Trisha Shetty (Editor)

HMS Marshal Soult

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Name
  
HMS Marshal Soult

Fate
  
Sold 10 July 1946

Draft
  
3.2 m

Commissioned
  
August 1915

Launched
  
24 August 1915

HMS Marshal Soult httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Namesake
  
Marshal Nicolas Jean de Dieu Soult

Class and type
  
Marshal Ney-class monitor

Displacement
  
6,670 long tons (6,780 t) (standard) 6,900 long tons (7,000 t) (full load)

Builder
  
Palmers Shipbuilding and Iron Company

HMS Marshal Soult was a Royal Navy Marshal Ney-class monitor constructed in the opening years of the First World War. Laid down as M14, she was named for the French general of the Napoleonic Wars Marshal Nicolas Jean de Dieu Soult. She served in both World Wars and was decommissioned in 1946.

Contents

Design

Designed for inshore operations along the sandbank strewn Belgian coastline, Marshal Soult was equipped with two 15-inch (380 mm) battleship guns. Originally, these guns were to have been stripped from one of the battlecruisers Renown and Repulse after they were redesigned. However the guns were not ready, and guns intended for the battleship Ramillies were used instead. The diesel engines used by the ships were a constant source of technical difficulty, restricting their use.

Service

Marshal Soult performed numerous bombardment operations against German positions in Flanders, including during the First Ostend Raid in April 1918. In October 1918, she became a tender to the gunnery school HMS Excellent at Portsmouth and in March 1919 undertook a similar role at Devonport before paying off in March 1921. Recommissioned in 1924, she moved to Chatham in April 1926 as a training ship.

Her armament was removed in March 1940 and was later fitted to the new Roberts-class monitor Abercrombie, which was completed in 1943.

Fate

She served throughout the Second World War as a depot ship for trawlers at Portsmouth until being sold on 10 July 1946 and scrapped at Troon.

References

HMS Marshal Soult Wikipedia