List of destroyer classes of the Royal Navy
This is a list of destroyer classes of the Royal Navy of the United Kingdom, organised chronologically by entry into service.
Torpedo boat destroyers
[edit]In 1913, the surviving members of the large heterogeneous array of older 27-knot and 30-knot torpedo boat destroyer types (all six of the original 26-knot ships had been disposed of by the end of 1912) were organised into the A, B, C and D classes according to their design speed and the number of funnels they possessed. All were of a "turtle-back" design and, excepting a few "builder's specials", powered by reciprocating engines. It should be stressed that these A to D class designations did not exist before 1913, and only applied to those "turtle-backed" destroyers surviving to that time.
- "26-knotter" types
- Daring class: 2 ships, 1893–1894
- Havock class: 2 ships, 1893
- Ferret class: 2 ships, 1893–1894
- A class; (27-knot classes)
- Ardent class: 3 ships, 1894–1895
- Charger class: 3 ships, 1894
- Rocket class: 3 ships, 1894
- Hardy class: 2 ships, 1895
- Conflict class: 3 ships, 1894–1895
- Fervent class: 2 ships, 1895
- Janus class: 3 ships, 1895
- Sturgeon class: 3 ships, 1894–1895
- Salmon class: 2 ships, 1895
- Swordfish class: 2 ships, 1895
- Banshee class: 3 ships, 1894
- Handy class: 3 ships, 1895
- Sunfish class: 3 ships, 1895
- Zebra class: 1 ship, 1895
- B class (4-funnelled, 30-knot classes)
- Quail class: 4 ships, 1895
- Earnest class: 6 ships, 1896–1897
- Spiteful class: 2 ships, 1899
- Myrmidon class: 2 ships, 1900
- C class (3-funnelled, 30-knot classes)
- Star class: 6 ships, 1896–1897
- Avon class: 3 ships, 1896–1897
- Brazen class: 4 ships, 1896–1898
- Violet class: 2 ships, 1897
- Mermaid class: 2 ships, 1897–1898
- Gipsy class: 3 ships, 1897
- Bullfinch class: 3 ships, 1898
- Fawn class: 6 ships, 1897–1899
- Falcon class: 2 ships, 1899–1900
- Greyhound class: 3 ships, 1900–1901
- Thorn class: 3 ships, purchased 1901
- Hawthorn special type: 2 ships, 1899, steam turbine specials
- Thornycroft special: 1 ship, 1898
- Armstrong-Whitworth special,: 1 ship, 1900
- D class; (2-funnelled, 30-knot classes) Unlike the A, B and C classes, the D class comprised a series of similar ships built by one contractor (Thornycroft), although there were small variations between the batches ordered in each year.
- 1893-94 Programme: 4 ships, 1896
- 1894-95 Programme: 2 ships, 1897
- 1895-96 Programme: 3 ships, 1897–1898
- 1896-97 Programme (special type): 1 ship, 1899
- Taku type: 1 ship, 1900, ex-Chinese prize
Conventional destroyers
[edit]In 1913, lettered names were given to all Royal Navy destroyers, previously known after the first ship of that class. The River or E class of 1913 were the first destroyers of the Royal Navy with a high forecastles instead of "turtleback" bow making this the first class with a more recognizable modern configuration.
