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HMS Cachalot (N83)

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Name
  
HMS Cachalot

Commissioned
  
15 August 1938

Beam
  
25 ft 6 in (7.77 m)

Launched
  
2 December 1937

Draft
  
5.13 m

Laid down
  
12 May 1936

Fate
  
sunk 30 July 1941

Construction started
  
12 May 1936

Length
  
89 m

HMS Cachalot (N83) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb2

Displacement
  
1,810 tons surfaced 2,157 tons submerged

Builder
  
Scotts Shipbuilding and Engineering Company

HMS Cachalot (N83) was one of the six ship class of Grampus-class mine-laying submarine of the Royal Navy. She was built at Scotts, Greenock and launched 2 December 1937. She served in World War II in home waters and the Mediterranean. She was rammed and sunk by the Italian torpedo boat Generale Achille Papa on 30 July 1941.

Contents

Career

In August, 1940, Cachalot torpedoed and sank the German submarine U-51 in the Bay of Biscay and in September the German auxiliary minesweeper M 1604 / Österreich hit a mine laid by Cachalot and sank.

She was assigned to operate in the Mediterranean in 1941.

Sinking

Cachalot left Malta on 26 July, bound for Alexandria and instructions to look out for an escorted tanker heading for Benghazi. At 2 o’clock on the morning of 30 July the Italian destroyer Achille Papa was spotted heading towards Cachalot, forcing the submarine to dive. On returning to the surface the submarine was attacked by the Italian vessel. Cachalot attempted to dive again but the upper hatch jammed, and the Italian destroyer rammed her. The crew scuttled the ship as they abandoned her and all personnel except for a Maltese steward were picked up by the Italians.

References

HMS Cachalot (N83) Wikipedia