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Peter Smith - Battle-Cruiser HMS Renown 1916-1948

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Peter Smith Battle-Cruiser HMS Renown 1916-1948
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    Battle-Cruiser HMS Renown 1916-1948
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This is the story of the Royal Navy battle-cruiser H.M.S. Renown, a famous ship with a long and distinguished operational career. Originally built for the First World War she subsequently served in the post-war fleet and took royalty around the world. Modernized just in time for World War Two, she re-joined the fleet in September, 1939 and for the first two years of the war her speed and heavy gun armament made her one of the most important ships of the fleet. She escorted the famous carrier Ark Royal for most of her illustrious career as flagship of Force H in the Mediterranean and took part in many stirring battles and convoy actions.

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By the same Author NAVAL AVIATION Close Air Support Arctic - photo 1

By the same Author:

NAVALAVIATION
Close Air Support
Arctic VictoryFairchild-Republic A10A Thunderbolt-II
Midway: Dauntless VictoryNorth American T-6, SNJ, Harvard and
Battles of the Malta Striking ForcesWirraway
Battleship Royal SovereignLockheed C-130 Hercules
British Battle-CruisersShip Strike!
Cruisers in ActionRAF Squadron Badges
Destroyer ActionT-6: the Harvard, Texan and Wirraway
Destroyer LeaderThe Sea Eagles
Eagles WarTorpedo Bombers
Fighting FlotillaAvro Lancaster
Hard LyingMILITARY
Heritage of the SeaMassacre at Tobruk
H.M.S. Wild SwanThe Royal Marines: A Pictorial History
Into the MinefieldsPer Mare, Per Terram
Midway: Dauntless VictoryVictorias Victories
Naval Warfare in the English ChannelWar in the Aegean
Pedestal; the convoy that saved Malta
Royal Navy Ships BadgesDIVE BOMBERS
Task Force 57Aichi D3A1/2 Val
The Great Ships PassCurtiss SB2C Helldiver
Dive Bomber!
Dive Bombers in Action!
Douglas SBD Dauntless
Douglas AD Skyraider
Fist from the Sky
History of Dive Bombing
Into the Assault
Jungle Dive Bombers at War
Junkers Ju87 Stuka
Luftwaffe Colours Stuka 1
Luftwaffe Colours Stuka 2
Petlyakov Pe-2 Peshka
Skua! the Royal Navys Dive Bomber
Straight Down!
Stuka Spearhead
Stuka at War
Stukas over the Mediterranean
Stuka Squadron
Stukas over the Steppe
Vengeance

First published in Great Britain in 2008 by PEN SWORD MARITIME An imprint of - photo 2

First published in Great Britain in 2008 by
PEN & SWORD MARITIME
An imprint of
Pen & Sword Books Ltd
47 Church Street
Barnsley
South Yorkshire
S70 2AS

Copyright Peter C. Smith 2008

ISBN 978 1 84415 745 7
PRINT ISBN: 9781848845206
EPUB ISBN: 9781844687206
PRC ISBN: 9781844687213

The right of Peter C. Smith to be identified as Author of this work has been
asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

A CIP catalogue record for this book is
available from the British Library

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any
form or by any means, electronic or mechanical including photocopying, recording
or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission from the
Publisher in writing.

First edition published in 1976 as Hit First, Hit Hard
by William Kimber, London

Typeset by Phoenix Typesetting, Auldgirth, Dumfriesshire

Printed and bound in England by CPI UK

Pen & Sword Books Ltd incorporates the Imprints of Pen & Sword Aviation, Pen
& Sword Maritime, Pen & Sword Military, Wharncliffe Local History, Pen &
Sword Select, Pen & Sword Military Classics, Leo Cooper, Remember When,
Seaforth Publishing and Frontline Publishing

For a complete list of Pen & Sword titles please contact
PEN & SWORD BOOKS LIMITED
47 Church Street, Barnsley, South Yorkshire, S70 2AS, England
E-mail:
Website: www.pen-and-sword.co.uk

A complete list of all the books written by Peter C Smith can be found at:
www.dive-bombers.co.uk

Contents

Appendices:

Hit First, Hit Hard and go on Hitting, Admiral of the Fleet Sir John Fisher, First Sea Lord, 21 October 1904 to 25 January 1910.

