HNLMS Flores

Flores
Career (Netherlands)
Name: Flores
Builder: Mij Feijenoord, Schiedam
Laid down: 13 January 1925
Launched: 15 August 1925
Commissioned: 25 March 1926
Identification: Pennant numbers: F66, N1, F803, A877
Fate: Sold for scrapping 12 November 1968
General characteristics
Type:Flores-class gunboat
Displacement:1,457 long tons (1,480 t) standard
1,793 long tons (1,822 t) full load
Length:75.6 m (248 ft 0 in)
Beam:11.5 m (37 ft 9 in)
Draught:3.6 m (11 ft 10 in)
Installed power:2,000 shp (1,500 kW)
4 Yarrow boilers
Propulsion:2 shafts, 2 Triple-expansion steam engines
Speed:15 knots (28 km/h; 17 mph)
Complement:145
Armament:As built:
3 × 5.9 in (150 mm) No. 7 guns
1 × 75 mm gun
4 × .50 Browning machine guns
Added:
1 × 40 mm pom-pom
4 × Hotchkiss 20 mm cannon
8 × .303 MG
Armour:Bridge: 50 mm (2.0 in)
Deck: 25–50 mm (0.98–1.97 in)
Ammunition hoists: 25 mm (0.98 in)
Gun shields: 14–80 mm (0.55–3.15 in)

HNLMS Flores (Dutch: Hr.Ms. Flores) was a Flores-class gunboat built in the mid-1920s for the Royal Netherlands Navy to patrol the Dutch East Indies.

Career

The ship was laid down on 13 January 1925 at the Mij Feijenoord , Schiedam and launched on 15 August 1925. 25 March 1926 she was commissioned in the Dutch navy. Flores and her sister ship Soemba left the port of Den Helder on 15 June 1926 for the Dutch East Indies. They take a route that led by Seville, Tunis, Port Said, Aden, Colombo and Sabang. She arrived there on 10 August that year.

On 5 March 1927 both ships made a trip to Singapore and Saigon. After a Japanese vessel refused to stop for investigation on 2 October 1937 the ship was seized by the Flores and fired upon, killing two men of the Japanese ship. In 1938 she made a visit to Australia.

Flores was brought back to the Netherlands at the start of World War II where she patrolled home waters until the Germans invaded in 1940. Slightly damaged, she escaped to Britain and was employed as an escort.

During the war Flores operated in the Mediterranean Sea and played an active role in the landings in Sicily, Salerno, Anzio, Garigliano, Gaeta and finally, at the beaches of Normandy in June 1944.

In 1951 she was reclassified as frigate. In 1955 Flores was stricken and rebuilt into an accommodation ship. Somewhere in July 1960 she is renamed Van Speyk after a new frigate HNLMS Van Speijk was launched on 5 March 1965 she was given her old name back. She was finally stricken on 26 August 1968 and sold for scrapping on 12 November 1968. She was scraped in Hendrik-Ido-Ambacht.

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