Misplaced Pages

ORP Warszawa (1920)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
For other ships with the same name, see ORP Warszawa.
River monitors Pińsk (left), Warszawa (centre) and Toruń (right), with the command vessel Generał Sikorski (extreme right)
History
Naval Ensign of PolandPoland
NameORP Warszawa
NamesakeWarsaw
BuilderGdansk Shipyard
Launched30 April 1920
Commissioned13 August 1920
FateScuttled 18 September 1939
Naval Ensign of the Soviet Union (1935 - 1950)Soviet Union
NameVitebsk (Витебск)
NamesakeVitebsk
AcquiredRaised in October 1939
Fate
  • Scuttled 18 September 1941
  • Raised in 1944 and scrapped
General characteristics
Displacement110 - 112½ tons
Length34.5 m (113.2 ft)
Beam5.5 m (18.0 ft)
Draught0.8 m (2.6 ft)
Installed power
  • Until 1937: 180 hp (130 kW)
  • After 1938: 200 hp (150 kW)
Propulsion
  • Until 1937:
  • 3 × Maybach 4-cylinder internal combustion engines
  • After 1938:
  • 2 × Glennifer 6-cylinder internal combustion engines
Speed8.6 kn (16 km/h)
Complement44
Armament
  • 1920 - 1930
  • 2 × 105 mm/47 guns
  • 1 x 100 mm/19 howitzer
  • 5 × 7.92 mm machine guns
  • 1930 - 1939
  • 2 × 75 mm howitzers
  • 5 × 7.92 mm machine guns
  • 1939 - 1941 (Soviet service)
  • 3 × 76.2 mm guns
  • 4 × 7.62 mm machine guns
Armour
  • Bulwarks - 5 mm (0.2 in)
  • Deck - 6 mm (0.2 in)
  • Bridge - 8 mm (0.3 in)

ORP Warszawa was an armed river monitor of the Riverine Flotilla of the Polish Navy, launched in 1920 and scuttled in 1939. She was raised by the Soviets, scuttled again in 1941, raised for the last time in 1944 and then scrapped.

Construction

Warszawa was built in 1920 in the Free City of Danzig for the Polish Navy. Initially she was armed with two 105 mm guns and five machine guns, and by the late 1930s she carried three 75 mm guns and four machine guns.

Invasion of Poland

Like all of the ships of the Riverine Flotilla of the Polish Navy in Pinsk, she was not used in combat during the German Invasion of Poland. After the Soviet invasion of Poland, she was scuttled on the Pripyat River on 18 September 1939, because of the impossibility of withdrawal.

Inside the turret of a Polish river monitor

Soviet service

She was raised on 11 October 1939 by the Soviets, towed to Factory No 300 in Kiev, repaired and commissioned as Vitebsk (Витебск). She served in the Dnepr Flotilla, then the Pinsk Flotilla. From July 1941 she fought against the Germans on the Berezina, Desna and Dnieper Rivers, in the defence of Kiev. Because of the Soviet retreat, she was scuttled on 18 September 1941 near Kiev.

Fate

The wreck was raised in August 1944 by the Soviets, and then scrapped at Kiev.

Model of Warszawa

References

  1. ^ S S Berezhnoy (1994) p.45
  2. ^ (in Russian) Мониторы тип «Бобруйск» (Bobruisk-class monitors) at ВМФ, Вторая Мировая Война (Soviet Navy, Second World War website), retrieved 2011-08-08
  • (in Russian) S.S. Berezhnoy, Trofyei i reparacyi VMF SSSR, Yakutsk 1994
  • Chesneau, Roger, ed. (1980). Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1922–1946. London: Conway Maritime Press. ISBN 0-85177-146-7.
Shipwrecks and maritime incidents in September 1939
Shipwrecks
Other incidents
1938 1939 1940
August 1939 October 1939
Shipwrecks and maritime incidents in September 1941
Shipwrecks
Other incidents
1940 1941 1942
August 1941 October 1941
Categories: