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HMS Jervis

HMS Jervis, was a J-class destroyer of the Royal Navy named after Admiral John Jervis (1735–1823). She was laid down by R. and W. Hawthorn, Leslie and Company, Limited, at Hebburn-on-Tyne on 26 August 1937. The ship was launched on 9 September 1938 and commissioned on 8 May 1939, four months before the start of the Second World War.

History
United Kingdom
NameHMS Jervis
NamesakeAdmiral John Jervis
BuilderHawthorn Leslie and Company
Laid down26 August 1937
Launched9 September 1938
Commissioned8 May 1939
DecommissionedMay 1946
Identification
Honours and
awards
13 battle honours (see below)
FateSold for scrap, 1954
General characteristics (as built)
Class and typeJ-class Flotilla leader
Displacement
Length356 ft 6 in (108.66 m) o/a
Beam35 ft 9 in (10.90 m)
Draught12 ft 6 in (3.81 m) (deep)
Installed power
Propulsion2 × shafts; 2 × geared steam turbines
Speed36 knots (67 km/h; 41 mph)
Range5,500 nmi (10,200 km; 6,300 mi) at 15 knots (28 km/h; 17 mph)
Complement183 (218 for flotilla leaders)
Sensors and
processing systems
ASDIC
Armament
Service record
Part of:
Commanders:
Operations:

Designed as a flotilla leader to the J-class destroyers, who were intended to make up the 7th Destroyer Flotilla, Jervis was the sister ship of, and identical to, Kelly, leader to the K class (forming the 8th Flotilla) and similar to Napier of the N class. However, despite an impressive war record (she earned 13 battle honours) she remains virtually unknown compared to her sister, Kelly.

Service history edit

1939 (Home Waters) edit

When war broke out in September 1939, Jervis was under the command of Captain Philip Mack, and was leader of the 7th Destroyer Flotilla (DF) based in the Humber. The first six months of hostilities was taken up with sweeps across the North Sea, in "appalling weather conditions" which saw the Flotilla suffer a succession of storm and collision damage. During this time Jervis captured three blockade runners, one on the second day of the war, and helped search for the merchant ship SS City of Flint. In March 1940 Jervis was involved in a collision with SS Tor, a Swedish freighter, that put her in dock for the next three months for repairs.

1940 (Mediterranean) edit

During this time Mack, as Captain (D) led the Flotilla from Janus, and in May 1940 sailed with her for the Mediterranean to take command of the 14th Destroyer Flotilla. Jervis' pennant number changed to G00 around this time[1] In July, after working-up trials, she joined him in Malta, where he resumed command. For the next two years Jervis saw action in a constant round of operations; sweeps along the coast, bombarding shore targets for the Army, protecting convoys to Malta, and screening major fleet movements.

1941 edit

In 1941 Jervis was involved in a number of fleet actions. In March she was at Battle of Cape Matapan. In the course of the battle she was involved in the destruction of the Italian cruiser Zara which had been crippled by heavy guns in attempting to recover the Italian cruiser Pola, which had been stricken by an aerial torpedo. Then Jervis came alongside Pola and boarded her, taking off the wounded before, with the destroyer Nubian, torpedoing and sinking Pola. In April she led the force that annihilated an Axis convoy at the action off Sfax. In May she was in the Battle of Crete, where many Royal Navy ships were lost, including her sister ship Kelly. During the summer Jervis ran supplies to the beleaguered port of Tobruk and in December led the destroyers at the First Battle of Sirte. On returning to Alexandria, she was damaged in an Italian human torpedo attack which left her in dock for six weeks. The same attack badly damaged the battleships Queen Elizabeth and Valiant. Her Chaplain, George Sherlock, was awarded the DSC for "outstanding zeal, patience, and cheerfulness and for setting an example of wholehearted devotion to duty."[2]

1942 edit

Released at the end of January, she resumed operations. In April she joined the Malta Strike Force, although without Mack who left Jervis in March due to ill-health and was replaced as captain of Jervis, and Captain (D), by A.L Poland. He would command her, and lead the 14th Destroyer Flotilla, for the next year. In March 1942, under Poland's leadership, she again led the destroyers at the Second Battle of Sirte.