- River or E class: 36 ships, 1903–1905 (including 2 later purchases)
- Cricket-class coastal destroyer: 36 ships, 1906–1909
- Tribal or F class: 13 ships, 1907–1909
- Beagle or G class: 16 ships, 1909–1910
- Acorn or H class: 20 ships, 1910–1911
- Acheron or I class: 23 ships, 1910–1915
- Acasta or K class: 20 ships, 1912–1913
- Swift type: 1 ship, 1907, large 36-knot flotilla leader prototype
- Laforey or L class: 22 ships, 1913–1915
- Arno type: 1 ship, 1914, Italian built for Portugal but purchased in 1915
- Admiralty M class: 74 ships, 1914–1917
- Hawthorn M class: 2 ships, 1915
- Yarrow M class: 10 ships, 1914–1916
- Thornycroft M class: 6 ships, 1914–1916
- Talisman class: 4 ships, 1914–1916, ex-Turkish purchases
- Medea class : 4 ships, 1915, ex-Greek purchases
- Faulknor-class leader: 4 ships, 1914, ex-Chilean purchases
- Marksman-class leader: 7 ships, 1915–1916
- Parker-class leader: 6 ships, 1916–1917
- Admiralty R class: 39 ships, 1916–1917
- Yarrow Later M class: 7 ships, 1916–1917
- Thornycroft R class: 5 ships, 1916–1917
- Admiralty modified R class: 11 ships, 1916–1917
- Admiralty S class: 55 ships, 1918–1924
- Yarrow S class: 7 ships, 1918–1919
- Thornycroft S class: 5 ships, 1918–1919
- Admiralty V class: 28 ships, 1916–1918
- Admiralty W class: 19 ships, 1916–1918
- Thornycroft V and W class: 4 ships, 1918
- Thornycroft modified W class: 2 ships, 1918–1924
- Admiralty modified W class: 15 ships, 1918–1922
- Admiralty type flotilla leader: 8 ships, 1917–1919
- Thornycroft type leader or Shakespeare class: 5 ships, 1917–1921
Inter-war standard classes
[edit]- Ambuscade type: 1 ship, 1926, Yarrow prototype of new design.
- Amazon type: 1 ship, 1926, Thornycroft prototype of new design.
- A class: 9 ships, 1928–1931
- B class: 9 ships, 1929–1931
- C class: 5 ships, 1930–1934
- D class: 9 ships, 1931–1933
- E class: 9 ships, 1933–1934
- F class: 9 ships, 1933–1935
- G class: 9 ships, 1934–1936
- H class: 9 ships, 1935–1937
- ex-Brazilian H class: 6 ships, 1938–1940, ex-Brazilian purchases
- I class: 9 ships, 1936–1937
- ex-Turkish I class: 2 ships, 1939–1941, ex-Turkish purchases
- Tribal class: 27 ships, 1936–1944
- J, K and N class: 24 ships, 1938–1941
- Hunt class: 86 ships (20 Type I, 36 Type II, 28 Type III, 2 Type IV), 1939–1942, "escort destroyers"
- L and M class: 16 ships, 1939–42
- Town class: 50 ships from three classes of United States Navy destroyers, built 1917–1920, transferred 1940
World War II War Emergency Programme destroyers
[edit]The following were ordered as part of the War Emergency Programme classes:
- O and P class: 16 ships, 1941–1942
- Q and R class: 16 ships, 1941–1942
- S and T class: 16 ships, 1942–1943
- U and V class: 16 ships, 1942–1943
- W and Z class: 16 ships, 1943–1944
- C class: 32 ships, (8 Ca-, 8 Ch-, 8 Co-, 8 Cr-), 1943–1945
- Battle class: 23 ships (16 Group I, 7 Group II), 1943–1946
- Weapon class: 4 ships, 1945–1946
- G class: 0 ships (8 cancelled), 1944
Post-war all-gun design
[edit]- Daring class: 8 ships, 1949–1952
- County class: 8 ships (4 Batch I, 4 Batch II), 1961–1967
- Type 82: 1 ship (Bristol, 1969) built to trial technology. Eight originally planned to operate with cancelled CVA-01 aircraft carriers.
- Type 42: 14 ships (6 Sheffield, 4 Exeter, 4 Manchester), 1971–1983
- Type 43: project cancelled at feasibility stage in 1981 Defence White Paper
- Type 44: Subclass of Type 43 with better anti-submarine capability.
- Type 45: 6 ships, all commissioned between 2009 and 2013
- Type 83: Planned to replace Type 45 in 2030s.
See also
[edit]Citations
[edit]- ^ Friedman 2008, pp. 179–195
Bibliography
[edit]- Friedman, Norman (2008). British Destroyers & Frigates: The Second World War and After. Barnsley, UK: Seaforth Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84832-015-4.
- Friedman, Norman (2009). British Destroyers From Earliest Days to the Second World War. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-59114-081-8.