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M29-class monitor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

M29-class monitor
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The M29 class comprised five monitors of the Royal Navy, all built and launched during 1915.

Quick Facts Class overview, General characteristics ...
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The ships of this class were ordered in March, 1915, as part of the Emergency War Programme of ship construction. The contract for construction was granted to Harland & Wolff, Belfast, who sub-contracted the construction of M32 and M33 to Workman, Clark and Company.

The main armament of the ships, two 6-inch Mk XII guns, came from guns originally intended for the five Queen Elizabeth-class battleships which became surplus when their aft casemate mountings turned out to be unworkable and were dispensed with.

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Ships of the class

  • HMS M29 – launched on 22 May 1915 and later renamed Medusa and Talbot, she was sold in 1946.
  • HMS M30 – launched on 23 June 1915, and sunk on 14 May 1916.
  • HMS M31 – launched on 24 June 1915, and broken up for scrap in 1948.
  • HMS M32 – launched on 22 May 1915, and sold in January 1920.
  • HMS M33 – launched on 22 May 1915, is one of a number of World War I-era warships in existence today and is located in dry-dock near HMS Victory at Portsmouth Naval Base. It has been restored and is open to public.[1]
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References

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