Previous ships called Tiger: Difference between revisions

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===HMS Tygar===
===HMS Tygar===

Revision as of 01:41, 31 July 2008

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HMS Tiger

HMS Tiger 1908.jpg

A destroyer of the Royal Navy rated at 380 tons, this HMS Tiger is best known for its unfortunate demise. Launched in 1900, the Tiger was part of a short exercise in 1908, involving a home fleet based at Portsmouth and an attacking destroyer fleet, of which Tiger was a member. The two fleets met at night, but the exercise went badly wrong as the HMS Berwick rammed the Tiger, splitting the destroyer in half. Tiger sunk in just three minutes off the coast of St. Catherine's Point, Isle of Wight, with the loss of 35 lives, including commanding officer Lt.Cmdr Middleton. 22 of the crew were rescued.


HMS Tiger

"Quis Eripet Dentes" ("Who will draw my teeth?")
HMS Tiger (1913).jpg

A battlecruiser of the Royal Navy, this Tiger was constructed in Clydebank, near Glasgow, Scotland by the same company responsible for the ocean liner Queen Elizabeth 2 (QE2). Construction began in June 1912 and the ship was launched in December the following year. Despite originally being planned as part of the Lion class, she was redesigned at an early stage as a unique vessel. She was the United Kingdom's most heavily armoured Battlecruiser upon the outbreak of World War I.

HMS Tiger (C50)

Renamed HMS Bellerophon, HMS Blake, then HMS Bellerophon before being scrapped incomplete.

HMS Tiger (C99)

Renamed from HMS Blake. Renamed to HMS Blake prior to launch

HMS Tiger (C20)

"Quis Eripet Dentes" ("Who will draw my teeth?")
Renamed from HMS Bellerophon (confused yet?)