1943 edit

On the night of 1/2 June, an Italian convoy of two supply ships escorted by a destroyer and a torpedo boat, was intercepted off the Straits of Messina by Jervis (commanded by Captain A.F Pugsley) and the Greek destroyer Vasilissa Olga. A Wellington bomber dropped flares and after a short battle lasting half an hour, the two Allied destroyers sank the Italian torpedo boat Castore.[3]

Jervis also saw action during the landings in Sicily, Calabria, Salerno, and Anzio, as well as operations in the Adriatic. She supported both the Eighth Army and Yugoslav partisans. In the autumn of 1943, Jervis was in the Aegean supporting the ill-fated operation against the Dodecanese Islands. On 16/17 October with HMS Penn, sank the submarine chaser UJ-2109 at Kalymnos.[4]

1944 (Home Waters) edit

On 23 January 1944 Jervis had her bows blown off while in company with Janus, the other destroyer being sunk by a German Fritz X guided bomb. There were no casualties and the damaged destroyer made it to Naples under her own power where, on 28 January her commanding officer, Captain Henderson, took over command of the flotilla leader Grenville while the latter's captain, Lieutenant Commander Roger Hill became CO of the damaged Jervis. The damaged destroyer subsequently steamed to Gibraltar where a new bow was put on the vessel. Then returning to Britain, no longer a Flotilla leader, Jervis saw action at the Normandy landings under Lieutenant Commander Roger Hill in the closing stages of the war. She was decommissioned in September 1944, paying off at Chatham prior to a further, major re-fit.

1945 and post-war edit

Re-commissioned in May 1945, Jervis saw further service in the Mediterranean, policing the aftermath of World War II. She paid off into the reserve at Chatham in May 1946, and was then laid-up in the Gareloch where she was used for training of local Sea Cadets. Placed on the Disposal List in October 1947, she was one of a number of ships used for explosives trials in Loch Striven during 1948.

Fate edit

Jervis was handed over to the British Iron and Steel Corporation for demolition in January 1949 and allocated to Arnott Young, arriving at Troon, on the Firth of Clyde for breaking up in September.

"Lucky Jervis" edit

Jervis had a reputation as a lucky ship (in contrast to her sister, Kelly, who seemed to have more than her share of bad luck). Despite a long and active career, in 5½ years of war and 13 major actions, not one of her crew was lost to enemy action, possibly a unique record. An example of her luck might be seen in her action at Anzio in January 1944. Supporting the landing with gunfire, Jervis and her sister ship, Janus, were attacked by enemy aircraft using Henschel Hs 293 glider bombs. Both were hit; Janus’ forward magazine exploded, sinking her with the loss of nearly 160 of her crew; Jervis’ bow was blown off, but the destroyer was able to steam at about eight knots back to safety in Naples. Astonishingly, not one of her crew was harmed in this incident, and she was able to rescue over 80 of Janus’ crew.

Battle honours edit

Jervis was awarded 13 battle honours for her service during the Second World War.[5][6]

Only Orion and Nubian, who served in the Mediterranean with Jervis matched this record; it was exceeded by HMS Warspite, the Mediterranean Fleet flagship, which saw service in both World Wars.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ HMS Jervis at naval-history.net
  2. ^ London Gazette, 1 January 1942
  3. ^ Kasperski, Tadeusz (in Polish). Jak Vasilefs Georgios stał się Hermesem. „Morze” Nr 2/2018, ISSN 2543-5469, p. 76
  4. ^ UJ-2109 was the Hunt-class minesweeper Widnes, which was sunk in 1941 at Suda Bay, and subsequently salvaged by the Axis for service as a submarine chaser. [usurped] at warshipsww2.eu; Archived from [usurped] on 6 October 2014; retrieved 29 June 2014.
  5. ^ Warlow. Battle Honours of the Royal Navy. p. 129.
  6. ^ HMS Jervis; Battle Honours at britainsnavy.co.uk; retrieved 8 July 2020

