HMS Thames

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Eight ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Thames, after the River Thames:

  • HMS Thames (1758) was a 32-gun fifth rate launched in 1758 and broken up in 1803. She was in French hands between 1793 and 1796, when she was known as Tamise.
  • HMS Thames (1805) was another 32-gun fifth rate, launched in 1805 and broken up in 1816.
  • was a cutter tender built in 1805. She became a dockyard craft in 1866 and was renamed YC 2. She was sold in 1872.
  • was a 46-gun fifth rate launched in 1823. She was converted to a prison ship in 1841, and sank at her moorings in 1863.
  • HMS Thames (1885) was a Mersey-class second-class cruiser launched in 1885. She was converted to a depot ship in 1903, and was sold in 1920 to become a training ship at the Cape, being renamed General Botha. Her name reverted to Thames when she became an accommodation ship in 1942; she was finally scuttled in 1947.
  • HMS Thames (N71) was a River-class submarine launched in 1932 and sunk by a mine in 1940.
  • HMS Thames (1938), a tugboat in service during World War II
  • HMS Thames has since 1949 been the name borne by a sequence of Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve tenders.

See also[]

  • was a bomb ketch that the Bombay Dockyard launched for the Bombay Marine, the naval arm of the British East India Company (EIC). At some point after active service she became a luggage ship;[1] her ultimate fate is unknown.

Citations[]

  1. ^ Wadia (1986), p. 340.

References[]

  • Wadia, R. A. (1986) [1957]. The Bombay Dockyard and the Wadia Master Builders. Bombay.
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