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HMS Cavalier (D73) is a retired C-class destroyer of the Royal Navy. She was laid down by J. Samuel White and Company at East Cowes on 28 March 1943, launched on 7 April 1944, and commissioned on 22 November 1944.[1] She served in World War II and in various commissions in the Far East until she was decommissioned in 1972. After decommissioning she was preserved as a museum ship and currently resides at Chatham Historic Dockyard.[2]
[edit] ConstructionHMS Cavalier was one of 96 War Emergency Programme destroyers ordered between 1940 and 1942. She was one of the first ships to be built with a welded hull, although the centre of the ship remained riveted to ensure strength. The new process gave the ship additional speed. In fact in 1970, a race was arranged between HMS Cavalier and the frigate HMS Rapid to decide which was faster. Cavalier beat Rapid by 30 yards (27 m), after the latter lifted a safety valve, reaching an average speed of 31.8 knots (58.9 km/h).[3] [edit] Service historyAfter commissioning she joined the 6th Destroyer Flotilla, part of the Home Fleet, and took part in a number of operations off Norway. Most notably in February 1945 she was despatched with HMS Myngs and HMS Scorpion[4] to reinforce a convoy from the Kola Inlet in Russia, which had suffered attacks from enemy aircraft and U-boats, and had subsequently been scattered by a violent storm. She and the other escorts reformed the convoy, and returned to Britain with the loss of only three of the thirty-four ships. This action earned Cavalier a battle honour.[1] Later in 1945 Cavalier was dispatched to the Far East, where she provided naval gunfire support during the Battle of Surabaya. In February 1946 she went to Bombay to help quell the Royal Indian Navy Mutiny. After some time in the British Pacific Fleet she was paid off in May 1946 and was placed in reserve at Portsmouth.[4] Cavalier returned to service in 1957 after a modernisation, which included removing some of her torpedo tubes in favour of Squid anti-submarine mortars. She was again sent to the Far East, and joined the 8th Destroyer Squadron in Singapore. In December 1962 she transported 180 troops from Singapore to Brunei to help with a rebellion that became part of the Indonesia-Malaysia Confrontation. After disembarking the troops she remained in Brunei as a communications centre for several days until other Royal Navy ships arrived to relieve her.[5] Cavalier was decommissioned in 1972, the last surviving destroyer of the Royal Navy to have served in World War II. On 14 November 2007, Cavalier was officially designated as a war memorial to the 142 Royal Navy destroyers sunk during World War II and the 11,000 men killed in their service. The unveiling of a bronze monument created by the artist Kenneth Potts was conducted by HRH The Duke of Edinburgh. The monument resides adjacent to the ship at the Historic Dockyard in Chatham, Kent. [edit] After decommissioningAfter decommissioning at Chatham Dockyard, she was laid up in Portsmouth. As a unique survivor, after a five year campaign led by Lord Louis Mountbatten of HMS Kelly fame, the ship was bought by the Cavalier Trust for £65,000 and handed over on Trafalgar Day 1977 in Portsmouth. By selling the ship to the Trust, the UK Government and the Royal Navy severed all formal connection and responsibility for the ship. A special warrant was issued that allows her to retain the prefix "HMS" (Her Majesty's Ship) and fly the White Ensign, a privilege normally only enjoyed by commissioned ships of the Royal Navy. A similar privilege is enjoyed by another museum ship, HMS Belfast. Moved to Southampton, Cavalier opened as a museum and memorial ship in August 1982. However, commercially this was not a success, and in October 1983 she was moved to Brighton, where she formed the centre piece of a newly built yacht marina. In 1987, the ship was brought to the River Tyne to form the centrepiece of a national shipbuilding exhibition centre planned by South Tyneside Metropolitan Borough Council in the former shipyard of Hawthorn Leslie and Company, builders of many similar destroyers including HMS Kelly. Unfortunately the ambitious plans for the museum came to nothing, and the borough council, faced with continuing maintenance costs of £30,000pa and a hardening of public opinion against unnecessary expenditure, resolved to sell the ship and wind up the venture in 1996. The ship sat in a dry dock (due to a previous list) in a rusting condition, awaiting a buyer or scrapping in situ. After the reforming of the Cavalier Trust, and a debate in Parliament, in 1998 Cavalier was bought by Chatham Historic Dockyard for display as a museum ship. Arriving on 23 May 1998, HMS Cavalier now resides in No. 2 dry-dock where HMS Victory was built. In the Summer of 2009 the Chatham Historic Dockyard Trust made available accommodation onboard the ship for youth groups who wish to stay onboard and experience life onboard a Royal Naval Destroyer. [edit] See also
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