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HMS Norfolk (D21)
County-class guided missile destroyer of the Royal Navy and Chilean Navy
County-class guided missile destroyer of the Royal Navy and Chilean Navy
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| section1 | {{Infobox ship/image |
| image | HMS Norfolk USS Claude-V-Ricketts(DDG-5) HNLMS De-Ruyter DN-SC-82-08446.jpg |
| image_caption | HMS Norfolk |
| section2 | {{Infobox ship/career |
| country | United Kingdom |
| flag | |
| name | HMS Norfolk |
| ordered | 5 January 1965 |
| builder | Swan Hunter |
| laid_down | 15 March 1966 |
| launched | 16 November 1967 |
| commissioned | 7 March 1970 |
| decommissioned | 1981 |
| identification | Pennant number: D21 |
| fate | Sold to Chile on 6 April 1982 |
| section3 | {{Infobox ship/career |
| hide_header | title |
| country | Chile |
| flag | |
| name | Capitán Prat |
| acquired | April 1982 |
| decommissioned | 11 August 2006 |
| fate | Sold for scrap September 2008 |
| section4 | {{Infobox ship/characteristics |
| class | |
| displacement | *6,200 tons |
| length | 522 ft |
| beam | 53 ft |
| draught | 20 ft |
| propulsion | Combined steam and gas turbines, 2 shafts |
| speed | 32 kn |
| range | 4000 nmi at 28 kn |
| capacity | 470 |
| armament | *2 × Twin 4.5-inch (113 mm) guns (1 pair removed after refit) |
| aircraft | 1 × Westland Wessex helicopter |
- 6,800 tons (full load)
- 2 × 20 mm Oerlikon guns
- 1 × Twin Sea Slug launcher
- 2 × Quad Sea Cat missile launchers
- 4 × Exocet missile launchers (added after refit)
**HMS ''Norfolk''''' (pennant **D21''') was a of the Royal Navy. She was the fourth Group 2 and the last of the County-class built.
The fifth ship named Norfolk, she was laid down on 15 March 1966 by Swan Hunter and launched by Lavinia, Duchess of Norfolk on 16 November 1967. She was commissioned on 7 March 1970.
In 1982 she was sold to Chile and served in their navy as Capitán Prat until 2006 and subsequently sold for scrap.
Design
Norfolk is described as a destroyer, rather than a cruiser, because the Royal Navy and First Sea Lord Earl Mountbatten had seen guided missile destroyers as easier to gain approval from the Treasury than cruisers, when the class originated in the late 1950s. By the late 1960s the armament being fitted to Norfolk was dated and limited with no more than the guns of a mid-1950s destroyer and a supposedly improved Sea Slug missile which was untested at the time work on Norfolk started. By the mid-1960s the Minister of Defence Denis Healey and the Labour Government were reducing the size of the Royal Navy and rejecting the idea of broken back conventional or limited nuclear war in the Atlantic. The Labour defence doctrine was one of tighter nuclear deterrence with the main armament, tactical nuclear and anti-submarine emphasis. Norfolk did not really fit with this strategy and was built to keep shipyards open and as a low level cruiser for low level defence, diplomacy, third world bushfire wars and recruitment. Eventually such ships could be sold to the third world to aid British interests in South America, the Middle East and Asia where Britain was withdrawing its own forces.
Commanding officers
Notable commanding officers include JWD Cook (1971–1972), Anthony J Whetstone (1977–1978) and A D Hutton (1978–1980).
References
Publications
- Marriott, Leo, 1989. Royal Navy Destroyers since 1945, Ian Allan Ltd.
- McCart, Neil, 2014. County Class Guided Missile Destroyers, Maritime Books.
category:Ships built by Swan Hunter
References
- Programme, ''Navy Days Portsmouth, 29th–31st August 1971'', p11.
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