HMS
Fame was one of three "thirty-knotter" torpedo boat destroyers ordered for the Royal Navy from
John I Thornycroft on 10 May 1895 under the 1894–1895 shipbuilding programme. These requirements included reaching a speed of during
sea trials and an armament of a single
QF 12 pounder 12 cwt ( calibre) gun, backed up by five 6-pounder guns, and two 18-inch (450 mm) torpedo tubes. An arched turtleback
forecastle was to be fitted. Thornycroft's design had three
water-tube boilers feeding two four-cylinder
triple-expansion steam engines, rated at , and had two funnels. The ship was
long overall and
at the waterline, with a
beam of and a
draught of .
Displacement was light and full load,
Fame was laid down as yard number 306 on 4 July 1895 at Thornycroft's shipyard at
Chiswick on the
River Thames and was launched on 15 April 1896. She had her armament fitted at
Portsmouth, was completed and was accepted by the Royal Navy in June 1897. ==Pre-war==