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Tally Ho is a gaff-rigged cutter yacht designed by the artist and yacht designer Albert Strange. [ 1 ] [ 3 ] The 48-foot (15 m) yacht was built at Shoreham-by-Sea , West Sussex in England and has previously carried the names Betty , Alciope , and Escape .
Tally-Ho was campaigning in the strait, where she sank several axis vessels. Bennington was also cruising on the surface, patrolling for Japanese shipping, when she sighted UIT-23 in the daytime. Tally-Ho attacked at full speed. Tally-Ho and UIT-23 were headed straight for one another when they both fired a spread of torpedoes. [1]
Albert Strange was born on 29 June 1855, [1] growing up in Gravesend where he learned to sail with a fisherman who helped him convert a peter boat for cruising around the Thames Estuary. He studied art at the Slade School of Fine Art and the Leicester College of Arts and Crafts , completing his education in 1878.
Tally-Ho sank the German commanded U-boat UIT-23 (formerly the Italian submarine Giuliani), just off the western mouth of Malacca Strait on 14 February 1944. On the night of 24 February 1944 Tally-Ho was ordered back to the Sembilan Islands , and while zig-zagging on the surface at night charging the batteries, lookouts spotted two wakes ahead.
HMS Tally-Ho. The action of 11 January 1944 was a minor naval action that resulted in the sinking of the light cruiser Kuma of the Imperial Japanese Navy by the British Royal Navy submarine HMS Tally-Ho. Kuma was being escorted by the destroyer Uranami about 10 nmi (12 mi; 19 km) north-west of Penang, Malaya.
The 340-boat registration limit was reached in 4 minutes and 24 seconds setting a new record. ... Tally Ho: Baron Stalbridge: Albert Strange: 1928: Niña: Paul ...
The end of the holiday weekend added two fresh examples of a historic shift on Wall Street: More CEOs than ever are heading for the exits. Over the past 24 hours, the leaders of chipmaker Intel ...
UIT-23 sailed for France on 15 February 1944 with 135 tonnes of rubber and 70 tonnes of tin, and was torpedoed three days later by HMS Tally-Ho. [4] There were 14 survivors from the crew of forty. [5]