HMS Desperate

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Desperate, 1896
Type: Torpedo Boat Destroyer ; Armament 1 x 12 pdr ; 5 x 6 pdr
Launched : 15 Feb 1896 ; Disposal date or year : 1920
Displacement: 340 tons
Complement: 58
Machinery notes: 5,700 FD ; Speed ; 30.4 knots ;
Notes:

26 Jun 1897 Present at the Naval Review at Spithead in celebration of the Diamond Jubilee.
Weekly Dispatch 28 Jan 1900
The destroyers Zebra and Desperate are also about to be attached to the flagship at Sheerness for instructional purposes in connection with the School of Gunnery.

15 Apr 1900 per News of the World
Disaster to Bluejackets - Boat Swamped at Brighton - Seven Seamen Drowned.
A deplorable disaster happened off the West Pier, Brighton, by which seven bluejackets of the torpedo boat destroyer Desperate were drowned. All the bodies have been recovered. During the morning four torpedo boat destroyers, the Bittern, Mallard, Desperate and Cheerful, belonging to the Chatham Division, arrived off the town and between four and five o'clock in the afternoon a whaler put off from the Desperate to go ashore. Twelve men were in the boat, six of them having obtained leave to go ashore, while the remainder were to tow the boat back. There was a fresh wind blowing, and just as the boat approached the pier a terrific sea swept over it completely swamping it. Immediately there was a scene of great excitement on the pier. One gentleman rushed off to the coastguard station, and the lifeboat was quickly launched. Other boats also put off to the rescue. Meanwhile, to the distress of the spectators, one by one the bluejackets were seen to sink under the waves until half their number had disappeared. The lifeboat rescued the others, who were nearly all in a state of insensibility. One was sent back to the ship and five others were brought ashore, three of these (John Smith, Albert Rowe, and Alfred Elliott) being taken to a house in Cannon-place, where they were carefully attended to, whilst the other two were conveyed to the hospital. One at the hospital was named Macallam. His mate's name has not yet been ascertained. One by one the sea began to give up its dead, and within an hour the mortuary near the Town Hall had received the lifeless bodies of four stalwart bluejackets. Their names were G. Smith, C. P. Fenner, J. Stuart and W. Hailstone. One the following morning the fifth body was washed ashore, that of R. E. Wells, whilst the body of a sailor named Hockham was found on the rocks. A Naval Committee of Inquiry has been opened.

Aug 1914 Portsmouth - in active commission. Tender to Excellent


Despot, late Despatch, 1921
Type: Tank Vessel (steel);
Displacement: 405 tons
Propulsion: Twin Screw
Machinery notes: I.H.P. 300 N.D.
Notes:

date unknown Despatch renamed Despot.

NL Jan 1921 employed at Plymouth.