HMS Warspite (03)
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HMS ''Warspite'' was one of five s built for the
Royal Navy The Royal Navy (RN) is the United Kingdom's naval warfare force. Although warships were used by English and Scottish kings from the early medieval period, the first major maritime engagements were fought in the Hundred Years' War against ...
during the early 1910s. Completed during the
First World War World War I (28 July 1914 11 November 1918), often abbreviated as WWI, was one of the deadliest global conflicts in history. Belligerents included much of Europe, the Russian Empire, the United States, and the Ottoman Empire, with fightin ...
in 1915, she was assigned to the
Grand Fleet The Grand Fleet was the main battlefleet of the Royal Navy during the First World War. It was established in August 1914 and disbanded in April 1919. Its main base was Scapa Flow in the Orkney Islands. History Formed in August 1914 from the F ...
and participated in the Battle of Jutland. Other than that battle, and the inconclusive Action of 19 August, her service during the war generally consisted of routine patrols and training in the
North Sea The North Sea lies between Great Britain, Norway, Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands and Belgium. An epeiric sea, epeiric sea on the European continental shelf, it connects to the Atlantic Ocean through the English Channel in the south and the ...
. During the interwar period the ship was deployed in the
Atlantic Ocean The Atlantic Ocean is the second-largest of the world's five oceans, with an area of about . It covers approximately 20% of Earth's surface and about 29% of its water surface area. It is known to separate the " Old World" of Africa, Europe ...
and the
Mediterranean Sea The Mediterranean Sea is a sea connected to the Atlantic Ocean, surrounded by the Mediterranean Basin and almost completely enclosed by land: on the north by Western and Southern Europe and Anatolia, on the south by North Africa, and on the ...
, often serving as flagship, and was thoroughly modernised in the mid-1930s. During the
Second World War World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great powers—forming two opposi ...
, ''Warspite'' was involved in the Norwegian Campaign in early 1940 and was transferred to the Mediterranean later that year where the ship participated in fleet actions against the Royal Italian Navy () while also escorting convoys and bombarding Italian troops ashore. She was damaged by German aircraft during the
Battle of Crete The Battle of Crete (german: Luftlandeschlacht um Kreta, el, Μάχη της Κρήτης), codenamed Operation Mercury (german: Unternehmen Merkur), was a major Axis airborne and amphibious operation during World War II to capture the island ...
in mid-1941 and required six months of repairs in the United States. They were completed after the start of the Pacific War in December and the ship sailed across the
Pacific The Pacific Ocean is the largest and deepest of Earth's five oceanic divisions. It extends from the Arctic Ocean in the north to the Southern Ocean (or, depending on definition, to Antarctica) in the south, and is bounded by the contine ...
to join the Eastern Fleet in the
Indian Ocean The Indian Ocean is the third-largest of the world's five oceanic divisions, covering or ~19.8% of the water on Earth's surface. It is bounded by Asia to the north, Africa to the west and Australia to the east. To the south it is bounded by t ...
in early 1942. ''Warspite'' returned home in mid-1943 to conduct
naval gunfire support Naval gunfire support (NGFS) (also known as shore bombardment) is the use of naval artillery to provide fire support Fire support is defined by the United States Department of Defense as " Fires that directly support land, maritime, amphibiou ...
as part of Force H during the Italian campaign. She was badly damaged by German radio-controlled glider bombs during the landings at Salerno and spent most of the next year under repair. The ship bombarded German positions during the
Normandy landings The Normandy landings were the landing operations and associated airborne operations on Tuesday, 6 June 1944 of the Allies of World War II, Allied invasion of Normandy in Operation Overlord during World War II. Codenamed Operation Neptune and ...
and on Walcheren Island in 1944, despite not being fully repaired. These actions earned her the most
battle honour A battle honour is an award of a right by a government or sovereign to a military unit to emblazon the name of a battle or operation on its flags ("colours"), uniforms or other accessories where ornamentation is possible. In European military t ...
s ever awarded to an individual ship in the Royal Navy. For this and other reasons, ''Warspite'' gained the nickname the ''"Grand Old Lady"'' after a comment made by Admiral Sir Andrew Cunningham in 1943 while she was his flagship. When she was launched in 1913 the use of oil as fuel and untried 15-inch guns were revolutionary concepts in the naval arms race between Britain and Germany, a considerable risk for
Winston Churchill Sir Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill (30 November 187424 January 1965) was a British statesman, soldier, and writer who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom twice, from 1940 to 1945 during the Second World War, and again from ...
, then
First Lord of the Admiralty The First Lord of the Admiralty, or formally the Office of the First Lord of the Admiralty, was the political head of the English and later British Royal Navy. He was the government's senior adviser on all naval affairs, responsible for the di ...
, and Admiral of the Fleet (Royal Navy), Admiral of the Fleet John Fisher, 1st Baron Fisher, Sir Jackie Fisher, who had advocated the design. However, the new "fast battleships" proved to be an outstanding success during the First World War. Decommissioned in 1945, ''Warspite'' ran aground under tow to be scrapped in 1947 on rocks near Prussia Cove, Cornwall, and was eventually broken up nearby.


