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HMS Tiger (C20)
File:HMS Tiger (C20).png
HMS Tiger before conversion
Career RN Ensign
Class and type: Tiger-class light cruiser
Name: HMS Tiger
Ordered: 1942 Additional Naval Programme
Builder: John Brown Shipyard
Laid down: 1 October 1941
Launched: 25 October 1945
Commissioned: 18 March 1959
Decommissioned: 20 April 1978
Fate: Scrapped starting October 1986
General characteristics
Displacement: 11,560 tons as built
12,080 tons after conversion
Length: 555.5 ft (169.3 m) overall
538 ft (164 m) between perpendiculars
Beam: 64 ft (20 m)
Draught: 21 ft (6.4 m)
Propulsion: Four Admiralty-type three drum boilers (400 psi)
Four shaft Parsons steam turbines
80,000 shp
Speed: 31.5 knots
Range: 8,000 nautical miles (15,000 km) at 16 knots
Complement: 716 (885 after conversion)
Armament:

As built:

  • Four × 6-inch guns (2 × 2)
  • Six × 3-inch (3 × 2)

After conversion:

  • Two × 6-inch (1 × 2)
  • Two × 3-inch (1 × 2)
  • Two × Seacat quad missile launchers
Aircraft carried: After conversion: Four helicopters (originally Westland Wessex, then Sea King)

HMS Tiger was a conventional cruiser of the Royal Navy, one of a three ship class known as the Tiger class.

Construction, redesign and commissioning[]

Tiger started out as Bellerophon laid down in 1941 at the John Brown Shipyard as part of the Minotaur class of light cruisers. They had a low construction priority due to more pressing requirements for other ship types during World War II, particularly anti-submarine craft. Bellerophon was renamed Tiger in 1945, and was launched, partially constructed, on 25 October 1945. She was christened by Lady Stansgate, the wife of William Benn, the Secretary of State for Air, and mother of MP Anthony Wedgewood Benn. However, work on Tiger was suspended in 1946, and she was laid up at Dalmuir.

Construction of Tiger resumed, but to a new design, with Tiger becoming the name ship of the class. The new design was approved in 1951, but construction did not resume until 1954. She would have semi-automatic 6-inch (152 mm) guns in twin high-angle mounts with each gun capable of shooting 20 rounds per minute, and a secondary battery of fully automatic 3-inch (76 mm) guns which delivered 90 rounds per minute per gun. She would have no lighter anti-aircraft armament or torpedo tubes. Air conditioning was fitted throughout the ship, and a 200-line automatic telephone exchange was installed. Each 6 inch and 3 inch mounting had its own director, linked to a dedicated radar on the director. Tiger was finally commissioned on Clydebank in March 1959.

Career[]

The early part of Tiger's first commission was spent, under Captain RE Washbourne, on trials trying to make her new armament actually work. After workup under Captain R Hutchins Tiger went on a round of autumn flag-showing visits to Gdynia, Stockholm, Kiel and Antwerp. At the end of 1959 she deployed to the Mediterranean for a year as Fleet Flagship. Rear Admiral Michael Pollock flew his flag in Tiger as Flag Officer, Second-in-Command, Home Fleet, from 1965 - 1966..

She took part in operations in the Far East during the Indonesian Confrontation in the early 1960s. In 1966, she hosted talks between Prime Ministers Harold Wilson (UK) and Ian Smith of Rhodesia. The latter had unilaterally declared independence from Britain due to Britain's insistence on the removal of white minority rule. Tiger was placed in reserve in 1966 before undergoing conversion to a "helicopter and command cruiser" from 1968-72 in HMNB Devonport.

Conversion and later career[]

This reconstruction included replacing the after 6 inch mount and 3 inch mounts with a flight deck and hangar to operate 4 Wessex (and then later Sea King) helicopters. She also had new radars, Sea Cat anti-aircraft missiles, and taller funnels. She had excellent command, control, and communications facilities installed, and found use as a flagship to task groups. The refit was very expensive; some say the many millions to convert Tiger, as well as her sister ship Blake to helicopter cruisers drained much needed resources better used elsewhere. She was recommissioned in 1972. Her large crew made her an expensive ship to operate and maintain. When the economic difficulties of the early seventies came around this led to a defense manpower drawdown that resulted in manpower shortages, although Tiger remained in service long enough to take part in the 1977 Silver Jubilee Fleet Review in celebration of Queen Elizabeth II.[1]

Decommissioning and disposal[]

In 1978 Tiger was placed in reserve, subsequently being placed on the disposal list in 1979. Both Tiger and sister-ship Blake were listed as part of the Standby Squadron, and moored inactive at HMNB Chatham.

When the Falklands War broke out in early April 1982, both ships were rapidly surveyed and it was determined both were in very good material shape, such that both were drydocked (Tiger in Portsmouth and Blake at Chatham) and recommissioning work was begun.

Whilst there was speculation that their 6-inch guns would be useful for shore bombardment, the real reason for their potential deployment was the size of their flight decks, (the 3rd largest in the Royal Navy at that time after Hermes and Invincible), and the potential to use them as mobile forward operating and refuelling bases for Task Force Harriers. (Blake had already operated RAF Harriers briefly for proving trials in 1971, and Harriers had refuelled on Tiger). Their benefit would be more as platforms to extend the range and endurance of Harriers and as a refuelling stop on the way back to the carriers, rather than as somewhere to operate offensive missions from, or as somewhere to place a pair of Sea Harriers as an extended-range CAP (Combat Air Patrol) ahead of the two carriers (and reducing their own exposure to air strikes), but the need to take off vertically rather than the use of a ski-jump severely reduced the Harriers endurance and weapons carrying capability, and in late May 1982 after the loss of HMS Sheffield and ARA Belgrano the refits were stopped.

There were also doubts about the two ships' self-defence capabilities, (the 6-inch and 3-inch armament had never been reliable) and this coupled with the large complement (and potential losses of life were one of the old girls to be lost) caused much anxiety in the Admiralty. That along with where to find 1800 capable and qualified crew in a hurry at a time when the Royal Navy was already downsizing sealed the two ships fate. The UK simply could not afford its own 'Belgrano' disaster, either materially or politically.

Though Chile showed a faint interest in acquiring Tiger (and sister-ship Blake), this did not get past the discussion stage, and Tiger lingered on tied to a mooring buoy in Portsmouth Harbour. Tiger existed in a slowly deteriorating condition until mid-1986, when she was sold for scrap. She was towed to Spain and scrapping started in October 1986.

Commanding officers[]

From To Captain
1956 1959 Commander B H Dodds RN
1959 1959 Captain R E Washbourne DSO OBE RN
1977 1977 Captain S A C Cassels CBE RN

References[]

  1. Official Souvenir Programme, 1977. Silver Jubilee Fleet Review, HMSO

Publications[]


All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at HMS Tiger (C20) and the edit history here.
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