H.M.S. Peterel (1927): Difference between revisions

From The Dreadnought Project
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 30: Line 30:
{{Tenure|rank={{LCommRN}}|name=Gaspard Patrick Hunter-Blair|nick=Gaspard P. Hunter-Blair|appt=7 May, 1929{{NLJul31|p. 260}}|end=}}
{{Tenure|rank={{LCommRN}}|name=Gaspard Patrick Hunter-Blair|nick=Gaspard P. Hunter-Blair|appt=7 May, 1929{{NLJul31|p. 260}}|end=}}
{{Tenure|rank={{LCommRN}}|name=Godfrey Ransome|nick=Godfrey Ransome|appt=14 August, 1931{{NLJan33|p. 261}}|end=}}
{{Tenure|rank={{LCommRN}}|name=Godfrey Ransome|nick=Godfrey Ransome|appt=14 August, 1931{{NLJan33|p. 261}}|end=}}
{{Tenure|rank={{LCommRN}} ('''A I ''Fr''''')|name=Hugh Nicholas Aubyn Richardson|nick=Hugh N. A. Richardson|appt=6 May, 1936{{NLJul37|p. 263}}|end=}}
</div name=fredbot:officeCapt>
</div name=fredbot:officeCapt>



Revision as of 12:20, 22 June 2018

H.M.S. Peterel (1927)
Builder: Yarrow & Company
Launched: 18 Jul, 1927
Sunk: 8 Dec, 1941

H.M.S. Peterel was a river gunboat built for service in the Royal Navy in the 1920s.

There was an earlier ship of the same name, the destroyer Peterel, launched in 1899.

Service

Peterel spent her career on the China Station, primarily plying the Yangtse River.

Re-commissioned at Hong Kong on 30 November, 1927.[1]

Peterel was lost to Japanese forces in close combat on 8 December, 1941 as she tried to stall for time to destroy secret materials. Lacking breech blocks for her 3-in guns, she fought back with small arms before sinking.

Captains

Dates of appointment are provided when known.

See Also

Footnotes

  1. The Navy List. (January, 1933). p. 261.
  2. The Navy List. (February, 1929). p. 259.
  3. The Navy List. (July, 1931). p. 260.
  4. The Navy List. (January, 1933). p. 261.
  5. The Navy List. (July, 1937). p. 263.

Bibliography


Gunboat H.M.S. Peterel
<– Kil Class Small Fry (UK) H.M.S. Gannet –>
<– Insect Class Gunboats (UK) H.M.S. Gannet –>