Design and description

The ''Queen Elizabeth''-class ships were designed to form a fast squadron (naval), squadron for the fleet that was intended to operate against the leading ships of the opposing battleline. This required maximum offensive power and a speed several knot (unit), knots faster than any other battleship to allow them to defeat any type of ship. ''Warspite'' had a length overall of , a beam (nautical), beam of and a deep draft (hull), draught of . She had a normal displacement (ship), displacement of and displaced at deep load. She was powered by two sets of Parsons Marine Steam Turbine Company, Parsons steam turbines, each driving two shafts using steam from 24 Yarrow boilers. The turbines were rated at and intended to reach a maximum speed of . The ship had a range of at a cruising speed of . Her crew numbered 1,025 officers and naval rating, ratings in 1915 and 1,220 in 1920. The ''Queen Elizabeth'' class was equipped with eight List of British ordnance terms#BL, breech-loading (BL) BL 15 inch Mk I naval gun, Mk I guns in four twin-gun turrets, in two superfire, superfiring pairs fore and aft of the superstructure, designated 'A', 'B', 'X', and 'Y' from front to rear. Twelve of the fourteen BL 6 inch Mk XII naval gun, BL Mk XII guns were mounted in casemates along the Broadside (naval), broadside of the vessel amidships; the remaining pair were mounted on the forecastle deck near the aft funnel (ship), funnel and were protected by gun shields. The anti-aircraft gun, anti-aircraft (AA) armament were composed of two quick-firing gun, quick-firing (QF) QF 3 inch 20 cwt, 20 cwt Mk I"Cwt" is the abbreviation for hundredweight, 20 cwt referring to the weight of the gun. guns. The ships were fitted with four submerged British 21 inch torpedo, 21-inch (533 mm) torpedo tubes, two on each broadside. ''Warspite'' was completed with two Fire-control system#Naval fire control, fire-control directors fitted with Rangefinding telemeter, rangefinders. One was mounted above the conning tower, protected by an armoured hood, and the other was in the Top (sailing ship), spotting top above the tripod mast. Each turret was also fitted with a 15-foot rangefinder. The main armament could be controlled by 'B' turret as well. The secondary armament was primarily controlled by directors mounted on each side of the compass platform on the foremast once they were fitted in July 1917. The Belt armor, waterline belt of the ''Queen Elizabeth'' class consisted of Krupp cemented armour (KC) that was thick over the ships' vitals. The gun turrets were protected by of KC armour and were supported by barbettes thick. The ships had multiple armoured decks that ranged from in thickness. The main conning tower was protected by 13 inches of armour. After the Battle of Jutland, 1 inch of high-tensile steel was added to the main deck over the magazine (artillery), magazines and additional anti-flash equipment was added in the magazines. The ship was fitted with Flight deck#Early, flying-off platforms mounted on the roofs of 'B' and 'X' turrets in 1918, from which fighters and reconnaissance aircraft could launch. Exactly when the platforms were removed is unknown, but no later than ''Warspite''s 1934–1937 reconstruction.


Construction and career

''Warspite'', the sixth warship of the Royal Navy to carry the name, was laid down on 21 October 1912 at HMNB Devonport, Devonport Royal Dockyard, Ship naming and launching, launched on 26 November 1913, and completed in April 1915 under the command of Captain (Royal Navy), Captain Edward Montgomery Phillpotts, Edward Phillpotts.#refBallantyne2013, Ballantyne, 2013, p. 30. ''Warspite'' joined the 2nd Battle Squadron (United Kingdom), 2nd Battle Squadron of the
Grand Fleet The Grand Fleet was the main battlefleet of the Royal Navy during the First World War. It was established in August 1914 and disbanded in April 1919. Its main base was Scapa Flow in the Orkney Islands. History Formed in August 1914 from the F ...
following a number of acceptance trials, including gunnery trials, which saw Churchill present when she fired her 15-inch (381 mm) guns. Churchill was suitably impressed with their accuracy and power. In late 1915, ''Warspite'' was grounded in the River Forth causing some damage to her hull; she had been led by her escorting destroyers down the small ships channel. After undergoing repairs for two months at Rosyth and Jarrow, she rejoined the Grand Fleet, this time as part of the new British 5th Battle Squadron, 5th Battle Squadron which had been created for ''Queen Elizabeth''-class ships. In early December, ''Warspite'' was involved in another incident when, during an exercise, she collided with her sister ship , which caused considerable damage to ''Warspite''s bow. She made it back to Scapa Flow and from there to Devonport for more repair work, rejoining the fleet on Christmas Eve 1915.


