Boreas at anchor
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History | |
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United Kingdom | |
Name | Boreas |
Namesake | Boreas |
Ordered | 22 March 1929 |
Builder | Palmer's, Jarrow |
Laid down | 22 July 1929 |
Launched | 11 June 1930 |
Completed | 20 February 1931 |
Identification | Pennant number: H77[1] |
Fate | Loaned to the Royal Hellenic Navy, 10 February 1944 |
Greece | |
Name | Salamis |
Namesake | Salamis |
Acquired | 10 February 1944 |
Commissioned | 25 March 1944 |
Decommissioned | 9 October 1951 |
Fate |
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General characteristics (as built) | |
Class and type | B-class destroyer |
Displacement | 1,360 long tons (1,380 t) (standard) |
Length | 323 ft (98.5 m) (o/a) |
Beam | 32 ft 3 in (9.8 m) |
Draught | 12 ft 3 in (3.7 m) |
Installed power |
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Propulsion | 2 × shafts; 2 × geared steam turbines |
Speed | 35 knots (65 km/h; 40 mph) |
Range | 4,800 nmi (8,900 km; 5,500 mi) at 15 knots (28 km/h; 17 mph) |
Complement | 142 (wartime) |
Sensors and processing systems | Type 119 ASDIC |
Armament |
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HMS Boreas was a B-class destroyer built for the Royal Navy around 1930. Initially assigned to the Mediterranean Fleet, she was transferred to the Home Fleet in 1936. She then patrolled Spanish waters, enforcing the arms blockade during the first year of the Spanish Civil War of 1936–1939. She spent most of World War II on convoy escort duties in the English Channel and the North Atlantic, based at Dover, Gibraltar, and Freetown, Sierra Leone. Boreas also participated in Operation Husky and was later loaned to the Royal Hellenic Navy the next year after conversion into an escort destroyer. She was renamed Salamis and served in the Aegean for the rest of the war. Salamis became a training ship after the war until she was returned to Britain and scrapped in 1952.