HMS Sandwich (L12)

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HMS Sandwich WWII IWM FL 22738.jpg
HMS Sandwich, with a second world war convoy.
History
Naval Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg United Kingdom
NameHMS Sandwich
NamesakeTown of Sandwich, Kent
OwnerRoyal Navy
Builder Hawthorn Leslie, Newcastle upon Tyne [1]
Launched28 September 1928 [1]
Out of service1944 [2]
Honours and
awards
Atlantic
Fatesold in 1946 [1]
General characteristics
Displacement1,045 tons [1]
Length250 ft (76 m) [1]
Beam34 ft (10 m) [1]
Draught8.7 ft (2.7 m) [1]
Speed16 kn (30 km/h) [1]
Complement100 [1]
Armament2 x 4-inch (102 mm) [1]

HMS Sandwich (L12) was a Bridgewater-class sloop built by Hawthorn Leslie, Newcastle. After a decade of peacetime service on the China Station, she escorted Atlantic convoys through World War II.

Contents

Construction and design

HMS Sandwich was ordered from Hawthorn Leslie on 19 September 1927, one of two Bridgwater-class sloops ordered from Hawthorn Leslie that day. [3] The Bridgewaters were intended as replacements for the Flower-class sloops, and were to combine the role of peacetime patrol work at distant overseas stations (with the Bridgewaters being specifically intended for service in the Persian Gulf) with a wartime role as minesweepers. [4] [5]

Sandwich was 266 feet 4 inches (81.18 m) long overall [6] and 250 feet (76 m) between perpendiculars, [7] with a beam of 34 feet (10 m) and a draught of 11 feet 5 inches (3.48 m). [6] Displacement was 1,045 long tons (1,062 t) standard and 1,600 long tons (1,600 t) full load. [4] The ship was powered by two Parsons geared steam turbines, each driving one propeller shaft, using steam provided by two Admiralty three-drum boiler. The turbines developed a total of 2,000 shaft horsepower (1,500 kW) and were designed to give a maximum speed of 16.5 knots (30.6 km/h; 19.0 mph). [4] [6] The main armament consisted of a pair of QF four-inch (102 mm) Mk V guns on the ship's centreline, one forward and one aft, with the forward gun on a high-angle mount, capable of anti-aircraft fire and the second gun on a low-angle mount, for anti-surface use only. Two 3-pounder saluting guns were also carried, while the anti-submarine armament initially consisted of four depth charges. [4] [6] The ship's crew consisted of 96 officers and ratings. [8]

Sandwich was laid down at Hawthorn Leslie's Tyneside shipyard on 9 February 1928 and was launched without ceremony on 29 September. [3] [6] Sandwich reached a speed of 17.27 knots (31.98 km/h; 19.87 mph) during sea trials and was commissioned on 23 March 1929. [6]

In 1938, the aft four-inch gun was replaced by one on a high-angle mounting and the two saluting guns were exchanged for a pair of quadruple Vickers 0.5 in (12.7 mm) anti-aircraft (AA) machinegun mounts. [6] By the outbreak of the Second World War, the ship had been fitted with ASDIC, and the depth charge outfit was increased to 15 charges. [4] [9]

Service

China Station

While ordered for service in the Persian Gulf, both Sandwich and her sister ship Bridgewater were first deployed to the China Station, replacing the old sloops Foxglove and Bluebell. [10] She was recommissioned with a new crew at Hong Kong in October 1931, remaining on the China Station. [11] Sandwich, along with the cruiser Cornwall was based at Shanghai during the Shanghai Incident in early 1932. [12] On 23 March 1932, while still at Shanghai, the American destroyer USS Stewart collided with Sandwich and two Chinese barges. While Sandwich suffered minimal damage, Stewart ended up with a length of anchor chain off one of the barges wrapped around a propeller, requiring the propeller to be replaced. [13] Sandwich again received a new crew at Hong Kong in April 1934. [11] When the British owned steamer Tungchow went missing on 31 January 1935 on a voyage between Shanghai and Yantai, having been seized by pirates, Sandwich was one of several warships despatched to search for the missing ship. The pirates abandoned Tungchow when the ship was spotted by aircraft from the aircraft carrier Hermes. [14] [15]

In January 1938, as the Second Sino-Japanese War continued, Sandwich landed men at Weihaiwei to protect British property against rioting as Japanese forces advanced towards the city. [16] The ship was refitted at Hong Kong from April to October 1938, recommissioning with a fresh crew in March 1939. [11]

Second World War

Sandwich was based at Hong Kong when war was declared, and patrolled the Tsushima Strait for German merchant shipping before sailing east in November 1939 to return to the United Kingdom in December with convoy HG 11. She escorted convoys between Liverpool and Gibraltar until May 1940 and then coastal and Western Approaches convoys rescuing survivors from the sunken freighters King Idwal and Anten of convoy OB 244 in November 1940. [2]

