Resolution in the Indian Ocean in 1942–1943
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History | |
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United Kingdom | |
Name | Resolution |
Builder | Palmers Shipbuilding and Iron Company, Jarrow |
Laid down | 29 November 1913 |
Launched | 14 January 1915 |
Commissioned | 30 December 1916 |
Identification | Pennant number: 09 |
Fate | Sold for scrap, 5 May 1948 |
General characteristics (as built) | |
Class and type | Revenge-class battleship |
Displacement | |
Length | 620 ft 7 in (189.2 m) |
Beam | 88 ft 6 in (27 m) |
Draught | 33 ft 7 in (10.2 m) (deep load) |
Installed power |
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Propulsion | 4 shafts; 4 steam turbine sets |
Speed | 22 knots (41 km/h; 25 mph) |
Range | 7,000 nmi (12,960 km; 8,060 mi) at 10 knots (19 km/h; 12 mph) |
Crew | 910 |
Armament |
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Armour |
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HMS Resolution (pennant number: 09) was one of five Revenge-class battleships built for the Royal Navy during the First World War. Completed in December 1916, Resolution saw no combat during the war as both the British and German fleets adopted a more cautious strategy after the Battle of Jutland in May owing to the increasing threat of naval mines and submarines.
Resolution spent the 1920s and 1930s alternating between the Atlantic Fleet and the Mediterranean Fleet. Whilst serving in the Mediterranean in the early 1920s, the ship went to Turkey twice in response to crises arising from the Greco-Turkish War, including the Great Fire of Smyrna in 1922. She also saw limited involvement during the Franco-British intervention in the Russian Civil War in the Black Sea in 1920. The ship's interwar career was otherwise uneventful. With the outbreak of the Second World War in September 1939, Resolution was assigned to the Channel Force before being transferred to convoy escort duties in the North Atlantic. In May 1940, she participated in the Battles of Narvik until German air attacks drove her off.
In June 1940, the ship was transferred to Force H, where she took part in the destruction of the French Fleet at Mers-el-Kebir in July after the French surrender to Germany. She was also involved in the Battle of Dakar, an attempt to neutralise the French battleship Richelieu that ended with Resolution's torpedoing by the French submarine Bévéziers. Badly damaged, Resolution was repaired first in Freetown, Sierra Leone, and then the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard under Lend-Lease. Thereafter assigned to the Eastern Fleet, her age kept her from seeing action against the Japanese fleet, and she instead escorted convoys off the eastern coast of Africa. She returned to Britain in September 1943 and was decommissioned. Thereafter she saw service with the training establishment HMS Imperieuse, a role she filled until February 1948, when she was paid off, sold for scrap and broken up at Faslane.