HMS Forfar (F30)

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HMS Forfar as SS Montrose in the port of Funchal, Madeira Island, early 1930s
History
Royal Navy EnsignUnited Kingdom
Builder: Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company, Glasgow
Launched:

14 December 1920 by Lady Raeburn, wife of the Director-General of the

Ministry of Shipping
Reclassified: 4 September 1939 Montrose of the Canadian Pacific Steamships Ltd, Montreal was requisitioned by the Admiralty. Conversion was completed on 6 November 1939
Fate: Sunk on 2 December 1940 by U-99
Notes: Pennant number F30
General characteristics
Class & type: Armed Merchant Cruiser converted from passenger ship
Displacement: 16402 BRT
Length: 548.7 ft (167.2 m)
Beam: 70.2 ft (21.4 m)
Speed: 17 knots
Complement: 193 men
Armament: 8x 152mm, 2x 76mm

HMS Forfar was formerly the liner SS Montrose, requisitioned as an Armed Merchant Cruiser in 1939 and sunk in 1940.

She was built by Fairfield Shipbuilding & Engineering Co Ltd in Glasgow, being launched in 1920 as passenger ship Montrose(II) of Canadian Pacific Steamships Ltd. In 1939 she was requisitioned by the Admiralty and converted to an armed merchant cruiser and renamed HMS Forfar.

On 2 December 1940 Forfar, on the Northern Patrol, was torpedoed and sunk by the German submarine U-99 under the command of Otto Kretschmer. Forfar was en route to join convoy OB 251 and was about 500 miles west of Ireland. 36 officers, including her Captain Norman Arthur Cyril Hardy, and 136 men lost their lives. The survivors were rescued by the Canadian destroyer HMCS St. Laurent, the British destroyer HMS Viscount and the British cargo steamer Dursley.

See also

External links

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