HMS Renown (1916)
|
Missing image HMS_Renown_(1916).jpg HMS Renown Renown operating with HMS Valiant (right distance), French battleship Richelieu (left distance) in the Indian Ocean, 12 May 1944 | ||
Career | ||
---|---|---|
Ordered: | ||
Laid down: | 25 January 1915 | |
Launched: | 4 March 1916 | |
Commissioned: | 20 September 1916 | |
Decommissioned: | ||
Fate: | Sold for scrapping | |
Struck: | Scrapped in 1948 | |
General characteristics | ||
Displacement: | 32,000 tons | |
Length: | 794 ft (242 m) | |
Beam: | 90 ft (27.4 m) | |
Draught: | 31.75 ft (9.7 m) | |
Propulsion: | Geared turbines, 4 shafts, 120,000 shp (89 MW) | |
Speed: | 31 knots (57 km/h) | |
Range: | 3,650 miles (5870 km) | |
Complement: | 1,181 officers and enlisted | |
Armament: | 6 x 15 in (381 mm), 20 x 4.5 in (114 mm), 24 x 2 pdr (907 g) guns | |
Aircraft: | 4 | |
Motto: |
HMS Renown was the lead ship of a class of two 26,500-ton battlecruisers of the Royal Navy.
She was built at Glasgow, Scotland. Completed in September 1916, she served with the Grand Fleet in the North Sea during the remaining two years of World War I.
In 1920-21, following a refit, she carried the Prince of Wales on a voyage to Australia and America. During 1923-26, she was extensively refitted to increase her protection against gunfire and torpedoes.
After a decade of further service, Renown was again reconstructed, greatly changing her appearance and giving her a modern anti-aircraft gun battery, much enhanced aircraft-handling facilities and up-to-date gunfire controls. This work was completed in September 1939, just after the outbreak of the Second World War.
Renown's high speed made her a valuable asset during World War II. In late 1939, she was sent to the South Atlantic to search for the German pocket battleship Admiral Graf Spee. She covered minelaying operations along the Norwegian coast in early April 1940 and, on the 9th of that month, engaged the German battlecruisers (or light battleships) Scharnhorst and Gneisenau, damaging the latter. Later in 1940 and into 1941, she operated with Force "H", based at Gibraltar to provide strategic presence in both the Atlantic and Mediterranean. While with Force "H", she participated in a bombardment of Genoa, Italy, in February 1941. After Home Fleet service in 1942-43, Renown was sent to join the Eastern Fleet in the Indian Ocean. Operating from Ceylon in 1944-45, she helped contain the Japanese in the East Indies.
Renown had brief post-war service in British waters and was sold for scrapping in March 1948.
See HMS Renown for other ships of the same name.
Originally from http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/sh-fornv/uk/uksh-r/renown.htm, a public domain publication of the Naval Historical Center, Department of the Navy.
Renown-class battlecruiser |
Renown | Repulse |
List of battlecruisers of the Royal Navy |