HMS Ultimatum (P34)
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HMS Ultimatum setting off from Holy Loch |
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Career | |
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Class and type: | U-class submarine |
Name: | HMS Ultimatum |
Builder: | Vickers Armstrong, Barrow-in-Furness |
Laid down: | 19 June 1940 |
Launched: | 11 February 1941 |
Commissioned: | 29 July 1941 |
Fate: | Sold for scrap on 23 December 1949, broken up 1950 |
General characteristics | |
Displacement: |
Surfaced - 540 tons standard, 630 tons full load Submerged - 730 tons |
Length: | 58.22 m (191 ft) |
Beam: | 4.90 m (16 ft 1 in) |
Draught: | 4.62 m (15 ft 2 in) |
Propulsion: |
2 shaft diesel-electric |
Speed: |
11.25 knots max surfaced 10 knots max submerged |
Complement: | 27-31 |
Armament: |
4 bow internal 21 inch torpedo tubes - 8 - 10 torpedoes 1 - 3 inch gun |
HMS Ultimatum (P34) was a Royal Navy U-class submarine built by Vickers-Armstrong at Barrow-in-Furness, and part of the third group of that class. So far she has been the only ship of the Royal Navy to bear the name Ultimatum.
[edit] Career
Ultimatum spent her wartime career in the Mediterranean, where she sank the Italian passenger ship Dalmatia L., a German sailing vessel and the Italian submarine Ammiraglio Millo. On 30 October 1943, Ultimatum attacked a German U-boat southeast of Toulon, France. This attack was against U-73 but it inflicted no damage. Ultimatum had been credited with sinking U-431 in this attack. However U-431 was sunk with all hands on 21 October 1943 in the Mediterranean off Algiers by depth charges from a British Wellington aircraft. U-431's fate was revised in November 1987 by the Foreign Documents Section of the British Ministry of Defence.
Ultimatum also unsuccessfully attacked the Italian merchants Ravello, Luciano Manara and Unione, the Italian submarine Zaffiro and the German auxiliary patrol vessel Uj 6073 / Nimeth Allah. She had more luck on 2 May 1944, when she shelled the harbour of Kalamata, Greece, sinking two sailing vessels, destroying five on the slips and damaging another. She also went on to attack a group of small German vessels, successfully hitting and sinking the German barge F 811.
Ultimatum survived the war and was sold to be broken up for scrap on 23 December 1949, and was scrapped at Port Glasgow in February 1950.
[edit] References
- HMS Ultimatum (P 34). uboat.net.
- Ultimatum to Unbroken. British submarines of World War II.
- Colledge, J. J. and Warlow, Ben (2006). Ships of the Royal Navy: the complete record of all fighting ships of the Royal Navy, Rev. ed., London: Chatham. ISBN 9781861762818. OCLC 67375475.
- Submarines, War Beneath The Waves, From 1776 To The Present Day, by Robert Hutchinson
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