Minesweeper of the Royal Navy
History United Kingdom Name HMS Saltburn Namesake Saltburn-by-the-Sea Builder Murdoch and Murray Laid down 29 January 1918 Launched 9 October 1918 Completed 31 December 1918 Fate Sold for scrap , 16 November 1946 Notes Pennant number N52 General characteristics (1939) Class and type Hunt-class minesweeper Displacement 710 long tons (721 t) Length 231 ft (70.4 m) Beam 28 ft 6 in (8.7 m) Draught 8 ft (2.4 m) Installed power 2,200 ihp (1,600 kW) Propulsion Speed 16 knots (30 km/h; 18 mph) Range 1,500 nmi (2,800 km; 1,700 mi) at 10 knots (19 km/h; 12 mph) Complement 74 Armament
HMS Saltburn was a Hunt-class minesweeper built for the Royal Navy during World War I . Named after the town of Saltburn-by-the-Sea in North Yorkshire , she was not completed until after the end of the war. The ship saw no active service during World War II as she spent the war as a training ship . Saltburn was sold for scrap in 1946, but was wrecked while under tow.
Saltburn was built by Murdoch and Murray of Port Glasgow and her keel was laid down on 29 January 1918. She was launched on 9 October 1918 and completed on 31 December 1918. The ship was armed with a QF 4-inch (102 mm) gun forward and a QF 12-pounder anti-aircraft gun aft.
In the 1930s, Saltburn was the RN Signal School's tender. A prototype Type 79X radar was installed in October 1936 and its antennas were strung between the ship's masts. They detected an aircraft at an altitude of 500 feet (150 m) and a range of 17 nautical miles (31 km; 20 mi) during tests in July 1937.[ 1] The ship spent World War II as the tender for HMS Dryad , the Royal Navy's navigation school.
After the war, Saltburn ran aground off Horse Sand Fort on 26 October 1945 and was declared a constructive total loss . She was sold for scrap on 16 November 1946, but was wrecked around 2 miles south of Hartland Point, Devon, the following month while under tow.[ 2] The wrecking rights were bought by a local man, Jack Gifford. The stairs of the ship still exist in a cottage in Hartland. The cottage is named Saltburn after the ship.
^ Swords, pp. 87–88. ^ Lenton, p. 251. Lenton, H. T. (1998). British & Commonwealth Warships of the Second World War . Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-048-7 . Swords, Sean S. (1986). Technical History of the Beginnings of Radar . London: IEE/Peter Peregrinus. ISBN 0-86341-043-X .
Belvoir groupAberdare groupSurvey ships
Shipwrecks and maritime incidents in October 1945
Shipwrecks 1 Oct: Empire Cormorant 8 Oct: Kuri 9 Oct: USS Dorsey , USS Extricate , USS Greene , USS Industry , USS Lamberton , USS LST-826 , USS Nestor , USS Ocelot , USS Silica , USS SC-636 , USS Snowbell , USS Southard , USS Southern Seas (a.k.a. Lyndonia ), USS Weehawken , USS Vandalia 15 Oct: Zhong’anlun 16 Oct: Takliwa 26 Oct: HMS Saltburn 29 Oct: Ha-204 , I-363 30 Oct: Wairuna Unknown date: Ha-101 , Ha-102 , Ha-104 Other incidents
Shipwrecks and maritime incidents in 1946
Shipwrecks 1 Jan: USS Dorsey 2 Jan: U-516 , U-2502 3 Jan: Empire Tigachi , U-825 , U-2336 , U-2351 5 Jan: U-541 , U-901 , U-2506 6 Jan: U-1109 , U-2356 7 Jan: U-1010 , U-1023 , U-2511 8 Jan: HMS Safari 14 Jan: USS Snowbell , USS Southard 28 Jan: Bluenose 30 Jan: Luray Victory January (unknown date): Akagi Maru 2 Feb: U-764 3 Feb: I-505 5 Feb: U-1228 10 Feb: U-975 12 Feb: I-501 , U-3514 14 Feb: Fulham VII 15 Feb: I-502 , I-506 February (unknown date): U-1197 1 Mar: Sackett's Harbor 4 Mar: USS Extricate 6 Mar: George W. Norris 11 Mar: USS Roche 16 Mar: Karl Leonhardt 26 Mar: Z34 27 Mar: HM LST-405 1 Apr: Charles S. Haight , Ha-103 , Ha-105 , Ha-106 , Ha-107 , Ha-108 , Ha-109 , Ha-111 , Ha-201 , Ha-202 , Ha-203 , Ha-208 , I-36 , I-47 , I-53 , I-58 , I-156 , I-157 , I-158 , I-159 , I-162 , I-366 , I-367 , I-402 , Ro-50 4 Apr: USS S-35 5 Apr: Ha-207 , Ha-210 , Ha-216 , I-202 , Ro-31 8 Apr: USS Despatch 9 Apr: Empire Bridge 16 Apr: I-503 , I-504 21 Apr: Empire Christopher 24 Apr: Alfios 30 Apr: Georgetown Victory , I-121 , Ro-68 , Ro-500 , USS Solar , HMS Stubborn , HMAS Tolga 1 May: HMS Tarantula 8 May: I-153 , I-154 , I-155 9 May: Ha-205 14 May: USS Bellona 21 May: I-203 23 May: I-201 24 May: DD-224 (ex-USS Stewart ) 28 May: I-14 31 May: I-401 May (unknown date): Ro-62 , Ro-63 4 Jun: I-400 , Kunashiri 7 Jun: Kamikaze 8 Jun: Myōkō 9 Jun: USS Solar 1 Jul: USS Anderson , USS Carlisle , USS Gilliam , USS Lamson , Sakawa 25 Jul: USS Apogon , USS Arkansas , USS LSM-60 , USS Pilotfish , USS Saratoga , USS Skipjack 30 Jul: Nagato 2 Aug: Empire Cross August (unknown date): I-372 19 Sep: Ohio 16 Oct: Cassius Hudson 17 Oct: HMAS Waree 19 Oct: Takao 13 Nov: U-977 20 Nov: Albany 27 Nov: Laksnes 2 Dec: HMCS Middlesex 6 Dec: N35 8 Dec: Liberté , HMS Saltburn 16 Dec: Leipzig , Z29 22 Dec: Prinz Eugen 24 Dec: Northeastern Victory 26 Dec: Brigadier General M. G. Zalinski 31 Dec: Monte Pascoal , Schwabenland Unknown date: Claus Von Bevern , HMS Truant , Yu 1007 Other incidents