Harman Patil (Editor)

HMS Foxglove (1915)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
HMS Foxglove

Commissioned
  
1915

Weight
  
1,219 tons

Draft
  
3.7 m

Namesake
  
The foxglove

Launched
  
30 March 1915

Displacement
  
1.089 million kg

Builder
  
Barclay Curle

HMS Foxglove (1915) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Fate
  
Sold for scrapping 7 September 1946

Type
  
Acacia-class minesweeping sloop

Length
  
250 ft (76 m) p/p 262 ft 6 in (80.01 m) o/a

HMS Foxglove was an Acacia-class minesweeping sloop of the Royal Navy. She saw service in World War I and World War II.

Contents

Construction

Foxglove was built at Glasgow, Scotland, by Barclay Curle and launched on 30 March 1915. She entered service later that year.

World War I

During World War I, Foxglove and the other Acacia-class sloops were used almost exclusively for minesweeping duties until 1917, when the Royal Navy began to use them as convoy escorts, a task to which they were well suited.

Interwar

Foxglove served on the China Station during the early 1920s.

On the evening of 3 March 1921, the Singaporean passenger ship SS Hong Moh grounded on the White Rocks off Lamock Island, Swatow, China, and was wrecked with the loss of an estimated 900 to 1,000 lives. The steamer SS Shanti discovered the wreck on the morning of 4 March and rendered assistance, rescuing 45 survivors before steaming to Swatow to seek additional help for Hong Moh. Upon receiving word of the disaster, the British consul at Swatow informed the British Senior Naval Officer at Hong Kong, who in turn broadcast a wireless message requesting ships to come to Hong Moh′s aid. Foxglove arrived on the scene late on 5 March but was unable to locate the wreck in the darkness. The Royal Navy light cruiser HMS Carlisle joined Foxglove on the scene at dawn on 6 March, and the two ships located Hong Moh and began to rescue additional survivors, with Foxglove taking 28 or 48 (sources differ) survivors on board before having to depart late in the afternoon to refuel. Carlisle remained on the scene until 8 March, leaving only when there was no further sign of life board the wreck of Hong Moh; she then proceeded to Hong Kong with 221 survivors aboard.

World War II

Foxglove was one of only two Acacia-class sloops to survive long enough to see service in World War II. She became a loss when she was dive-bombed and badly damaged by German aircraft off the Isle of Wight on 9 July 1940. She remained afloat, and was converted into an accommodation ship and base ship. In this new role, she became a harbour guard ship in 1941, serving at Londonderry (also known as Derry) in Northern Ireland for the remainder of World War II.

Fate

The last surviving Acacia-class sloop, Foxglove was sold for scrapping on 7 September 1946. She was scrapped at Troon, Scotland.

Legacy

Foxglove's logbook is among those that was selected for digitisation as part of the online Old Weather project.

References

HMS Foxglove (1915) Wikipedia