Roberts class monitor

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Class overview
Name: Roberts
Operators: Naval flag of United Kingdom Royal Navy
In commission: 1 April 1941
Completed: Two
General characteristics (Roberts & Abercrombie[1])
Type: monitor
Displacement: Roberts:
7,973 tons (Standard)
9,150 tons (Full load)
Abercrombie:
8,536 tons (Standard)
9,717 tons (Full load)
Length: 373 ft
Beam: 89 ft
Draught: Roberts: 13 ft 6 inch
Abercrombie: 14 ft 5 inch
Propulsion: 2 shaft, Parsons steam turbines, 2 boilers, 4,800 hp
Speed: 12.5 knots (14.4 mph)
Complement: 442 - 460
Armament: 2 × 15-inch/42 Mk 1 guns in a single turret
8 × 4-inch AA guns (4 × 2)
16 × 2-pdr "pom-pom"s (1 × 8, 2 × 4)
20 × 20 mm guns
Armour: Turret: 13 inch
Barbette: 8 inch
Belt: 4-5 inches
Notes: Ships in class include: HMS Roberts (F40), HMS Abercrombie (F109)

The Roberts class of monitors of the Royal Navy consisted of two heavily-gunned vessels built during the Second World War. They were the Roberts, completed in 1941, and Abercrombie, completed in 1943.

Features of the class, apart from two 15" guns in a twin mounting (taken from two First World War era Marshall class monitors), were shallow draught for operating inshore, broad beam to give stability (and also resistance to torpedoes and mines) and a high observation platform to observe fall of shot.

[edit] Ships

Built by John Brown & Company, Clydebank, laid down 30 April 1940, launched 1 April 1941 and completed on 27 October 1941. She reused the turret of the World War I monitor Marshall Soult. Roberts provided bombardment support during Operation Torch in north Africa, where she was damaged by two 500 kg bombs. She was repaired in time to support Operation Husky (the invasion of Sicily), Allied landings near Salerno Operation Avalanche, the D-Day landings and the Walcheren operations. She was scrapped in 1965.

One of HMS Robert's guns (formerly in HMS Resolution) is mounted outside the Imperial War Museum in Lambeth, South London, together with one from the battleship Ramillies. HMS Roberts herself was sold for scrapping shortly after the war, but hired back by the navy as an accommodation ship at Devonport until 1965: it was widely rumoured that the ship-breakers who bought her had more than recovered their purchase price in rent before they then sold her remains as scrap metal.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Conway, All The World's Fighting Ships 1922-1946

[edit] External links



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