First World War


Battle of Jutland (1916)

Following the German Bombardment of Yarmouth and Lowestoft, raid on Lowestoft in April 1916, ''Warspite'' and the 5th Battle Squadron were temporarily assigned to Vice-Admiral David Beatty, 1st Earl Beatty, David Beatty's Battlecruiser Force. On 31 May, ''Warspite'' was deployed with the squadron to fight in the Battle of Jutland, the largest naval encounter between Britain and Germany during the war. Following a signalling error, the battleships were left trailing Beatty's fast ships during the Battle of Jutland#Battlecruiser action, battlecruiser action, and the 5th Battle Squadron was exposed to heavy fire from the German High Seas Fleet as the force turned away to the north, although ''Warspite'' was able to score her first hit on the battlecruiser . The 5th Battle Squadron then headed Battle of Jutland#Run to the north, north, exchanging fire with both Hipper's battlecruiser force and the leading elements of Scheer's battleships, damaging . When the squadron turned to join the
Grand Fleet The Grand Fleet was the main battlefleet of the Royal Navy during the First World War. It was established in August 1914 and disbanded in April 1919. Its main base was Scapa Flow in the Orkney Islands. History Formed in August 1914 from the F ...
, the damage from a shell hitting the port-wing engine room caused ''Warspite''s steering to jam as she attempted to avoid her sister ships and .#refBallantyne2013, Ballantyne, 2013, p. 50. Captain Phillpotts decided to maintain course, in effect circling, rather than come to a halt and reverse. This decision exposed ''Warspite'' and made her a tempting target; she was hit multiple times, but inadvertently diverted attention from the armoured cruiser , which had been critically damaged whilst attacking the leading elements of the German fleet. This action gained her the admiration of ''Warrior''s surviving crew, who believed that ''Warspite''s movement had been intentional. The crew regained control of ''Warspite'' after two full circles. Their efforts to end the circular motion placed her on a course which took her towards the German fleet.#refBallantyne2013, Ballantyne, 2013, p. 51. The rangefinders and the transmission station were non-functional and only "A" turret could fire, albeit under local control with 12 salvos falling short of their target. Sub Lieutenant Herbert Annesley Packer was subsequently promoted for his command of "A" turret. Rather than continue, ''Warspite'' was stopped for ten minutes so the crew could make repairs. They succeeded in correcting the problem, but the ship would be plagued with steering irregularities for the rest of her naval career. As the light faded the Grand Fleet Crossing the T, crossed ahead of the German battle line and opened fire, forcing the High Seas Fleet to retreat and allowing ''Warspite'' to slip away. ''Warspite'' was hit fifteen times during the battle, and had 14 killed and 16 wounded; among the latter warrant officer Walter Yeo, who became one of the first men to receive facial reconstruction via plastic surgery. Although she had been extensively damaged, ''Warspite'' could still raise steam and was ordered back to Rosyth during the evening of 31 May by Rear-Admiral Hugh Evan-Thomas, commander of the 5th Battle Squadron. Whilst travelling across the North Sea the ship came under attack from a German U-boat. The U-boat fired three torpedoes, all of which missed their target. ''Warspite'' later attempted to ram a surfaced U-boat. She signalled ahead for escorts and a squadron of torpedo boats came out to meet her. They were too slow to screen her effectively, but there were no more encounters with German vessels and she reached Rosyth safely on the morning of 1 June, where it took two months to repair the damage.


1916–1918

Upon the completion of her repairs, ''Warspite'' rejoined the 5th Battle Squadron. Further misfortune struck soon afterwards, when she collided with ''Valiant'' after a night-shooting exercise, necessitating more repair work at Rosyth. Captain Philpotts avoided reprimand on this occasion, but was moved to a shore-based job as Naval Assistant to the new First Sea Lord, Admiral Jellicoe.#refBallantyne2013, Ballantyne, 2013, pp. 65–66. He was replaced by Captain de Bartolome in December 1916.#Watton1996, Watton, 1996, p. 8. In June 1917, ''Warspite'' collided with a destroyer, but did not require major repairs. Early in April 1918 she joined the Grand Fleet in a fruitless pursuit of the German High Seas Fleet which had been hunting for a convoy near Norway. In 1918, ''Warspite'' had to spend four months being repaired after a boiler room caught fire. Captain Hubert Lynes relieved Captain de Bartolome and on 21 November he took ''Warspite'' out to escort the German High Seas Fleet into internment at Scapa Flow following the signing of the Armistice.


Interbellum (1919–1939)

