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HMS Maidstone (1937)

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HMS Maidstone in the harbour of Algiers. Alongside are HMS Safari and HMS Sahib
History
United Kingdom
NameHMS Maidstone
NamesakeMaidstone, Kent
BuilderJohn Brown & Company - Clydebank
Laid down17 August 1936
Launched21 October 1937
Commissioned5 May 1938
ReclassifiedInternment Holding area, 1970s
FateScrapped May 1978
General characteristics
TypeSubmarine depot ship
Displacement8,900 tons
Length497 ft (151 m)
Beam73 ft (22 m)
Speed17 knots (31 km/h; 20 mph)
Complement1,167 men
Armament

HMS Maidstone was a submarine depot ship of the Royal Navy. It operated in the Mediterranean Sea, Indian Ocean and Pacific Ocean during the Second World War. It was later used as a barracks ship and then a prison ship in Northern Ireland.

Facilities

It was built to support the increasing number of submarines, especially on distant stations, such as the Mediterranean Sea and the Pacific Far East. Its equipment included a foundry, coppersmiths, plumbing and carpentry shops, heavy and light machine shops, electrical and torpedo repair shops and plants for charging submarine batteries. It was designed to look after nine operational submarines, supplying over 100 torpedoes and a similar number of mines. Besides large workshops, there were repair facilities for all materiel in the attached submarines and extensive diving and salvage equipment was carried. There were steam laundries, a cinema, hospital, chapel, two canteens, a bakery, barber shop, and a fully equipped operating theatre and dental surgery.

Career

Second World War

Maidstone in Algiers Harbour
Winston Churchill meets submarine commanders in Algiers aboard Maidstone during the War

In September 1939 Maidstone was depot ship to the ten submarines of the 1st Submarine Flotilla. In March 1941 it went to Gibraltar. From November 1942, Maidstone was based at Algiers Harbour, the main Allied base in the Mediterranean. In November 1943 it was assigned to the Eastern Fleet. In September 1944 Maidstone and the 8th Submarine Flotilla were transferred from Ceylon to Fremantle in Western Australia to operate in the Pacific.

In late 1945 Maidstone left Fremantle, and en route to the UK, docked in the Selborne dry dock at Simonstown, South Africa. While on passage, it was diverted to Macassar to pick up 400 British naval prisoners of war from HMS Exeter, HMS Encounter and HMS Stronghold. In November 1945, it arrived at Portsmouth.

During the war Maidstone was adopted by the Borough of Maidstone as part of Warship Week. The plaque from this adoption is held by the National Museum of the Royal Navy in Portsmouth.[1]

Postwar

In 1946 Maidstone became mother ship to the 2nd and 7th Submarine Flotillas. The 2nd Flotilla comprised operational boats, the latter a trials and training squadron. Maidstone had a semi-permanent mooring off Monkey Island (Portland) but often put to sea with its subsidiary ships. In 1951 Maidstone called briefly at Corunna to land a sick crewman. This was not classified an official visit, although it was the first time a British warship had entered a Spanish harbour since the end of the Spanish Civil War. In 1953, it took part in the Fleet Review to celebrate the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II.[2]

On 16 June 1955 the submarine HMS Sidon sank in Portland harbour alongside Maidstone 20 minutes after an explosion in the forward torpedo compartment. A rescue party from Maidstone saved a number of the Sidon's crew, but 13 died. A week later, the submarine was raised and the accident was found to be caused by the high-test peroxide fuel in a torpedo. Surgeon Lieutenant Charles Rhodes was posthumously awarded the Albert Medal for his part in the rescue.

In 1956 Maidstone was the flagship of the Commander-in-Chief, Home Fleet. In September 1957, the Soviet Union protested when Maidstone accompanied the training aircraft carrier HMS Ocean on a visit to Helsinki. In 1959 Maidstone received an extensive refit to accommodate nuclear submarines and the 2nd Flotilla was then moved to Devonport. In 1961 Maidstone sailed to Faslane, on Gareloch, where it was the depot ship to the 3rd and 10th Submarine Squadrons. In 1965, it undertook a trip to Liverpool, and it visited the same port one year later. It also undertook a trip to Rothesay during this period and then, in 1968, it sailed to Rosyth Dockyard to undertake preparations to permanently retire the Maidstone. The Norwegian navy considered buying it, as did HM Prison Service, who decided the facilities onboard, used by hundreds of sailors, were only suitable for 50 or so prisoners.

Belfast

In October 1969 Maidstone was refitted and re-commissioned as accommodation for 2,000 troops and sent to Belfast. In 1969, it arrived under tow at Belfast to serve as barracks for the increased security forces in the area.[3] In 1971, it was used as a prison ship in Operation Demetrius as a place to hold internees without trial, including Gerry Adams. The holding area itself was at the stern and consisted of two bunkhouses, one up, one down, and two messrooms. Above these were the rooms of the governor and his staff (previously the captain's cabin) and above this was the deck, used twice a day for exercise. The deck was surrounded by 10-foot (3.0 m)-high barbed wire. It was moored in Belfast harbour 20 feet (6.1 m) from the land, entry to the jetty being guarded by sand-bagged army emplacements.[4] Maidstone was also notable for a successful escape by seven Provisional IRA members on 17 January 1972. The men swam close to 300 yards (270 m) through icy water and evaded army and police. They later held a press conference.[5][6]

By early 1975 the prisoners had left the Maidstone but the ship remained at Sydenham Wharf in Belfast as part of the Royal Naval Operation in Northern Ireland, to provide immediate short-notice accommodation for the Army, should significant reinforcements be required, and to provide ad-hoc accommodation for UK Service Personnel, visiting the Province.

Fate

On 23 May 1978, Maidstone was broken up for scrap at the Thos. W. Ward scrapyard in Inverkeithing. The ship's bell is now located at Maidstone Grammar School, where it is rung to signify the start of assemblies.

See also

References

  1. ^ Warship Weeks: Adopting Naval Vessels in World War Two | Royal Naval Museum at Portsmouth Historic Dockyard Archived 7 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Souvenir Programme, Coronation Review of the Fleet, Spithead, 15th June 1953, HMSO, Gale and Polden
  3. ^ Van der Bijl, Nicholas (2017). Operation Banner: The British Army in Northern Ireland 1969—2007. Barnsley: Pen & Sword Military. p. 39. ISBN 978-1-47389-895-0.
  4. ^ HMS Maidstone, Uboat.net
  5. ^ Desmond Hamill, Pig in the Middle - The Army in Northern Ireland, 1969-1984 (London: Methuen London Ltd., 1985), 95.
  6. ^ Robinson, Carmel. "Republican prisoners see escape as their duty". The Irish Times. Retrieved 12 January 2020.

Publications