References edit

  • Colledge, J. J.; Warlow, Ben (2006) [1969]. Ships of the Royal Navy: The Complete Record of all Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy (Rev. ed.). London: Chatham Publishing. ISBN 978-1-86176-281-8.
  • G.G.Connell, Mediterranean Maelstrom: HMS Jervis and the 14th Flotilla (1987) ISBN 0-7183-0643-0
  • English, John (2001). Afridi to Nizam: British Fleet Destroyers 1937–43. Gravesend, Kent: World Ship Society. ISBN 0-905617-64-9.
  • Friedman, Norman (2006). British Destroyers and Frigates, the Second World War and After. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-86176-137-6.
  • Hill, Roger (1979). Destroyer Captain. London: Granada Publishing. ISBN 0-583-12875-0.
  • Hodges, Peter; Friedman, Norman (1979). Destroyer Weapons of World War 2. Greenwich: Conway Maritime Press. ISBN 978-0-85177-137-3.
  • Langtree, Charles (2002). The Kelly's: British J, K, and N Class Destroyers of World War II. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-422-9.
  • Lenton, H. T. (1998). British & Empire Warships of the Second World War. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-048-7.
  • March, Edgar J. (1966). British Destroyers: A History of Development, 1892–1953; Drawn by Admiralty Permission From Official Records & Returns, Ships' Covers & Building Plans. London: Seeley Service. OCLC 164893555.
  • Rohwer, Jürgen (2005). Chronology of the War at Sea 1939–1945: The Naval History of World War Two (Third Revised ed.). Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-59114-119-2.
  • Warlow, Ben (2004). Battle Honours of the Royal Navy. Liskeard, UK: Maritime Books. ISBN 1-904459-05-6.
  • Whitley, M. J. (1988). Destroyers of World War Two: An International Encyclopedia. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-326-1.

External links edit

  • HMS Jervis on naval-history.net
  • HMS Jervis at uboat.net
  • HMS Jervis at britainsnavy.co.uk