In 1919, ''Warspite'' joined the 2nd Battle Squadron, part of the newly formed British Atlantic Fleet, Atlantic Fleet, and undertook regular spring cruises to the Mediterranean.#refBallantyne2013, Ballantyne, 2013, p. 71. In 1924, she attended a Royal Fleet Review at Spithead, presided over by George V of the United Kingdom, King George V. Later in the year, ''Warspite'' underwent a partial modernisation that altered her superstructure by trunking her two funnels into one, enhanced her armour protection with torpedo bulges, swapped the high-angle 3-inch guns with new 4-inch anti-aircraft guns, and removed half her torpedo tubes. After the process finished in 1926, ''Warspite'' assumed the role of flagship of the Commander-in-Chief and Second-in-Command, British Mediterranean Fleet, Mediterranean Fleet. In 1927, under the command of Captain James Somerville, she struck an uncharted rock in the Aegean and was ordered to return to Portsmouth for repairs.#refBallantyne2013, Ballantyne, 2013, p. 73. In 1930, ''Warspite'' rejoined the Atlantic Fleet. She was at sea when the crews of a number of warships Invergordon Mutiny, mutinied at Invergordon in September 1931, although three sailors were later dismissed from the ship. In March 1933, she was rammed in fog by a Romanian passenger ship off Portugal, but did not require major repairs.#refBallantyne2013, Ballantyne, 2013, p. 79. Between March 1934 and March 1937, she underwent a major reconstruction in Portsmouth at a cost of £2,363,000. This refit gave the Admiralty a virtually new warship, replacing internal machinery and significantly changing the battleship's appearance and capabilities. * Propulsion: The reconstruction project replaced her propulsion machinery and installed six individual boiler rooms, with Three-drum boiler#Admiralty boiler, Admiralty three-drum boilers, in place of 24 Yarrow boilers; geared Parsons turbines were fitted in four new engine rooms and gearing rooms. This increased fuel efficiency, reducing fuel consumption from 41 tons per hour to 27 at almost 24 knots, and gave the warship 80,000 shp. The weight saving on the lighter machinery was used to increase protection and armament.#refBallantyne2013, Ballantyne, 2013, p. 80. * Armour: of armour were added, improving coverage forward of A turret and the boiler rooms, as well as an increase to 5 inches over the magazines and 3.5 inches over the machinery. Better sub-division of the engineering rooms strengthened the hull and improved its integrity.#refBallantyne2013, Ballantyne, 2013, p. 81. * Armament: The last pair of torpedo tubes were removed and the 6 inch guns had their protection reduced; four guns were removed from the fore and aft ends of the batteries. Eight 4 inch high-angle guns in four twin mountings and two octuple 2 pdr pom-poms were added to her anti-aircraft defences, as well as additional .50 calibre machine guns on two of the main turrets. The original 15-inch turrets were upgraded to increase the elevation of the guns by ten degrees (from 20° to 30°), providing a further 9,000 yards of range to a maximum of with a 6crh shell. The fire control was also modernised to include the HACS Mk III* AA fire control system and the Admiralty Fire Control Table Mk VII for surface fire control of the main armament. Additionally, her superstructure was radically altered, allowing two cranes and an aircraft hangar to be fitted. This could carry four aircraft, but ''Warspite'' typically carried only two: from 1938 to 1941 these were Fairey Swordfish, Swordfish floatplanes and from 1942 to 1943 Supermarine Walrus, Walrus flying boats. Her tripod mast was removed and a distinctive armoured citadel built up to enclose the bridge and to provide space for her to operate as a flagship. After completion of the refit, ''Warspite'' was recommissioned under the command of Captain Victor Crutchley. The intention was for her to become the flagship of Admiral Dudley Pound's Mediterranean Fleet, but trials revealed problems with propulsion machinery and steering, a legacy of Jutland, which continued to beset ''Warspite'' and delayed her departure. These delays and the work required to rectify them also affected the crew's leave arrangements and led to some sailors airing their views in national newspapers, angering Pound. ''Warspite'' finally entered Grand Harbour, in Malta, on 14 January 1938 and continued gunnery practice and training. At the end of one anti-aircraft exercise, a junior midshipman independently discharged his QF 2 pounder naval gun, pom-pom gun after a towing aircraft flew low overhead to display its attached target to the crew. ''Warspite'' had turned towards Valletta on the exercise's conclusion and the shells hurtled towards the city. The shells landed harmlessly at a gunnery range where a platoon of the Green Howards was exercising. For the remainder of the year, she cruised the Aegean, Adriatic and Mediterranean seas, leading an intensive series of fleet exercises in August due to rising international tension. She undertook another cruise of the western Mediterranean in the spring of 1939. In June 1939, Vice Admiral Andrew Browne Cunningham, 1st Viscount Cunningham of Hyndhope, Andrew Cunningham replaced Dudley Pound and took ''Warspite'' to Istanbul for talks with the Turkish government. When war was declared in September, the Mediterranean remained quiet and ''Warspite'' was recalled to join the Home Fleet following the loss of .


Second World War


Atlantic and Narvik (1939–1940)

''Warspite''s first task was to escort convoy HX 9 carrying fuel from Nova Scotia to the UK. She was diverted northwards in pursuit of the German battleships and which had sunk the armed merchant cruiser north of the Faroe Islands, but failed to make contact. In April 1940, ''Warspite'' had started her voyage back to the Mediterranean when the Germans invaded Denmark and Norway; she rejoined the Home Fleet on 10 April and proceeded towards Narvik. On 13 April, Vice-Admiral William Whitworth hoisted his flag in ''Warspite'' and led nine destroyers, three sweeping mines and six in an offensive role, into Ofotfjord to neutralise a force of eight German destroyers trapped near the port of Narvik. Her Fairey Swordfish float-plane sank the German U-boat with 250 lb bombs, becoming the first aircraft to sink a U-boat in the war. The Swordfish continued to provide accurate spotting reports during the early afternoon which were, arguably, more important to the course of the battle than the ''Warspite's'' guns.#OHara2013, O'Hara, 2013, p. 54. The British destroyers soon opened fire on their counterparts, which had almost exhausted their fuel and ammunition following the Battles of Narvik#First naval Battle of Narvik, First Naval Battle of Narvik. All were sunk during the action. ''Warspite'' destroyed the heavily damaged with broadsides, while damaging and . ''Diether von Roeder'' had to be scuttled while ''Erich Giese'' was sunk in conjunction with destroyers. The Battles of Narvik#Second naval Battle of Narvik, Second Naval Battle of Narvik was considered a success. She remained in Norwegian waters, participating in several shore bombardments around Narvik on 24 April, but these proved ineffectual and she returned to Scapa Flow prior to being redeployed to the Mediterranean on 28 April.


