P-class sloop

Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums Service image of 1:48 scale model P-class sloop HMS P23
Class overview
NameP class
Operators Royal Navy
In service1916–1921
Planned64
Completed64 (including 20 as PC-class Q-ships)
Lost3
General characteristics [1]
Displacement613 long tons (623 t)
Length244 ft 6 in (74.52 m) o.a.
Beam23 ft 9 in (7.24 m)
Draught8 ft (2.4 m)
Installed power3,500 shp (2,600 kW)
Propulsion
  • 2 × steam turbines
  • 2 × cylindrical boilers
  • 2 × screws
Speed20 knots (23 mph; 37 km/h)
RangeOil fuel
Complement50–54 men
Armament
  • (As designed):
  • 1 × 4-inch (102 mm) gun
  • 1 × QF 2-pounder (40mm) A/A
  • 2 × 14-inch torpedo tubes

The P class, nominally described as "patrol boats", was in effect a class of British coastal sloops. Twenty-four ships to this design were ordered in May 1915 (numbered P.11 to P.34) and another thirty between February and June 1916 (numbered P.35 to P.64) under the Emergency War Programme[2] for the Royal Navy in the First World War, although ten of the latter group were in December 1916 altered on the stocks before launch for use as decoy Q-ships and were renumbered as PC-class sloops. None were named initially, although in 1925 P.38 was given the name Spey.

These vessels were designed to replace destroyers in coastal operations, but had twin screws, a very low freeboard, ram bows of hardened steel, a sharply cutaway funnel and a small turning circle. Clearly seen as the linear descendants of the late 19th century steam torpedo boats and coastal destroyers, many were fitted with the 14-inch torpedo tubes removed from old torpedo boats.

With the survival of a builder's diary by William Bartram, full details of the sea trials of P.23 on 21 June 1916 exist. She worked up to 21.8 knots (40.4 km/h). Bartram's commissioned a model from Sunderland modelmaker C Crawford & Sons and this model, in the collections of Sunderland Museum and Heritage Service, is stored in the model store of Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums Service at the Discovery Museum.

  1. ^ Gardiner and Gray 1985, p. 96.
  2. ^ "P boats of the First World War – William Bartram and P23", Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums Blog, 18 April 2013