enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of monitors of the Royal Navy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_monitors_of_the...

    The Abercrombie-class monitors came about when Bethlehem Steel in the United States, the contracted supplier of the main armament for the Greek battleship Salamis being built in Germany, instead offered to sell the four 14"/45 caliber gun twin gun turrets to the Royal Navy on 3 November 1914, the ships were laid down and launched within six ...

  3. History of the Royal Navy (after 1707) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Royal_Navy...

    The history of the Royal Navy reached an important juncture in 1707, when the Act of Union merged the kingdoms of England and Scotland into the Kingdom of Great Britain, following a century of personal union between the two countries. This had the effect of merging the Royal Scots Navy into the Royal Navy.

  4. HMS Roberts (F40) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Roberts_(F40)

    HMS Roberts was a Royal Navy Roberts-class monitor of the Second World War.She was the second monitor to be named after Field Marshal Frederick Roberts, 1st Earl Roberts.. Built by John Brown & Company, of Clydebank, she was laid down 30 April 1940, launched 1 February 1941 and completed on 27 October 1941.

  5. Royal Navy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Navy

    The Royal Navy's presence in the Persian Gulf typically includes a Type 45 destroyer and a squadron of minehunters supported by an RFA Bay-class mothership. The Royal Navy is currently deployed in different areas of the world, including some standing Royal Navy deployments. These include several home tasks as well as overseas deployments.

  6. History of the Royal Navy (before 1707) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Royal_Navy...

    The Royal Scots Navy (or Old Scots Navy) was the navy of the Kingdom of Scotland until its merger with the Kingdom of England's Royal Navy in 1707 as a consequence of the Treaty of Union and the Acts of Union that ratified it. From 1603 until 1707, the Royal Scots Navy and England's Royal Navy were organised as one force, though not formally ...

  7. Abercrombie-class monitor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abercrombie-class_monitor

    The company – Bethlehem Steel in the United States – instead offered to sell the four 14 in (356 mm) twin gun turrets to the Royal Navy on 3 November 1914. [1] The Royal Navy was using obsolete pre-dreadnought battleships for shore bombardment in support of the army in Belgium, and a design for a shallow-draught warship (known as "Monitors ...

  8. Roberts-class monitor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roberts-class_monitor

    Roberts herself was sold for scrapping shortly after the war, but hired back by the Royal Navy as an accommodation ship at Devonport until 1965. HMS Abercrombie: She used a 15-inch gun turret originally built as a spare for HMS Furious. She was damaged by contact mines on several occasions while supporting the invasion of Italy, but was repaired.

  9. Erebus-class monitor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erebus-class_monitor

    The Erebus class of warships was a class of 20th century Royal Navy monitors armed with a main battery of two 15-inch /42 Mk 1 guns in a single turret. It consisted of two vessels, Erebus and Terror, named after the two ships lost in the Franklin Expedition. Both were launched in 1916 and saw active service in World War I off the Belgian coast.