Mediterranean (1940–1941)

Calabria
''Warspite'' arrived safely in Alexandria before Italy entered the war on 10 June 1940. Admiral Cunningham took the fleet to sea on 7 July to meet two convoys travelling from Malta to Alexandria, knowing that part of the Italian fleet was escorting its own convoy to Tripoli, Libya, Tripoli. Cunningham hoped to draw the Regia Marina into battle by sailing towards the "toe" of Italy to cut them off from their base at Taranto. The two fleets eventually met 30 miles from Punta Stilo at the Battle of Calabria on 9 July 1940. Initially, the Allies of World War II, Allied cruisers, armed with 6-inch guns, were outranged by the 8-inch guns of their heavier Italian counterparts and disengaged. Seeing that they were under pressure, Cunningham took ''Warspite'' ahead to assist his cruisers. The Italian cruisers turned away under a smoke screen while the battleships and closed on ''Warspite'' before ''Malaya'' and could catch up.#refBallantyne2013, Ballantyne, 2013, p. 110. During the battle ''Warspite'' achieved one of the longest range gunnery hits from a moving ship to a moving target in history, hitting ''Giulio Cesare'' at a range of approximately , the other being a shot from Scharnhorst which hit at approximately the same distance in June 1940. The shell pierced ''Giulio Cesare's'' rear funnel and detonated inside it, blowing out a hole nearly across, while fragments started several fires and their smoke was drawn into the boiler rooms, forcing four boilers off-line as their operators could not breathe which reduced the ship's speed to . Uncertain how severe the damage was, Campioni ordered his battleships to turn away in the face of superior British numbers and they disengaged behind a smoke screen laid by Italian destroyers. The destroyers and cruisers on both sides continued shooting for half an hour but with ''Malaya'' and ''Royal Sovereign'' coming into range, the Italian fleet disengaged. Over 125 aircraft of the Regia Aeronautica attacked the ships over the next three hours but caused no damage. ''Warspite'' returned to Alexandria on 13 July. Taranto
In mid-August, she set out to bombard Bardia and on 6 November she sailed from Alexandria to provide cover for the Battle of Taranto, a torpedo-bomber attack on ships in Taranto harbour. As a result of this attack, ''Warspite'' and ''Valiant'' were able to bombard the Italian supply base in the Adriatic port of Vlorë in mid-December. On 10 January 1941, ''Warspite'' was lightly damaged by a bomb while operating with Force A during Operation Excess. Matapan
In March 1941, to support the planned German Invasion of Yugoslavia, invasion of the Balkans, Vice Admiral Angelo Iachino's Italian fleet, led by the battleship , sailed to intercept Allied convoys between Egypt and Greece. Warned of the Italian intentions by intelligence from the Government Communications Headquarters#Government Code and Cypher School (GC&CS), Government Code and Cypher School at Bletchley Park, Admiral Cunningham took his fleet to sea on 27 March 1941, flying his flag on ''Warspite''. On 28 March, the British cruisers Battle of Cape Matapan#Action off Gavdos, encountered the Italian fleet and were forced to turn away by the heavy guns of ''Vittorio Veneto''. To save his cruisers Cunningham ordered an air attack, prompting Iachino to retreat. Subsequent air attacks damaged the battleship and the cruiser , slowing the former and crippling the latter. ''Vittorio Veneto'' escaped to the west as dusk fell but the British pursued through the night, first detecting ''Pola'' on radar and then two of her sister ships. ''Warspite'', ''Valiant'' and ''Barham'' closed on the unsuspecting Italian ships and aided by searchlights, destroyed the heavy cruisers and and two destroyers at point blank range. ''Pola'' was also sunk once her crew had been taken off. Having established by aerial reconnaissance that the rest of the Italian fleet had escaped, ''Warspite'' returned to Alexandria on 29 March, surviving air attacks without suffering casualties. The Battle of Cape Matapan had a paralysing effect on the ''Regia Marina'', providing the Royal Navy with an opportunity to tighten its grip on the Mediterranean, as evidenced by the unequal Battle of the Tarigo Convoy near the Kerkennah Islands on 16 April. This was not enough and the success of the ''Afrika Korps'' in North Africa induced Churchill to order a desperate attack on Tripoli, Libya, Tripoli to block the Axis supply route by sinking a battleships in the harbour. Cunningham rejected this plan, but on 21 April he sailed with ''Warspite'' to bombard the harbour in company with and , the cruiser and several destroyers. The raid was ineffectual, partly because of poor visibility created by dust from an earlier RAF bombing raid; the fleet returned to Alexandria without damage. The futility of the mission and the exposure of his battleships led to a tense exchange of letters between Cunningham and Churchill. Crete
During the
Battle of Crete The Battle of Crete (german: Luftlandeschlacht um Kreta, el, Μάχη της Κρήτης), codenamed Operation Mercury (german: Unternehmen Merkur), was a major Axis airborne and amphibious operation during World War II to capture the island ...
, ''Warspite'' was used as a floating anti-aircraft battery and like many other ships, suffered severe damage from German air attacks on 22 May. A 500 lb bomb damaged her starboard 4-inch and 6-inch batteries, ripped open the ship's side and killed 38 men. The attack was carried out by ''Jagdgeschwader 77'' (JG 77—Fighter Wing 77). ''Oberleutnant'' Kurt Ubben, a future flying ace with 110 enemy aircraft shot down, claimed a hit on the warship. She was able to make it back to port under her own steam, but the damage could not be repaired in Alexandria and it was decided that she would have to be sent to Bremerton, Washington, Bremerton on the west coast of the United States.


