Name HMS Chieftain Laid down 27 June 1943 Construction started 27 June 1943 Length 111 m | Ordered 24 July 1942 Commissioned 7 March 1946 Launched 26 February 1945 Weight 1,737 tons | |
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Fate Scrapped at Sunderland on 20 Mar 1961 |
HMS Chieftain was a C-class destroyer of the Royal Navy that was in service from March 1946, and which was scrapped in 1961.
Contents
Construction
The Royal Navy ordered Chieftain on 24 July 1942, one of eight Ch subclass of the C-class "Intermediate" destroyers of the 1942 Programme. She was laid down at Scotts Shipbuilding and Engineering Company, Greenock, Scotland, on 27 June 1943, and launched 26 February 1945. She was commissioned on 7 March 1946, too late for World War II duty.
Service
Chieftain was assigned to the 1st Destroyer Squadron based at Malta and served with the Royal Navy's 1945-8 Palestine Patrol, intercepting illegal immigration into Mandate Palestine. In 1947 Chieftain intercepted three immigrant ships: a schooner, a former USCG cutter, and a former USN vessel. The ex-cutter Unalga renamed Chaim Arlosoroff got past the RN destroyer and managed to beach near Haifa: the other two were detained at sea. She was given an interim modernization in 1954, which saw her 'X' turret at the rear of the ship replaced by two Squid anti-submarine mortars. She saw duty during the Suez Crisis in 1956.
Decommissioning and disposal
Chieftain was decommissioned after the Suez Crisis and was scrapped in Sunderland on 20 March 1961.