HMS Rattlesnake was a Beagle-class (or G-class) destroyer of the British Royal Navy. The Beagle class were coal-fuelled ships, designed for a speed of 27 kn (31 mph; 50 km/h) and armed with a 4 in (102 mm) gun and two torpedo tubes. Built by Harland & Wolff and launched in 1910, Rattlesnake was transferred to the Mediterranean Fleet in 1913, and spent most of the First World War in the Mediterranean. In 1914, the ship was based at Malta, where there was an acute shortage of coal, and was sent on coaling expeditions to Bizerta for supplies. While participating in the Dardanelles campaign in 1915, the destroyer assisted the troops of the Australian First Division in both their advance and retreat, using a searchlight and guns to suppress troops of the Ottoman Army. The destroyer ended the war at Buncrana in the north of Ireland. After the Armistice that ended the war, Rattlesnake was initially transferred to Portsmouth and then sold in 1921 to be broken up.
Rattlesnake was one of three Beagle-classdestroyers ordered as part of the 1908–1909 shipbuilding programme.[1][2] The vessels were coal-burning after concerns had been raised about the availability of fuel oil in time of war and the bridge was larger and higher than previous designs.[3] This reduced costs, although it also meant that five boilers were needed, the extra machinery meaning that deck space became more premium.[4] Otherwise, the Beagle-class vessels were not built to a standard design, with detailed design being left to the builders of individual ships in accordance with a loose specification.[5] The vessels were known as the G class from October 1913 as part of a wider renaming of the Royal Navy's warships into classes named alphabetically, although they did not change their names.[6] It was not until the introduction of the L- or Laforey class that the destroyers' names matched the class designation.[7]
Rattlesnake was 270 feet 3 inches (82.4 m) long, with a beam of 27 feet 6 inches (8.4 m) and a draught of 16 feet 6 inches (5 m).[8]Normal displacement was 946 long tons (961 t).[9] Five Yarrow boilers were fitted that fed steam to direct-drive Parsonsturbines driving three shafts.[10] Two funnels were fitted. The machinery was rated at 12,000 shaft horsepower (8,900 kW) giving a design speed of 27 knots (31 mph; 50 km/h).[11] The destroyer reached a speed of 27.034 kn (31.110 mph; 50.067 km/h) during sea trials.[12] Up to 226 long tons (230 t) of coal was carried, giving a design range of 2,000 nautical miles (3,700 km; 2,300 mi) at 15 knots (28 km/h; 17 mph).[13]
As the First World War approached, the destroyer was part of the Fourth Division of the Fifth Destroyer Flotilla and based in Alexandria.[25] The flotilla arrived at Malta on 29 July.[26] The island had a coal shortage, which restricted the vessel's activity.[27] Nonetheless, on 2 August 1914, the destroyer escorted a small fleet led by the battlecruiserInflexible, and including sister shipSavage, as part of the search for Goeben and Breslau.[28] On 5 August, the vessel accompanied Inflexible''s sister ship Indomitable and Savage on a more successful sortie to Bizerta to coal, rejoining the fleet the following day.[29]Savage and Rattlesnake were back the following day for more coal, but nonetheless the fuel shortage continued to curtail action by the whole flotilla.[30] The attempts to intercept Goeben and Breslau failed, and the two German ships reached Turkey on 10 August.[31] On 10 September, Rattlesnake transported Rear AdmiralErnest Troubridge back to England to give an account of their escape.[32]
In 1915 Rattlesnake participated in the naval operations in the Dardanelles Campaign. Notable was an action supporting the Australian First Division on 27 May at Kabatepe. Turning the ship's searchlight onto the coast, the crew identified the Ottoman Army trenches and opened fire. A large communications line was destroyed, enabling the troops to advance.[33] The destroyer returned to the same location during the evening of 18 December and, once again using a combination of a searchlight and guns, supported the evacuation of the same division.[34] The next year saw Rattlesnake still a member of the Fifth Destroyer Flotilla within the Mediterranean Fleet.[35]Submarine action by the Imperial German Navy in the Mediterranean Sea was intensifying, with a commensurate impact on British shipping. In February alone, fifty ships, totalling 101,000 long tons (103,000 t), were lost. Due to a lack of resources, the destroyers in the Mediterranean Fleet could only escort high value ships, like troopships.[36]
Rattlesnake was still based in the Mediterranean in 1917 and was subsequently transferred to the Aegean Squadron.[37] On 20 January the following year, the destroyer was detached from the squadron to serve at Gibraltar.[38]Rattlesnake was subsequently transferred to the Second Destroyer Flotilla, based at Buncrana in the north of Ireland.[39] The destroyers at Buncrana assisted convoys travelling across the Atlantic Ocean to and from the American industrial complex at Hampton Roads, sailing via Sydney, Nova Scotia to arrive and depart ports on the Clyde and Mersey.[40] The service was demanding, but succeeded in bringing many ships safely to port.[41]
After the Armistice that ended the war, the Royal Navy quickly withdrew all pre-war destroyers from active service.[42] By February 1919, Rattlesnake had been transferred to Portsmouth.[43] However, that deployment did not last long. As the force returned to a peacetime level of strength, both the number of ships and personnel needed to be reduced to save money.[44]Rattlesnake was declared superfluous to operational requirements, retired, and, on 9 May 1921, sold to Ward at Milford Haven to be broken up.[19]
^"IX.—Coast of Ireland Station". Supplement to the Monthly Naval List: 18. October 1918. Retrieved 16 December 2023 – via National Library of Scotland.
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