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HMS Yarmouth

HMS Yarmouth

Showing her damaged bows after ramming the ICVG Baldur during the Cod Wars.

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As per Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Yarmouth_%28F101%29, the following is stated:

HMS Yarmouth was the first modified Type 12 frigate of the Rothesay class to enter service with the Royal Navy. From her commissioning in 1960, she performed in numerous roles, including the Third Cod War and the Falklands War.

Service history

On 13 July 1965, Yarmouth collided with the submarine Tiptoe, 10 miles South East of Portland Bill. Tiptoe survived, but had to be repaired at the yards of Cammell Laird.

In April 1970 whilst on the Beira Patrol she was diverted to be a long stop for the rescue of Apollo 13. Communications in the Indian Ocean were very poor. The recovery instructions were sent from Houston to Halifax, Nova Scotia where the Royal Canadian Navy sent them by morse code to the ship. Recovery manual was taken down by communications ratings, two at a time, in pencil and paper. Luckily the space craft came down amongst a US Navy task force with two aircraft carriers and television cameras in the Pacific Ocean.

Falklands War

See also: Battle of Seal Cove

She carried out a variety of tasks including shore bombardment, anti-submarine patrols, covert operations and escorting merchant ships to and from the landing area. On the early hours of 23 May 1982, along with Brilliant, she intercepted and shelled the Argentine coaster Monsunen west of Lively Island; the coaster evaded capture by running aground at Seal Cove. After the San Carlos Landings (Operation Sutton) she provided air defence during the Battle of San Carlos for the landing ships in San Carlos Water. On 25 May she shot down an A4C Skyhawk (C-319), flown by Teniente Tomás Lucero, with her Sea Cat missile system. Lucero ejected and was recovered by Fearless. On 13–14 June, she and Active fired on Argentine positions during the Battle of Mount Tumbledown. During the war she fired over 1,000 shells from her 4.5" guns, mostly during shore bombardment, and 58 anti-submarine Limbo mortar rounds.

She was decommissioned in 1986, and in 1987 towed out to the North Atlantic and sunk by weapons from Manchester in that year's SinkEx on 16 June 1987.

Career

Name: HMS Yarmouth

Operator: Royal Navy

Builder: John Brown & Company

Laid down: 29 November 1957 Launched: 23 March 1959 Commissioned: 26 March 1960 Decommissioned: 30 April 1986

Homeport: Rosyth, Scotland

Identification: Pennant number: F101

Motto: Rex et Jura Nostra (Latin: "Our King and Laws")

Nickname: The Fighting 101, The Crazy 'Y', The Rubber Duck

Fate: Sunk as target practice by HMS Manchester 16 June 1987

General characteristics

Class & type: Rothesay-class frigate

Displacement: 2800 tons

Armament: 2 x 4.5 inch (113 mm) Mark 6 guns, 1 x quad Seacat SAM launcher, 1 x Limbo mortar, 2 x 20 mm Oerlikon guns

Kind Regards

Tomislav Raymondi.
 

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They must have been very confident of the shoring up forward to be going at that speed.
 

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it was the paint shop/ cable locker which was a very strong part on any warship due to the nature of what was contained within
 

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