jervis, class, destroyer, royal, navy, named, after, admiral, john, jervis, 1735, 1823, laid, down, hawthorn, leslie, company, limited, hebburn, tyne, august, 1937, ship, launched, september, 1938, commissioned, 1939, four, months, before, start, second, world. HMS Jervis was a J class destroyer of the Royal Navy named after Admiral John Jervis 1735 1823 She was laid down by R and W Hawthorn Leslie and Company Limited at Hebburn on Tyne on 26 August 1937 The ship was launched on 9 September 1938 and commissioned on 8 May 1939 four months before the start of the Second World War History United Kingdom NameHMS Jervis NamesakeAdmiral John Jervis BuilderHawthorn Leslie and Company Laid down26 August 1937 Launched9 September 1938 Commissioned8 May 1939 DecommissionedMay 1946 IdentificationPennant number F00 1937 1940 G00 1940 1946 Honours andawards13 battle honours see below FateSold for scrap 1954 General characteristics as built Class and typeJ class Flotilla leader Displacement1 690 long tons 1 720 t standard 2 330 long tons 2 370 t deep load Length356 ft 6 in 108 66 m o a Beam35 ft 9 in 10 90 m Draught12 ft 6 in 3 81 m deep Installed power44 000 shp 33 000 kW 2 Admiralty 3 drum boilers Propulsion2 shafts 2 geared steam turbines Speed36 knots 67 km h 41 mph Range5 500 nmi 10 200 km 6 300 mi at 15 knots 28 km h 17 mph Complement183 218 for flotilla leaders Sensors and processing systemsASDIC Armament3 twin QF 4 7 inch 120 mm Mk XII guns 1 quadruple QF 2 pounder 40 mm anti aircraft guns 2 quadruple QF 0 5 inch 12 7 mm Mk III anti aircraft machineguns 2 quintuple 21 inch 533 mm torpedo tubes 20 depth charges 1 rack 2 throwers Service record Part of 7th Destroyer Flotilla 1939 1940 14th Destroyer Flotilla 1940 1945 Commanders Captain Philip Mack 1939 1942 Captain A L Poland 1942 Captain A F Pugsley January 1943 22 June 1943 Captain J S Crawford 22 June 1943 November 1943 Lt Commander Roger P Hill 1944 Operations Battle of Cape Matapan March 1941 Battle of the Tarigo Convoy April 1941 Battle of Crete May 1941 Second Battle of Sirte March 1942 Operation Vigorous June 1942 Operation Husky July 1943 Operation Avalanche September 1943 Dodecanese Campaign September November 1943 Operation Shingle January 1944 Operation Neptune June 1944 Designed as a flotilla leader to the J class destroyers who were intended to make up the 7th Destroyer Flotilla Jervis was the sister ship of and identical to Kelly leader to the K class forming the 8th Flotilla and similar to Napier of the N class However despite an impressive war record she earned 13 battle honours she remains virtually unknown compared to her sister Kelly Contents 1 Service history 1 1 1939 Home Waters 1 2 1940 Mediterranean 1 3 1941 1 4 1942 1 5 1943 1 6 1944 Home Waters 1 7 1945 and post war 2 Fate 3 Lucky Jervis 4 Battle honours 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksService history edit1939 Home Waters edit When war broke out in September 1939 Jervis was under the command of Captain Philip Mack and was leader of the 7th Destroyer Flotilla DF based in the Humber The first six months of hostilities was taken up with sweeps across the North Sea in appalling weather conditions which saw the Flotilla suffer a succession of storm and collision damage During this time Jervis captured three blockade runners one on the second day of the war and helped search for the merchant ship SS City of Flint In March 1940 Jervis was involved in a collision with SS Tor a Swedish freighter that put her in dock for the next three months for repairs 1940 Mediterranean edit During this time Mack as Captain D led the Flotilla from Janus and in May 1940 sailed with her for the Mediterranean to take command of the 14th Destroyer Flotilla Jervis pennant number changed to G00 around this time 1 In July after working up trials she joined him in Malta where he resumed command For the next two years Jervis saw action in a constant round of operations sweeps along the coast bombarding shore targets for the Army protecting convoys to Malta and screening major fleet movements 1941 edit In 1941 Jervis was involved in a number of fleet actions In March she was at Battle of Cape Matapan In the course of the battle she was involved in the destruction of the Italian cruiser Zara which had been crippled by heavy guns in attempting to recover the Italian cruiser Pola which had been stricken by an aerial torpedo Then Jervis came alongside Pola and boarded her taking off the wounded before with the destroyer Nubian torpedoing and sinking Pola In April she led the force that annihilated an Axis convoy at the action off Sfax In May she was in the Battle of Crete where many Royal Navy ships were lost including her sister ship Kelly During the summer Jervis ran supplies to the beleaguered port of Tobruk and in December led the destroyers at the First Battle of Sirte On returning to Alexandria she was damaged in an Italian human torpedo attack which left her in dock for six weeks The same attack badly damaged the battleships Queen Elizabeth and Valiant Her Chaplain George Sherlock was awarded the DSC for outstanding zeal patience and cheerfulness and for setting an example of wholehearted devotion to duty 2 1942 edit Released at the end of January she resumed operations In April she joined the Malta Strike Force although without Mack who left Jervis in March due to ill health and was replaced as captain of Jervis and Captain D by A L Poland He would command her and lead the 14th Destroyer Flotilla for the next year In March 1942 under Poland s leadership she again led the destroyers at the Second Battle of Sirte 1943 edit On the night of 1 2 June an Italian convoy of two supply ships escorted by a destroyer and a torpedo boat was intercepted off the Straits of Messina by Jervis commanded by Captain A F Pugsley and the Greek destroyer