Repair and refit

In June 1941, ''Warspite'' departed Alexandria for the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, Bremerton Naval Shipyard in the United States, arriving there on 11 August, having travelled through the Suez Canal, across the Indian Ocean to Ceylon, stopping at Manila, then Pearl Harbor and finally Esquimalt along the way. Repairs and modifications began in August, including the replacement of her deteriorated 15 in guns, the addition of more anti-aircraft weapons, improvements to the bridge, and new surface and anti-aircraft radar. ''Warspite'' was still at the shipyard when the Japanese Navy Attack on Pearl Harbor, attacked Pearl Harbor and went on alert as she would have been one of the few ships in the harbour which could have provided anti-aircraft defence should the Japanese have struck east. She was recommissioned on 28 December and undertook sea trials near Vancouver before sailing down the west coast of the U.S. and Mexico, crossing the equator and arriving in Sydney on 20 February 1942. She joined the British Eastern Fleet, Eastern Fleet at Trincomalee in March 1942.


Indian Ocean (1942–1943)

''Warspite'' joined the Eastern Fleet as flagship of Admiral Sir James Somerville (admiral), James Somerville, who had commanded her in 1927. Initially, ''Warspite'' was based in Ceylon, forming a fast group with the aircraft carriers and , four cruisers and six destroyers. In March, Somerville received intelligence indicating the Japanese Kido Butai, Fast Carrier Strike Force was heading towards the Indian Ocean and he relocated his base to Addu Atoll in the Maldives. Vice Admiral Chuichi Nagumo used five carriers and four battleships in the Indian Ocean raid a naval sortie into the Indian Ocean in April, attacking Allied shipping and bases in the Indian Ocean and the Bay of Bengal. Somerville's fleet was outnumbered and outclassed but he hoped to get close enough to launch a night-time torpedo bomber attack. ''Warspite''s fast group set sail to intercept on 4 April, detecting the Japanese attack on the cruisers and and later, a scouting aircraft from the cruiser . The fleets did not meet; ''Warspite'' withdrew to Addu Atoll and then to Kilindini on the East African coast to protect the convoy routes. The Japanese believed that she was still in Sydney and ordered the Attack on Sydney Harbour. During May and June, ''Warspite'' continued to act as Somerville's flagship, carrying out exercises with other elements of the fleet and shore-based aircraft in Ceylon. In early June, she was sent to hunt the Japanese auxiliary cruisers and ''Hōkoku Maru'' near the Chagos Archipelago but failed to find them. In August, she was involved in Operation Stab, a simulated attack on the Andaman Islands to distract the Japanese from U.S. preparations to attack Guadalcanal. She covered the landings at Mahajanga and Tamatave during the Battle of Madagascar an Allied invasion, in September. Her surface radar was replaced in Durban in October and Captain Herbert Annesley Packer, Packer, her former Assistant Gunnery Officer at Jutland, took command in January 1943. The remainder of ''Warspite''s cruise was uneventful. She underwent a short refit in Durban in April and returned to the UK in May 1943, having sailed approximately 160,000 miles since the war began.


