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HMS Dulverton (L63)

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Destroyer of the Royal Navy For other ships with the same name, see HMS Dulverton.

History
United Kingdom
NameHMS Dulverton
Ordered4 September 1939
BuilderAlexander Stephen and Sons, Govan
Laid down16 July 1940
Launched1 April 1941
Commissioned28 September 1941
Honours and
awards
FateDamaged and scuttled on 13 November 1943
BadgeOn a Field barry wavy of six White and Blue within an annulet per fess Red and Green, a Griffin's claw erased Red grasping a riding whip and an axe in saltire Gold.
General characteristics
Class and typeType II Hunt-class destroyer
Displacement
  • 1,050 tons standard;
  • 1,490 tons full load
Length85.34 m
Beam9.62 m
Draught2.51 m (8 ft 3 in)
Propulsion2 shaft Parsons geared turbines; 19,000 shp
Speed25.5 knots (25½ kn full)
Range3,600 nmi (6,670 km) at 14 knots (26 km/h)
Complement164
Armament

HMS Dulverton was a Type II Hunt-class destroyer of the Royal Navy. Launched in 1941, she saw service during the Second World War until being damaged by German aircraft in 1943 during the Battle of Leros, and was scuttled. The Commander during her last battle was Stuart Austen Buss, MVO, DSC, RN. He did not survive.

Dulverton was ordered from Alexander Stephen and Sons of Govan on the outbreak of war in 1939. She was laid down on 16 July 1940, and launched 1 April 1941. She was completed by September 1941.

Service history

Dulverton participated in many operations, including escorting troop convoys bound for Suez Canal and the convoys to Malta including the first one to lift the siege there, supporting the British Eighth Army in North Africa, the Tobruk Raid, and the destruction of the German submarine U-559 with other destroyers and the Royal Air Force.

In October 1943 Dulverton was involved in the Dodecanese Campaign, as part of a force that was trying to capture the Greek islands of Kos and Leros on 20 October and again on 4 November. On 12 November, Dulverton returned to support the garrison on Leros which had just been invaded by the Germans. On 13 November, whilst five miles off the coast of Kos, she was attacked by German Do 217 E-5 aircraft from KG 100 using Hs 293 glider bombs, one of which struck Dulverton abreast of the bridge. Six officers and 114 ratings were evacuated from the ship before she was scuttled by HMS Belvoir, but three officers including the Captain of the 5th Destroyer Flotilla and 75 ratings were lost.

References

  1. ( per family of Commander Buss)
  2. Ford, Roger (2013). Germany's Secret Weapons of World War II. London, United Kingdom: Amber Books. p. 224. ISBN 978-1-909160-56-9.
  3. HMS Dulverton (L 63) Escort destroyer of the Hunt (Type II) class

Publications

External links

36°50′N 27°30′E / 36.833°N 27.500°E / 36.833; 27.500

Hunt-class destroyers
Type I
 Royal Navy
 Republic of China Navy
 Ecuadorian Navy
 Egyptian Navy
 Israeli Navy
  • Haifa (ex-Ibrahim el-Awal (1951))
Type II
 Royal Navy
 Royal Danish Navy
 German Navy
 Royal Hellenic Navy
 Indian Navy
 Royal Norwegian Navy
 Free Polish Navy
Type III
 Royal Navy
 Free French Naval Forces
 German Navy
 Royal Hellenic Navy
 Royal Norwegian Navy
Type IV
 Royal Navy
Shipwrecks and maritime incidents in November 1943
Shipwrecks
Other incidents
1942 1943 1944
October 1943 December 1943
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