Foreword

by the late Vice-Admiral B.C.B. Brooke, CB, CBE, Royal Navy

I welcome Peter Smiths history of the last of the Battle-cruisers, HMS Renown. My own connection with this famous ship was unique. When she was commissioned for the first time in September 1916 I was on her bridge during her first seagoing trials. Many years later I was her Commanding Officer in the East during the last two years of World War II.

In my experience this great ship never failed to answer the slightest touch of wheel or engines, nor did her armament ever fail when needed.

The rapport between Renown and her commanders brought her to life and permeated all who served in her; indeed it became an identity. This ship thereby attained the heights of efficiency and morale, and was always found ready and anxious to Hit First and Hit Hard.

Renowns last appearance on the world stage took place in Plymouth Sound in 1945 where she lay proudly wearing the standards of His Britannic Majesty and that of the President of the United States of America, Old Glory, a fitting symbolism of her place in history.

After this she laid down her burden, as so many great fighting ships had done before her, with supreme and immaculate dignity. The reception of the most powerful leaders of the Western World was a final tribute to her life of strenuous and unfailing service. To those who served in her she will never die and for those who follow this book will serve as fitting memorial.

Introduction

T his is the story of a famous warship in peace and in war. The facts of the operations are, wherever possible, from official records and use of published material during my research has been kept to a minimum.

Renown was not just a ship she was a family, and a close-knit family at that. Moreover it was a family that has withstood the test of time. So for the details of life as it was really lived aboard a British man-o-war, I hand my narrative over to the Renowns themselves. It is through their eyes that the reader will see World War II and the Royal Navy as it was. They talk freely of the boredom, of the perils of VD ashore, of TB afloat, of the ever-present rats, of fear in action and of common sense and heroism too. It was not all blood and guts in the Royal Navy during the last war, but a steady endurance test, punctuated with moments of intense mental and physical shock. It is none the less gallant and noble for that. If some of the myths are swept away (such as that they were eager to pit the Renown against the Bismarck on the lower deck they were just not that stupid!) then the reality from the men themselves makes the story even more worth the while telling.

I would like to express my appreciation to the following ex-Renowns who gave up their time to talk about their old ship, who lent logbooks, photographs, scrapbooks and personal mementoes of the largest destroyer in the Fleet, without which this book would not have been attempted; their names, and approximate years of service and position in the ship, are given herewith in chronological order:

Admiral B.C.B. Brooke, (Midshipman 191617, Captain 194345); W.F.J. Waller, (Captain of the Focsle 192122); A. Duff-Steward, (Stoker, 192124); Eric Brand, (Navigation Officer 192729); L.P. Stirk, (Torpedo Rating 193436); Captain A.W. Gray, (Chief Engineer 193741); Lieutenant Commander C. McD. Stuart, (Midshipman 193941); Jimmy Cannon (Seaman 193943); Tom Oliver, (Master-at-Arms 193948); John M. Roche, (Seaman 193944); A.V. Herbert, (Signal Boy 193941); John C. Shattock, (QMS Royal Marines 193941); Charles G. Wright (CPO Stores 193948); Bill Cain, (Stoker Petty Officer 193944); Henry Shannon, (Seaman 193944); M.V. Holmes, (Stoker 194044); E.J. Smith, (Leading Steward 194042); Norman W. Hopwood, (Chief ERA 194144); D.G. Anderson, (Seaman 194145); Peter Elvin, (Damage Control Officer 194144); J.H.G. Stuart, (Engineering Officer 194243); Peter Allbeury, (Walrus Pilot 194243); J.T.J. Dobie, (Lieutenant, RNVR. 194246); Maurice Balaam, (Lieutenant, RNVR. 194246); George H. Kennon, (Shipwright 194345); The Very Reverend H.M. Lloyd, (Chaplain 194345); Peter Churchill, (Engineering Lieutenant 194345); T.J. McCafferty (CPO 194546); Edward Walker, (Lieutenant, RNVR. 194446); Martin Cain, (Seaman 194446); and also a great many other old Renowns who have written to me and sent in information which I was unable to use due to lack of space.

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