After the preceding coal-burning Beagle class, the Acorn-classdestroyers saw a return to oil-firing, as pioneered by the Tribal class of 1905, which enabled the vessels to be smaller yet with increased deck space available for weaponry.[1] The class was later renamed the H class.[2]
Staunch was 240 feet (73 metres) long between perpendiculars and 246 ft (75 m) overall, with a beam of 25 ft 5 in (7.7 m) and a deep draught of 8 ft 6 in (2.6 m). Displacement was 748 long tons (838 short tons; 760 tonnes) normal and 855 long tons (958 short tons; 869 t) full load.[3][4] Power was provided by Parsonssteam turbines, fed by four Yarrow boilers.[5] Parsons supplied a set of direct-drive turbines with seven casings, three for high speed, two for cruising and two for running astern. Power was transmitted through three shafts, a single high-speed turbine driving a centre shaft and the remainder distributed amongst two wing-shafts.[6] Three funnels were fitted.[7] The engines were rated at 13,500 shaft horsepower (10,100 kW) and design speed was 27 knots (50 km/h; 31 mph).[2] The vessel carried 170 long tons (170 t) of fuel oil which gave a range of 1,540 nautical miles (2,850 km; 1,770 mi) at a cruising speed of 15 knots (28 km/h; 17 mph).[3][5]
The 20 destroyers of the Acorn class were ordered by the Admiralty under the 1909–1910 Naval Programme.[11] Unlike previous destroyer designs, where the individual yards had been given discretion within the parameters set by the Admiralty, the Acorn class were a set, with the machinery the only major variation between the different ships, enabling costs to be reduced.[6][12]Staunch was laid down at the Dumbarton shipyard of William Denny and Brothers with the yard number 920 on 15 January 1910, launched on 29 October and completed on 17 March.[4][13] The ship was the fifth in Royal Navy service given the name staunch.[14][15] The vessel initially joined the Fourth Destroyer Flotilla.[16] On 5 August 1911, the destroyer escorted the royal yachtBritannia at the Cowes Regatta.[17]Staunch subsequently joined the Second Destroyer Flotilla.[18]
After the British Empire declared war on Germany at the beginning of the First World War in August 1914, the flotilla became part of the Grand Fleet.[19] Between 13 and 15 October, the flotilla supported the battleships of the Grand Fleet in a training exercise.[20] Soon afterwards, the destroyers were deployed to Devonport to undertake escort and patrol duties, protecting merchant ships against German submarines.[5][21] January 1915 found the vessel still attached to the Second Destroyer Flotilla of the Grand Fleet.[22] On 28 August 1915, the flotilla took part in an anti-submarine patrol, accompanied by battleships and cruisers, but this was unsuccessful at destroying any submarines.[23] However, towards the end of the year, the destroyer was detached from the Grand Fleet.[24]
Leaving Devonport on 13 November, Staunch sailed to the Mediterranean Sea.[25] The ship was attached to the Fifth Destroyer Flotilla as part of the Mediterranean Fleet.[26] Within months, the destroyer was deployed to support the end of the Gallipoli campaign. Royal Navy vessels had successfully removed a large force from the peninsular, but there remained 37,500 troops on 29 December left on the beaches. The Navy organised the evacuation of 22,500 troops, but the combination of weather and geography meant that there were still 15,000 that were left ashore.[27] It was not until 9 January 1916 that the destroyer was able to approach one of the hulks that lay offshore and was able to save the majority of a battalion of the Worcestershire Regiment.[28][29]
On 30 October 1917, the destroyer formed part of the support for the monitorRaglan in bombarding troops of the Ottoman Empire stationed north of Gaza.[30] The monitor was joined by HMS M15 and HMS M29, and three French destroyers and the ships moored off the coast of Deir al-Balah, but, on 10 November, the German submarineU-38, led by Lieutenant Hans Wendlandt, arrived in the area. Remained at periscope depth, Wendlandt monitored the flotilla until, on the following day, he found a gap between the anti-submarine nets and the coast. Shortly after 17:30, he launched torpedoes at M15 and Staunch, sinking both ships.[31][32] Eight sailors aboard Staunch were killed but the submarine escaped unscathed.[33]
^"I. — Home and Atlantic Waters". Supplement to the Monthly Navy List: 11. January 1915. Retrieved 23 February 2023 – via National Library of Scotland.
Brassey, Thomas (1912). The Navy Annual 1912. Portsmouth: J. Griffin & Co.
Brown, David K. (2010). The Grand Fleet: Warship Design and Development 1906–1922. Barnsley: Seaforth Publishing. ISBN978-1-84832-085-7.
Bush, Steve; Warlow, Ben (2021). Pendant Numbers of the Royal Navy: A Complete History of the Allocation of Pendant Numbers to Royal Navy Warships & Auxiliaries. Barnsley: Seaforth Publishing. ISBN978-1-526793-78-2.
Colledge, J. J.; Warlow, Ben (2006). Ships of the Royal Navy: a Complete Record of all Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy from the 15th Century to the Present. London: Chatham. ISBN978-1-85367-566-9.