Vasilissa Olga A Wellington bomber dropped flares and after a short battle lasting half an hour the two Allied destroyers sank the Italian torpedo boat Castore 3 Jervis also saw action during the landings in Sicily Calabria Salerno and Anzio as well as operations in the Adriatic She supported both the Eighth Army and Yugoslav partisans In the autumn of 1943 Jervis was in the Aegean supporting the ill fated operation against the Dodecanese Islands On 16 17 October with HMS Penn sank the submarine chaser UJ 2109 at Kalymnos 4 1944 Home Waters edit On 23 January 1944 Jervis had her bows blown off while in company with Janus the other destroyer being sunk by a German Fritz X guided bomb There were no casualties and the damaged destroyer made it to Naples under her own power where on 28 January her commanding officer Captain Henderson took over command of the flotilla leader Grenville while the latter s captain Lieutenant Commander Roger Hill became CO of the damaged Jervis The damaged destroyer subsequently steamed to Gibraltar where a new bow was put on the vessel Then returning to Britain no longer a Flotilla leader Jervis saw action at the Normandy landings under Lieutenant Commander Roger Hill in the closing stages of the war She was decommissioned in September 1944 paying off at Chatham prior to a further major re fit 1945 and post war edit Re commissioned in May 1945 Jervis saw further service in the Mediterranean policing the aftermath of World War II She paid off into the reserve at Chatham in May 1946 and was then laid up in the Gareloch where she was used for training of local Sea Cadets Placed on the Disposal List in October 1947 she was one of a number of ships used for explosives trials in Loch Striven during 1948 Fate editJervis was handed over to the British Iron and Steel Corporation for demolition in January 1949 and allocated to Arnott Young arriving at Troon on the Firth of Clyde for breaking up in September Lucky Jervis editJervis had a reputation as a lucky ship in contrast to her sister Kelly who seemed to have more than her share of bad luck Despite a long and active career in 5 years of war and 13 major actions not one of her crew was lost to enemy action possibly a unique record An example of her luck might be seen in her action at Anzio in January 1944 Supporting the landing with gunfire Jervis and her sister ship Janus were attacked by enemy aircraft using Henschel Hs 293 glider bombs Both were hit Janus forward magazine exploded sinking her with the loss of nearly 160 of her crew Jervis bow was blown off but the destroyer was able to steam at about eight knots back to safety in Naples Astonishingly not one of her crew was harmed in this incident and she was able to rescue over 80 of Janus crew Battle honours editJervis was awarded 13 battle honours for her service during the Second World War 5 6 Mediterranean 1940 44 Libya 1940 42 Malta convoys 1941 42 Matapan 1941 Sfax 1941 Crete 1941 Sirte 1942 Sicily 1943 Salerno 1943 Aegean 1943 Adriatic 1944 Anzio 1944 Normandy 1944 Only Orion and Nubian who served in the Mediterranean with Jervis matched this record it was exceeded by HMS Warspite the Mediterranean Fleet flagship which saw service in both World Wars See also editRaid on Alexandria 1941 Notes edit HMS Jervis at naval history net London Gazette 1 January 1942 Kasperski Tadeusz in Polish Jak Vasilefs Georgios stal sie Hermesem Morze Nr 2 2018 ISSN 2543 5469 p 76 UJ 2109 was the Hunt class minesweeper Widnes which was sunk in 1941 at Suda Bay and subsequently salvaged by the Axis for service as a submarine chaser UJ 2109 usurped at warshipsww2 eu Archived from the original usurped on 6 October 2014 retrieved 29 June 2014 Warlow Battle Honours of the Royal Navy p 129 HMS Jervis Battle Honours at britainsnavy co uk retrieved 8 July 2020References editColledge J J Warlow Ben 2006 1969 Ships of the Royal Navy The Complete Record of all Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy Rev ed London Chatham Publishing ISBN 978 1 86176 281 8 G G Connell Mediterranean Maelstrom HMS Jervis and the 14th Flotilla 1987 ISBN 0 7183 0643 0 English John 2001 Afridi to Nizam British Fleet Destroyers 1937 43 Gravesend Kent World Ship Society ISBN 0 905617 64 9 Friedman Norman 2006 British Destroyers and Frigates the Second World War and After Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 86176 137 6 Hill Roger 1979 Destroyer Captain London Granada Publishing ISBN 0 583 12875 0 Hodges Peter Friedman Norman 1979 Destroyer Weapons of World War 2 Greenwich Conway Maritime Press ISBN 978 0 85177 137 3 Langtree Charles 2002 The Kelly s British J K and N Class Destroyers of World War II Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 55750 422 9 Lenton H T 1998 British amp Empire Warships of the Second World War Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 55750 048 7 March Edgar J 1966 British Destroyers A History of Development 1892 1953 Drawn by Admiralty Permission From Official Records amp Returns Ships Covers amp Building Plans London Seeley Service OCLC 164893555 Rohwer Jurgen 2005 Chronology of the War at Sea 1939 1945 The Naval History of World War Two Third Revised ed Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 59114 119 2 Warlow Ben 2004 Battle Honours of the Royal Navy Liskeard UK Maritime Books ISBN 1 904459 05 6 Whitley M J 1988 Destroyers of World War Two An International Encyclopedia Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 326 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to HMS Jervis ship 1938 HMS Jervis on naval history net HMS Jervis at uboat net HMS Jervis at britainsnavy co uk Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title HMS Jervis amp oldid 1218913885, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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