Sandwich began refit at Tilbury in December and resumed convoy escort duties in April 1941 assigned to the 43rd Escort Group. Type 271 radar was installed during refit at Belfast from January through March 1942, and the original .50 caliber anti-aircraft machine guns were replaced with Oerlikon 20 mm cannon during a shorter refit in October. Sandwich was credited with sinking U-213 while escorting convoy OS 35, and then escorted convoys in support of Operation Torch until refit on the River Tyne from February through July 1943. [2]

Upon completion of trials and workup, Sandwich escorted convoys between Liverpool and Sierra Leone as part of the 38th Escort Group from August 1943 until retirement in June 1944. Planned refit at Brindisi was not completed, and the ship was towed to Bizerte in 1945.

Convoys escorted

Convoy [2] Escort Group [2] Dates [2] Notes [17]
HG 1116–24 December 193952 ships escorted without loss from Gibraltar to Liverpool
OG 16F26-31 January 194023 ships outbound to Gibraltar
HG 17F31 January-5 February 194025 ships escorted without loss from Gibraltar to Liverpool
SL 1917-20 February 194028 ships inbound to Western Approaches
OA 9826-27 February 194019 ships outbound from Western Approaches
HG 20F28 February-3 March 194030 ships inbound to Western Approaches
OG 21F5-11 March 194045 ships outbound to Gibraltar
HG 2428 March-7 April 194041 ships escorted without loss from Gibraltar to Liverpool
OG 26F14-20 April 194054 ships outbound to Gibraltar
HG 297-17 May 194045 ships escorted without loss from Gibraltar to Liverpool
OB 15424-27 May 194012 ships outbound from Western Approaches
HX 43 27-30 May 194043 ships inbound to Western Approaches
OB 1591-4 June 194023 ships outbound from Western Approaches
HX 455-7 June 194063 ships inbound to Western Approaches
OB 1649-12 June 194029 ships outbound from Western Approaches
HX 4714-17 June 19402 ships lost from 57 inbound to Western Approaches
OB 16917-20 June 194032 ships outbound from Western Approaches
HX 4920-24 June 19401 ship lost from 50 inbound to Western Approaches
OB 17425-28 June 194064 ships outbound from Western Approaches
HX 5129 June-2 July 194035 ships inbound to Western Approaches
OB 1807-10 July 194047 ships outbound from Western Approaches
HX 5411-14 July 194043 ships inbound to Western Approaches
OA 18617-21 July 194039 ships outbound from Western Approaches
HX 5723-26 July 194051 ships inbound to Western Approaches
OA 19230 July-3 August 194018 ships outbound from Western Approaches
HX 604-7 August 19403 ships lost from 60 inbound to Western Approaches
OA 19915-19 August 19401 ship torpedoed of 29 outbound from Western Approaches
HX 6420-23 August 194062 ships inbound to Western Approaches
OA 20629 August-3 September 19401 ship torpedoed of 48 outbound from Western Approaches
SL 443-7 September 19401 ship lost from 29 inbound to Western Approaches
OA 21414-19 September 194029 ships outbound from Western Approaches
OA 2232-6 October 194017 ships outbound from Western Approaches
SC 8 15-31 October 194040 ships escorted without loss from Sydney to Liverpool
OB 24417-22 November 19403 ships sunk of 46 outbound from Western Approaches
OB 2544-7 December 194013 ships outbound from Western Approaches
OG 59 43rd EG 15-28 April 194144 ships escorted without loss from Liverpool to Gibraltar
HG 6143rd EG6-20 May 194123 ships from Gibraltar to Liverpool; U-96 sank Empire Ridge
OB 33243rd EG10-19 June 194143 ships escorted without loss from Liverpool to Iceland
HX 13443rd EG26 June-4 July 194148 ships escorted without loss from Iceland to Liverpool
SC 3643rd EG13-17 July 194140 ships inbound to Western Approaches
OS 243rd EG4-19 August 194117 ships escorted without loss from Liverpool to Sierra Leone
SL 8543rd EG28 August-11 September 194111 ships from Sierra Leone to Gibraltar; bomber sank Daru
HG 7243rd EG11-17 September17 ships escorted without loss from Gibraltar to Liverpool
OS 843rd EG4-20 October 194146 ships escorted without loss from Liverpool to Sierra Leone
SL 9143rd EG27 October-19 November 1941Sierra Leone to Liverpool
OS 1343rd EG1-18 December 194145 ships escorted without loss from Liverpool to Sierra Leone
SL 9643rd EG28 December 1941 – 13 January 194235 ships from Sierra Leone to dispersal
OS 2343rd EG25 March-11 April 194245 ships escorted without loss from Liverpool to Sierra Leone
SL 10743rd EG16 April-5 May 194232 ships escorted without loss from Sierra Leone to Liverpool
OS 2943rd EG22 May-10 June 194244 ships escorted without loss from Liverpool to Sierra Leone
SL 11343rd EG15-29 June 194241 ships escorted without loss from Sierra Leone to Liverpool
OS 3543rd EG25 July-12 August 194251 ships escorted without loss from Liverpool to Sierra Leone
sank U-213
SL 11943rd EG14 August-5 September 1942Sierra Leone to Liverpool; two ships torpedoed and sunk
OS 4143rd EG20 September-1 October 194241 ship Liverpool to dispersal
SL 12343rd EG4-10 October 194227 ships escorted without loss from Sierra Leone to Liverpool
KMS 243rd EG26 October-12 November 19421 ship sunk of 51 from Loch Ewe to Operation Torch
TE 743rd EG28 November 1942Gibraltar to North Africa
GUF 3 43rd EG30 December 1942 – 1 January 1943North Africa to Gibraltar
CF 1043rd EG5-8 January 1943 Cape Town to United Kingdom
GUS 3 43rd EG18-19 January 1943North Africa to Gibraltar
MKS 743rd EG8-17 February 1943 Algiers to Liverpool
SL 13738th EG23 September-17 October 194349 ships escorted without loss from Sierra Leone to Liverpool
OS 5738th EG31 October-18 November 194378 ships escorted without loss from Liverpool to Sierra Leone
SL 14138th EG23 November-12 December 194314 ships escorted without loss from Sierra Leone to Liverpool
OS 6138th EG19-29 December 194342 ships escorted without loss from Liverpool to Sierra Leone
SL 14538th EG1-12 January 194433 ships escorted without loss from Sierra Leone to Liverpool
OS 6538th EG26 January-6 February 194441 ships escorted without loss from Liverpool to Sierra Leone
SL 14938th EG11-22 February 194447 ships escorted without loss from Sierra Leone to Liverpool
OS 6938th EG5-15 March 194447 ships escorted without loss from Liverpool to Sierra Leone
SL 15338th EG22 March-2 April 194447 ships escorted without loss from Sierra Leone to Liverpool
OS 7338th EG16-25 April 194444 ships escorted without loss from Liverpool to Sierra Leone
SL 15738th EG1-10 May 194445 ships escorted without loss from Sierra Leone to Liverpool
OS 7738th EG23 May-2 June 194431 ships escorted without loss from Liverpool to Sierra Leone
SL 16138th EG11-22 June 194441 ships escorted without loss from Sierra Leone to Liverpool

