nelson (the former HMS Orkney) and RFA Gold Rover[5].

5 February 2002 saw Sheffield deployed to the Standing Naval Force Mediterranean (STANAVFORMED) to replace HMS Chatham. The mission was anti-terrorism by monitoring merchant shipping. There were also visits to Turkey, Sicily, Crete, Spain and Algiers[6]. Sheffield was the flagship under the command of Commodore Angus Somerville. Tuesday 26 February saw HMS Sheffield assist the Spanish submarine SPS Siroco, whilst participating in the exercise DOGFISH 2002. The submarine needed medicines for a sailor whilst in the Ionian Sea[7].

HMS Sheffield was decommissioned on November 4, 2002[8][9]. After 14 years service, which included providing humanitarian assistance to Nicaragua and Honduras after Hurricane Mitch (which earned her the Wilkinson Sword for Peace along with HMS Ocean (L12)), the Strategic Defence Review of 1998 (updated 2001) saw the end of her career.

She was sold to Chile on 4 September 2003 and renamed Almirante Williams (FF-19). She is slated for a major refit in 2008, which will see the instalation of a 76mm cannon, surface-to-surface missiles (probably Harpoon), and more advanced electronics. Some sources state that the Barak anti-missile system will be installed, these having been retrieved (and refurbished) from decomissioned County Class destroyers. The Barak is more advanced than the current Sea Wolf system installed on Type 22 frigates, although they both are for anti-missile defense.

HMS Sheffield at HMNB Devonport Navy days 1999.
HMS Sheffield at HMNB Devonport Navy days 1999.

[edit] References

HMS Sheffield Type 22 Frigate (Batch 2A) guide. Directorate of Public Relations (Royal Navy). Printed in UK for HMSO by Roman Press Ltd, Bournemouth. Crown Copyright 1994, London.

Devonport Navy Days guide 1999

[edit] External links

[edit] Further reading

  • Lofthouse, Alistair (1998). Shiny Sheff – The Story of Sheffield's Fighting Ships. Northern Map Distributors.  An overall history of the three vessels named HMS Sheffield.
Preceded by
D80
HMS Sheffield
1986-2003
Succeeded by
N/A