- HMS Renown (1916)
HMS "Renown" was the
lead ship of the two 26,500-ton Renown classbattlecruisers of theRoyal Navy , the other being HMS|Repulse|1916|6. Both ships were originally to be built asRevenge class battleship s along with a third ship named HMS "Resistance", but the orders were suspended after theFirst World War broke out. A few months laterFirst Sea Lord Jackie Fisher used his influence to have "Renown" and "Repulse" restarted to a new design as battlecruisers.She was built by Fairfield Shipbuilding & Engineering Co. Ltd. at Govan,
Glasgow ,Scotland . Completed in September 1916, she was too late to serve in theBattle of Jutland but served with theGrand Fleet in theNorth Sea during the remaining two years ofWorld War I . The futureFirst Sea Lord John H. D. Cunningham served aboard her for a period as seniornavigator .In 1920-21, following a refit, she carried the Prince of Wales on voyages to
Australia ,New Zealand and theUnited States . During 1923-26, she was extensively refitted to increase her protection against gunfire and torpedoes, and in 1927 also carried the Duke and Duchess of York to Australia and New Zealand.After a decade of further service, "Renown" was again reconstructed, greatly changing her appearance and giving her a modern anti-aircraft gun battery, much enhanced aircraft-handling facilities, and up-to-date gunfire controls. This work was completed in September 1939, just after the outbreak of the Second World War. During this work she picked up the Nickname of HMS Refit. (The ship had first been nicknamed 'HMS Refit' as early as 1916, due to the hurried addition of extra armour in response to the defensive weaknesses of battlecruisers revealed by losses at Jutland. Her sister-ship "Repulse" had similarly been nicknamed 'HMS Repair').
"Renown's" high speed made her a valuable asset during World War II. In late 1939, she was sent to the South Atlantic to search for the German
pocket battleship "Admiral Graf Spee". She then covered minelaying operations along the Norwegian coast in early April 1940 and, on the 9th of that month, engaged the Germanbattlecruiser s "Scharnhorst" and "Gneisenau", damaging the latter with three hits and getting hit twice in return. Later in 1940 and into 1941, she operated with Force "H", based atGibraltar , to provide strategic presence in both the Atlantic andMediterranean . While with Force "H", she participated in a bombardment ofGenoa, Italy , in February 1941. In May, she took part in the hunt for the German battleship "Bismarck".After
Home Fleet service in 1942-43, "Renown" was sent to join the Eastern Fleet in theIndian Ocean . During this period she also carried Churchill to and from a pre-Tehran conference in America, and was granted a set of handbells for use at or before church services by the people of Leicester, with whom she had become associated inWarship Week 1942 (commemorated by a letter from the captain, still on display atLeicester Cathedral ). Operating fromCeylon in 1944-45, she helped contain the Japanese in the East Indies."Renown" was one of only four battlecruisers to survive World War II — the others being the two
US Navy "Alaska" class "large cruisers" built during the war and the Turkish TCG "Yavuz" which had been launched as SMS "Goeben" in 1911. "Renown" had brief post-war service in British waters as a training hulk as part of the stokers' training establishment HMS "Imperieuse", and was sold for scrapping in March 1948. She was the last of Admiral Jackie Fisher's battlecruisers to see the scrapyard, outlasting HMS|Furious|47|6 by days.References
*"This article incorporates text from http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/sh-fornv/uk/uksh-r/renown.htm, a
public domain publication of the U.S. Naval Historical Center."ee also
External links
* [http://www.maritimequest.com/warship_directory/great_britain/battleships/renown_1916/hms_renown_1916.htm Maritimequest HMS Renown Photo Gallery]
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