HMS Ben-my-Chree
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Image here | |
Career | |
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Ordered: | |
Laid down: | 1907 at Vickers shipyard in Barrow-in-Furness |
Launched: | 23 March 1908 |
Commissioned: | 3 March 1915[1] |
Fate: | Sunk on 11 January 1917 by shore-based Turkish artillery fire. Hull scrapped 1921 |
Struck: | |
General Characteristics | |
Displacement: | 3880 tons |
Length: | 375 ft (114 m) |
Beam: | 46 ft (14.0 m) |
Draught: | 18 ft (5.5 m) |
Propulsion: | Three steam turbines, triple screw, 14 000 hp (10 MW). Four 170 psi coal-fired double-ended cylindrical boilers. |
Speed: | 24.5 knots (45 km/h) maximum |
Range: | |
Complement: | 250 |
Armament: | 1915: four 12 pounder quick-firing guns and two 3 pounder guns Additional 12-pdr, 2 pounder pom-pom and 3 pounder carriage mounted guns added in May 1916. |
Aircraft: | Up to six seaplanes, usually four. |
Armour: | None |
Motto: |
HMS Ben-my-Chree was built as a fast passenger ferry, the third to bear her name, in 1908 by Vickers for the England–Isle of Man route and taken over by the Royal Navy as a seaplane carrier during World War I. Her name means Lady of My Heart in Manx.
As built, she had a capacity of 2,500 passengers in two classes but she was chartered by the Royal Navy on 1 January 1915 and converted to a seaplane carrier by Cammell Laird in Birkenhead. A hangar occupied much of the aft part of the ship with cranes at the back for lifting the seaplanes from the sea. A flying off deck covered most of the forward part, and a workshop for aircraft maintenance was also added.
She was originally based at Harwich, England, under the command of Commander Cecil L'Estrange Malone, where on 3 May she took part in an abortive air raid on Nordeich using a Sopwith Schneider to be launched from a trolley on the fore deck. The raid was abandoned because of thick fog and the ships returned to harbour the following day. On 6 May she was accidentally rammed by the destroyer HMS Lennox in thick fog, although damage was slight. Another attempt at raiding Nordeich was made on 11 May but was again abandoned because of several mishaps. During this raid Ben-my-Chree attempted to launch her Schneider seaplane to attack an airship, but the engine failed to start.
At the end of May 1915 she sailed for the Dardanelles, where her aircraft were mainly involved spotting for naval artillery. However one of her Shorts 184 seaplanes (piloted by Flight Commander Charles Humphrey Kingsman Edmonds) made the first ever aerial torpedo attack on 12 August 1915. Although the 14 inch (356 mm) diameter torpedo hit the Turkish ship and exploded, the vessel had been previously torpedoed by the British submarine HMS E14 and beached. This was followed by a successful attack on 19 August against a 5000 ton ship by Edmonds and Flight Lieutenant George Dacre.
Following the abandonment of the Gallipoli Campaign, she was transferred to Port Said in Egypt. SS Uganda collided with her on 11 February 1916 and caused serious damage to Ben-my-Chree's bows, which were temporarily repaired. Permanent repairs in dry dock took from 13 March until 26 April. Commander Charles Samson replaced L'Estrange Malone as captain of the ship on 14 May 1916. A few days later, Lieutenant William Wedgwood Benn, later Secretary of State for India (1929-1931), joined the ship as an observer.
Over the next few months, she operated from Port Said and Aden provided artillery spotting aircraft for the bombardment of El Arish, reconnaissance around Jaffa and Ramleh and bombing raids.
She was sunk on 11 January 1917 by shore-based Turkish artillery fire whilst at anchor at Castellorizo, in the Dodecanese Islands. The hull was salvaged for scrap in 1921.
[edit] References
- History of the ship, written in 1923
- Gallipoli: The Air War
- World Aircraft Carriers List: RN Seaplane Carriers & Tenders
- Manx Quarterly 1908 - Launch of Ben-My-Chree
- RAF 269 Squadron history 1914-1923, largely a chronology of Ben-My-Chree's activities
- Appendices to RAF 269 Squadron history - includes Edmond's report of 12 August torpedo attack