Mediterranean (1943–1944)

She underwent a short refit in May in another attempt to fix her steering problem, then joined Force H at Scapa Flow, departing on 9 June for Gibraltar in company with five other battleships, two carriers and twelve destroyers. Assigned to Division 2 with ''Valiant'' and ''Formidable'', she returned to Alexandria on 5 July in preparation for Operation Husky, the Allied invasion of Sicily. Division One and Two rendezvoused in the Gulf of Sidra, Gulf of Sirte on 9 July and covered the assembling convoys. ''Warspite'' was detached to refuel at Malta on 12 July, the first visit by a British battleship since December 1940. On 17 July, she bombarded Catania in support of an unsuccessful attack by the Eighth Army (United Kingdom), 8th Army, although her steering problem temporarily delayed her taking up position. She returned to Malta at high speed on 18 July, avoiding several air attacks during the night. On her return, Admiral Cunningham inadvertently coined the nickname by which she would be known thereafter when he signalled: "''Operation well carried out. There is no question when the old lady lifts her skirts she can run.''" Between 2 and 3 September, ''Warspite'' and ''Valiant'' covered the Operation Baytown, assault across the Straits of Messina and bombarded the Italian coastal batteries near Reggio Calabria, Reggio. Between 8 and 9 September, Force H, covering the landings at Salerno, came under fierce German air-attack and narrowly avoided being torpedoed. The resolve of the Italian Government had already been wavering by the time of the Allies victory in North Africa; the invasion of Sicily and aerial attacks on mainland Italy encouraged negotiations. They signed an Armistice of Cassibile, armistice on 3 September, which took effect on 8 September. Anxious to ensure that the Germans did not acquire an additional 200 warships, the Allies insisted that the Regia Marina must sail for Allied ports. Three days later, ''Warspite'' met and led elements of the Italian Fleet, including ''Vittorio Veneto'' and ''Italia'', into internment at Malta. She repeated this process on 12 September for her opponent from the Battle of Calabria, ''Giulio Cesare''. On 14 September, Force H was recalled to the UK to begin preparations for the invasion of France, but ''Warspite'' and ''Valiant'' were detached to provide support for Allied forces at Salerno. Although the Italians had surrendered, the Germans had anticipated this and moved forces into position to block the Allied landings. The American forces near Battipaglia were in a precarious situation following German counter-attacks. After arriving off Salerno on 15 September, ''Warspite'' bombarded an ammunition dump and other positions around Altavilla Silentina, demoralising the German forces and providing time for Allied reinforcements to arrive. Overnight, the fleet came under intense air attack, but she was able to continue bombardment duties the next day. However, early in the afternoon she was attacked by a Luftwaffe squadron of Focke-Wulf Fw 190 fighter bombers and then, from high altitude, by three Dornier Do 217 bombers from Kampfgeschwader 100, KG 100 armed with an early guided bomb, the Fritz X. She was hit directly once; a second near-miss ripped open the torpedo bulges while the third missed altogether. The bombs that did hit her struck near the funnel, cutting through her decks and making a 20-foot hole in the bottom of her hull, crippling her. Although the damage had been considerable, ''Warspite''s casualties amounted to only nine killed and fourteen wounded. She was soon on the journey to Malta, escorted by the anti-aircraft cruiser and four destroyers, while being towed by United States Navy tugs. Towing a ship of ''Warspite''s dimensions proved difficult, and at one stage she broke all tow lines and drifted sideways through the Straits of Messina. She reached Malta on 19 September and undertook emergency repairs before being towed to Gibraltar on 12 November. ''Warspite'' returned to Britain in March 1944 to continue her repairs at Rosyth. Captain Packer was mentioned in despatches for his actions bringing the ship to Malta, the second time he had limped into port on board a heavily damaged ''Warspite''.


North-Western Europe (1944–1945)

At Rosyth, ''Warspite''s 6-inch guns were removed and plated in, and a concrete Caisson (engineering), caisson covered the hole left by the German missile. One of her boiler rooms and the Gun turret#Turret identification, X turret could not be repaired, remaining out of action for the remainder of her career. She left Greenock on 2 June 1944 with six 15-inch guns, eight 4-inch anti-aircraft guns and forty QF 2-pounder naval gun, pom poms, joining Bombardment Force D of the Eastern Task Force of the Normandy landings, Normandy invasion fleet off Plymouth two days later. At 0500 on 6 June 1944, ''Warspite'' was the first ship to open fire,#refBallantyne2013, Ballantyne, 2013, p. 188. bombarding the German battery at Villerville from a position 26,000 yards offshore, to support landings by the British 3rd Mechanised Division (United Kingdom), 3rd Division on Sword Beach. She continued bombardment duties on 7 June, but after firing over 300 shells she had to rearm and crossed the Channel to Portsmouth. She returned to Normandy on 9 June to support American forces at Utah Beach and then, on 11 June, she took up position off Gold Beach to support the British 69th Infantry Brigade (United Kingdom), 69th Infantry Brigade near Cristot. On 12 June, she returned to Portsmouth to rearm, but her guns were worn out so she was ordered to sail to Rosyth via the Straits of Dover, the first British battleship to have done so since the war began. She evaded German coastal batteries, partly due to effective radar jamming, but hit a mine 28 miles off Harwich Dockyard, Harwich early on 13 June. Repairs to her propeller shafts and the replacement of the guns took until early August; she sailed to Scapa Flow to calibrate the new barrels with only three functional shafts, limiting her top speed to 15 knots, although by now the Admiralty considered her main role was that of a bombardment vessel. ''Warspite'' arrived off Ushant on 25 August 1944 and attacked the coastal batteries at Le Conquet and Pointe Saint-Mathieu during the Battle for Brest. The VIII Corps (United States), U.S. VIII Corps eventually captured "Festung Brest" on 19 September, but by then ''Warspite'' had moved on to the next port. In company with the Monitor (warship), monitor , she carried out a preparatory bombardment of targets around Le Havre prior to Operation Astonia on 10 September, leading to the capture of the town two days later. Her final task was to support an Anglo-Canadian Operation Infatuate, operation to open up the port of Antwerp, which had been captured in September, by clearing the Battle of the Scheldt, Scheldt Estuary of German strongholds and gun emplacements. With the monitors ''Erebus'' and , she bombarded targets on Walcheren, Walcheren Island on 1 November 1944, returning to Deal, Kent, Deal the next day, having fired her guns for the last time.#refBallantyne2013, Ballantyne, 2013, p. 195.


