| Hamblin |
Feb 27th 2004 2:29pm |
From British Warships & Auxiliaries 2002/2003 by Mike Critchley:
Quote:
At the end of the line...
Readers may well find other warships afloat which are not mentioned in this book. The majority have fulfilled a long and useful life and are now relegated to non-seagoing duties. The following list gives details of their current duties:
Pennant No/Ship/Remarks- None/Britannia/Ex Royal Yacht at Leith. Open to the public.
- A134/Rame Head/Escort Maintenance Vessel - Royal Marines Training Ship in Fareham Creek (Portsmouth)
- C35/Belfast/World War II Cruiser Museum ship - Pool of London. Open to the public daily. Tel: 020 7940 6300
- D23/Bristol/Type 82 Destroyer - Sea Cadet Training Ship at Portsmouth.
- D73/Cavalier
S17/Ocelot
World War II Destroyer & Oberon class Submarine. Museum ships at Chatham. Partially open to the public. Tel: 01634 823800
- F126/Plymouth/
S21/Onyx/Type 12 Frigate & Oberon class Submarine. Museum ships at Birkenhead, Wirral. Open to the public daily. Tel: 0151 650 1573.
- M1115/Bronington/Ton class Minesweeper at Manchester. Limited Opening to the Public. Tel 0161 877 7778.
- S67/Alliance/Submarine - Museum Ship at Gosport. Open to the public daily. Tel: 023 92 511349.
- M1151/Iveston/(Thurrock)
M1154/Kellington/(Stockton upon Tees)
Static Sea Cadet Training Vessels
At the time of publishing (December 2001) the following ships were laid up in long term storage or awaiting sale.
Portsmouth
Intrepid
Boxer
Brave
Coventry
London
Scylla
Cromer
Plymouth
Courageous
Conqueror
Valiant
Warspite
Rosyth
Churchill
Dreadnought
Revenge
Swiftsure
Resolution
Renown
Repulse
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I can tell you now that Scylla will be sunk as an artificial coral reef and that Courageous has been turned into a museum in Plymouth. Er, and before anyone says anything: any ship you see there with a Battleship name is actually a submarine ( Dreadnought, Warspite, et al). The United States is the only nation to have preserved any Dreadnought Battleships as museums, and is the only nation to have two ( Iowa and Wisconsin) preserved in what they call " Maintenance Category B", that is, the highest level of maintenance that a ship in OCIR, or Out-of-Commission-In-Reserve, status, can recieve. "Ships selected for this category are the most urgently needed to augment the Active Fleet in an emergency". Japan is the only nation to have a pre-Dreadnought Battleship preserved; the Mikasa.
If anyone wants a list of United States naval vessels preserved as museums, those vessels about which attempts are being made to preserve as vessels, and vessels which are no longer preserved (there are too many for me to type out here), please visit this page.
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