HMS Cheerful (1897)

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NameHMS Cheerful
Ordered1896 – 1897 Naval Estimates
Cost£54,509[1]
The visually identical Greyhound underway in 1906
History
Royal Navy EnsignUnited Kingdom
NameHMS Cheerful
Ordered1896 – 1897 Naval Estimates
BuilderR.W. Hawthorn Leslie & Co., Hebburn-on-Tyne
Cost£54,509[1]
Yard number343[1]
Laid down7 September 1896
Launched14 July 1897[Note 1]
CommissionedJune 1899
FateMined on 30 June 1917
General characteristics [1]
Class & typeHawthorn Leslie three-funnel, 30-knot destroyer
Displacement
  • 355 long tons (361 t) light
  • 400 long tons (406 t) full load
Length215 ft (66 m) o/a
Beam21 ft 1 in (6.43 m)
Draught8 ft 2 in (2.49 m)
Installed power6,100 ihp (4,500 kW)
Propulsion
Speed30 kn (56 km/h)
Range
  • 95 tons coal
  • 1,615 nmi (2,991 km) at 11 kn (20 km/h; 13 mph)
Complement63 officers and men
Armament
Service record
OperationsWorld War I 1914 - 1918

HMS Cheerful was a 30-knot, three-funnel torpedo boat destroyer built by Hawthorn Leslie. She was ordered by the Royal Navy under the 1896–1897 Naval Estimates, launched in 1898, and saw action during World War I. She was mined off the Shetland Islands in 1917 and sank with the loss of 44 officers and men.

She was laid down on 7 September 1896, at the R.W. Hawthorn Leslie and Company shipyard at Hebburn-on-Tyne, and launched on 14 July 1897. During her builder's trials, she made her contract speed of 30 knots (56 km/h; 35 mph). She was completed and accepted by the Royal Navy in February 1900,[2][3] and passed into the Medway Fleet Reserve at Chatham.[4]

Service

After commissioning, she was assigned to the Chatham Division of the Harwich Flotilla. She was deployed in home waters for her entire service life. On 6 March 1900, she was commissioned at Chatham to take the place of HMS Mermaid in the Medway instructional flotilla,[5] with Commander Mark Kerr transferring from Mermaid to take command of Cheerful.[6] In April 1900, she was present at an accident at Brighton's West Pier, when seven sailors from HMS Desperate were drowned in bad weather as they approached the pier.[7][8]

On 30 August 1912, the Admiralty directed all destroyer classes were to be designated by letters. She was assigned to the C class along with the other 3-funnel, 30-knot destroyers. After 30 September 1913, she was known as a C-class destroyer and had the letter ‘C’ painted on the hull below the bridge area and on either the fore or aft funnel.[9] Between 1912 and 1914 she had a wireless radio set installed.

In July 1914, she was in active commission in the 8th Destroyer Flotilla based at Sheerness and tendered to HMS Tyne, the flotilla depot ship. Her duties included anti-submarine and counter-mining patrols.

On 26 September, two torpedoes were fired at her, 3 miles (4.8 km) west of Fidra in the Firth of Forth. At the end of September 1914, she was redeployed to the Shetland patrol based out of Scapa Flow. Here, she was deployed in anti-submarine operations and defending the main fleet anchorage. In December 1914, she was given the pennant number P13; at the start of September 1915, this was changed to D49.[10]

On 30 June 1917, while on patrol off the Shetland Islands, she struck a contact mine that had been laid by German submarine UC-33. She sank with the loss of 44 officers and men in position 60°02′N 01°07′W / 60.033°N 1.117°W / 60.033; -1.117.[10][11]

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