Girish Mahajan (Editor)

HMS Cyclops (F31)

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Name
  
HMS Cyclops

Nickname(s)
  
Cycle Box

Launched
  
27 October 1905

Commissioned
  
5 November 1907

Fate
  
Scrapped in 1947

Draft
  
2.51 m

HMS Cyclops (F31) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonscc

Builder
  
Sir James Laing & Son (Sunderland, U.K.)

Displacement
  
11,300 long tons (11,500 t)

Place built
  
Sunderland, United Kingdom

HMS Cyclops (F31) was a submarine repair and depot ship of the Royal Navy. She was originally the passenger liner Indrabarah sister ship to Indralema, built by Laing, for the Indra Line Ltd then bought by The Admiralty, while she was building. She was launched 27 October 1905.

Contents

Cyclops was 460 feet (140.2 m) long between perpendiculars and 476 feet (145.1 m) overall, with a beam of 55 feet (16.8 m).

Career

Cyclops served during the First World War as a repair ship with the Grand Fleet where she served the whole of the War at Scapa Flow. She was paid off 1 April 1919, then was recommissioned for White Sea duty at Archangel. She returned to Chatham in October 1919 and on 31 January 1920 went into reserve for refit and conversion to a submarine depot ship, commissioning for the 1st Submarine Flotilla , Atlantic Fleet, on 21 December 1922 at Chatham Dockyard.

Between the wars HMS Cyclops served in Malta and was in reserve at the start of the Second World War before returning to Home Waters in late 1939 as the depot ship for the Royal Navy's 7th Submarine Flotilla based in Rothesay

In 1944 she sailed from Rothesay to Singapore via India and returned to the UK in 1946.

Facilities

Cyclops was well served with a distilling plant for fresh water, machinery, carpenters' and blacksmiths' shops, coppersmiths', iron, and brass foundrys.

Fate

Cyclops was sold to John Cashmore Ltd and scrapped at Newport in July 1947.

References

HMS Cyclops (F31) Wikipedia