Disposal and fate

Sandwich was sold at Bizerte in 1946 for £3,050 to local interests for mercantile service. [2] Some hold that she was scrapped after conversion was abandoned. [2] Others say that she was renamed Prince Albert in 1946, then owned by Hui Bon Hua of Tunis and registered at that port as the mercantile Amoy. On 18 February 1948 Amoy foundered outside Port La Nouvelle, on a voyage from Oran to Sète with a cargo of oranges. Two lives were lost; 28 crew and 6 passengers were rescued. The wreck was cleared later in 1948. [18] [19]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Lenton & Colledge 1968, pp. 167–168
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Mason, Geoffrey B. "HMS SANDWICH (L 12) – Bridgewater-class Sloop". Service Histories of Royal Navy Warships in World War 2. edited by Gordon Smith. naval-history.net. Retrieved 18 January 2014.
  3. 1 2 Hague 1993, p. 6.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Campbell 1980, p. 55.
  5. Hague 1993, pp. 10–11.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Hague 1993, p. 23.
  7. Parkes 1931, p. 76.
  8. Brown 2007, p. 24.
  9. Brown 2007, p. 23.
  10. Hague 1993, pp. 23–24.
  11. 1 2 3 Hague 1993, p. 24.
  12. "Chinese-Japanese War". The Bathurst National Advocate . Bathurst, New South Wales. 2 February 1932. p. 2. Retrieved 18 December 2016.
  13. Klar 1988, p. 392
  14. "Steamer Taken By Chinese Pirates: Found Abandoned". The Argus . Melbourne. 2 February 1935. p. 24. Retrieved 18 December 2016.
  15. "In Pirate Hands: Children's Experiences: China Sea Adventure". The Western Mail . Perth, Western Australia. 7 February 1935. p. 20. Retrieved 18 December 2016.
  16. "Mobilisation Measure". The Mercury . Hobart. 25 January 1938. p. 7. Retrieved 18 December 2016.
  17. Hague 2000, pp.123-183
  18. "Ship sinks in sight of port". Gloucestershire Echo. The British Newspaper Archive (subscription). 19 February 1948. Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  19. "Sandwich". Tyne Built Ships. Shipping & Shipbuilding Research Trust. Retrieved 22 May 2020.

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References

See also