HMS Verity circa. 1930
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History | |
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United Kingdom | |
Class and type: | Admiralty Modified W-class destroyer |
Name: | HMS Verity |
Ordered: | January 1918 |
Builder: | John Brown & Company, Clydebank |
Laid down: | 17 May 1918 |
Launched: | 19 March 1919 |
Commissioned: | 17 September 1919 |
Refit: | Reconstructed to Long Range Escort finished in October 1943 |
Motto: |
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Honours and awards: |
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Fate: | Sold to be broken up for scrap on 4 March 1947 |
Badge: | On a Field Black, a Roman Lamp Gold |
General characteristics | |
Class and type: | Admiralty modified W class destroyer |
Displacement: | 1,140 tons standard, 1,550 tons full |
Length: | 300 ft o/a, 312 ft p/p |
Beam: | 29.5 feet (9.0 m) |
Draught: | 9 feet (2.7 m), 11.25 feet (3.43 m) under full load |
Propulsion: |
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Speed: |
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Range: |
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Complement: | 127 |
Sensors and processing systems: |
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Armament: |
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HMS Verity was an Admiralty modified W class destroyer built for the Royal Navy. She was the first ship to carry the name Verity. She was ordered in January 1918 from John Brown & Company of Clydebank with the 13th Order for Destroyers of the Emergency War Program of 1918-19.
HMS Verity’s keel was laid on 17 May 1918 at the John Brown & Company Shipyard in Clydebank, Scotland. She was launched on 19 March 1919. She was 312 feet overall in length with a beam of 29.5 feet. Her mean draught was 9 feet, and would reach 11.25 feet under full load. She had a displacement of 1,140 tons standard and up to 1,550 full load.
She was propelled by three Yarrow type water tube boilers powering Brown-Curtis geared steam turbines developing 27,000 shp driving two screws for a maximum designed speed of 34 knots. She was oil-fired and had a bunkerage of 320 to 350 tons. This gave a range of between 3500 nautical miles at 15 knots to 900 nautical miles at 32 knots.
She shipped four BL 4.7 in (120-mm) Mk.I guns, mount P Mk.I naval guns in four single centre-line turrets. The turrets were disposed as two forward and two aft in super imposed firing positions. She also carried two QF 2 pdr Mk.II "pom-pom" (40 mm L/39) mounted abeam between funnels. Abaft of the second funnel, she carried six 21-inch Torpedo Tubes mounted in pairs on the centre-line.
Commissioned into the Royal Navy on 17 September 1919, she was assigned to the 1st Destroyer Flotilla of the Atlantic Fleet with pennant number D63. She spent the later part of the 20s and the early 30s in the Mediterranean. In 1938 the ship was assigned to the Local Flotilla based at Portsmouth.