Decommissioning

During her service career, ''Warspite'' had lived up to her motto, enduring shellfire, bombing, ramming, mines and a guided missile. However, time had taken its toll and more modern ships were required to continue the war in the Far East. Although there were proposals to retain her as a museum ship, the Admiralty approved ''Warspite''s scrapping in July 1946 and she sailed from Spithead into Portsmouth to have her guns removed. On 19 April 1947, ''Warspite'' departed Portsmouth for scrapping at Faslane, on the River Clyde. On the way, she encountered a severe storm and the hawser of the naval tug ''Bustler'' parted, whilst the other tug ''Metinda III'' slipped her tow. In storm force conditions, ''Warspite'' dropped one of her anchors in Mount's Bay, which did not hold, and the storm drove her onto Mount Mopus Ledge near Cudden Point. Later refloating herself she went hard aground a few yards away in Prussia Cove. Her skeleton crew of seven was saved by the Penlee Lifeboat Station, Penlee Lifeboat ''W. & S.'' There were several attempts to refloat her but the hull was badly damaged. In 1950, an attempt to re-float her was tried. A large crowd and the media watched on as the salvage crew set to work. Despite the use of 24 compressor tanks pumping air into her tanks, the salvage failed. There was insufficient depth of water to float her clear of the reef in a rising south westerly gale. The salvage boat ''Barnet'', standing guard overnight under the ''Warspite''’s bows was holed in the engine room, towed off and eventually drifted ashore at Long Rock, a few miles to the west. However, by August the battleship was finally beached off St Michael’s Mount and after further salvage another attempt was made to refloat her in November. The Falmouth tug ''Masterman'' spent the night on the Hogus Rocks after failing to tow ''Warspite''; and her sister tug ''Tradesman'' had of wire wrapped around her propeller when trying to haul ''Masterman'' off the rocks. Aided by her compressor and two jet engines from an experimental aircraft the hulk was finally moved closer to shore and by the summer of 1955, on-site scrapping resulted in her disappearance from view. According to the contractors, it remains the largest salvage operation ever carried out in British waters. A memorial stone was placed near the sea wall at Marazion and later moved a short distance. The stone was unveiled by Admiral Sir Charles Madden, 2nd Baronet, Sir Charles Madden and prayers were read by a former crew member. The remains of the masts lie in the yard at Porthenalls House, Prussia Cove and one portion was erected on a headland, overlooking Prussia Cove. One of her 15-inch Tampion, tompions and her chapel door are held by the Royal Naval Museum in Portsmouth. Her nameplate was held by the pub, The Wink, in Lamorna, Cornwall but has since been sold at auction. Her ship's wheel was given by King George VI to King Haakon VII of Norway in 1947, who later gave it to the City of Narvik. It is kept in the City Hall of Narvik. Timbers from the ship would also be used to create commemorative souvenirs of various types, such as ashtrays and letter openers.


Battle honours

This ''Warspite'' earned 15 of the 25 battle honours awarded to Royal Navy ships of this name.#refBallantyne2013, Ballantyne, 2013, p. 6. First World War * Battle of Jutland, Jutland 1916 Second World War * Battle of the Atlantic, Atlantic 1939 * Battles of Narvik#Second naval Battle of Narvik, Narvik 1940 * Occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany, Norway 1940 * Battle of Calabria, Calabria 1940 * Mediterranean theatre of World War II, Mediterranean 1940-41-43 * Malta Convoys, Malta Convoys 1941 * Battle of Cape Matapan, Matapan 1941 * Battle of Crete, Crete 1941 * Allied invasion of Sicily, Sicily 1943 * Allied invasion of Italy, Salerno 1943 * English Channel#Second World War, English Channel 1944 * Normandy Landings, Normandy 1944 * Battle for Brest, Biscay 1944 * Operation Infatuate, Walcheren 1944


Notes


Citations


Bibliography

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External links


Maritimequest HMS Warspite Photo Gallery


* [https://www.jutlandcrewlists.org/warspite Battle of Jutland Crew Lists Project - HMS Warspite Crew List] {{DEFAULTSORT:Warspite (1913) Queen Elizabeth-class battleships Ships built in Plymouth, Devon 1913 ships World War I battleships of the United Kingdom World War II battleships of the United Kingdom Maritime incidents in September 1943 Maritime incidents in 1947