Egret-class sloop
HMS Auckland in January 1939 |
Class overview |
Name: |
Egret class |
Operators: |
Royal Navy |
Preceded by: |
Bittern class |
Succeeded by: |
Black Swan class |
In commission: |
1938–1958 |
Completed: |
3 |
Lost: |
2 |
Scrapped: |
1 |
General characteristics |
Type: |
Sloop-of-war |
Displacement: |
1,200 tons |
Length: |
276 ft (84 m) |
Propulsion: |
|
Speed: |
19.25 knots (35.65 km/h; 22.15 mph) |
Complement: |
188 |
Armament: |
- 8 × 4-inch AA guns (4 × 2)
- 4 × .5-inch AA (1 × 4)
|
The Egret-class sloops were a three ship class of a long-range escort vessels used in the Second World War by the Royal Navy. They were an enlarged version of the Bittern class with an extra twin 4-inch gun mounting. They were fitted with Denny Brown stabilisers and the Fuze Keeping Clock anti-aircraft fire control system.
Ships
Service history
Three ships were built; HMS Auckland, HMS Pelican and HMS Egret.
Auckland was lost on 24 June 1941, to 48 Junkers 87 aircraft dive-bombing both her and HMAS Parramatta, off the coast of Tobruk.
Pelican was an effective convoy escort, and was credited with the destruction of four U-boats. She survived until the end of the war, and was broken up in 1958.
Egret was lost to a guided missile. While patrolling in the Bay of Biscay, she was attacked by 18 Do 217 aircraft, one of which carried the Henschel Hs 293 guided bomb.[1]
Notes
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