On commissioning,
Hawke joined the
Mediterranean Fleet, remaining on that station for most of the rest of the decade. In early 1897,
Hawke deployed to
Crete to serve in the
International Squadron, a multinational force made up of ships of the
Austro-Hungarian Navy,
French Navy,
Imperial German Navy, Italian Royal Navy (),
Imperial Russian Navy, and Royal Navy that intervened in the 1897–1898 Greek uprising on Crete against rule by the
Ottoman Empire. The uprising prompted Greece to land a
Greek Army expeditionary force of 1,500 men on Crete to support the Cretan insurgency, which in turn precipitated the outbreak of the
Greco-Turkish War of 1897, also known as the Thirty Days War, in April 1897. The war ended in a quick and disastrous Greek defeat, and the ceasefire agreement required the Greek Army to withdraw from Crete. Accordingly, the Greek expeditionary force embarked aboard
Hawke on 23 May 1897 for transportation to Greece. The uprising on Crete continued, however, and the International Squadron continued to operate off Crete until December 1898. In August 1901
Hawke was paid off at
Chatham and placed in the Fleet Reserve. In February 1902 she received orders to prepare to convey relief crews to the
Cape of Good Hope Station, and she was commissioned for this duty on 1 April. She left Chatham the following week with new crews for the British vessels , and , and arrived at
Simon's Town on 10 May. She left South Africa ten days later, stopping at
Saint Helena,
Ascension, Sierra Leone,
Las Palmas and
Madeira before she arrived at
Plymouth on 16 June 1902. She took part in the
fleet review held at
Spithead on 16 August 1902 for the
coronation of King
Edward VII. Following the review she left Chatham to convey relief crews for the vessels , , , , and , all serving in the Mediterranean. She arrived at fleet headquarters at
Malta on 27 August. She returned to Chatham the following month with the relieved crews of
Vulcan,
Boxer,
Bruiser, and
Foam. She paid off into the A division of the Fleet Reserve at Chatham on 4 October 1902. In January 1903, she was again ordered to convey relief crews to ships on the Mediterranean station, this time , , , and , all recommissioned for new terms on the station, and she left Sheerness for Malta on 23 January, arriving there in early February, and returned home again after a couple of days. The ship paid off in March 1903. In November 1904,
Hawke became Boy's Training Ship as part of the 4th Cruiser Squadron, serving in that role until August 1906, when she joined the torpedo school at
Sheerness. In 1907,
Hawke joined the Home Fleet. In the course of the collision,
Hawke lost her
inverted bow, which was replaced by a
straight bow. The subsequent trial pronounced
Hawke to be free from any blame. During the trial, a theory was advanced that the large amount of water displaced by
Olympic had generated a suction that had drawn
Hawke off course, causing
Olympics voyage to be delayed. The White Star Line also lost on appeal.
Sinking In February 1913,
Hawke joined the training squadron based at
Queenstown, Ireland, where she served along with most of the rest of the
Edgar class. In August 1914, on the outbreak of the
First World War,
Hawke and the other
Edgars from Queenstown, formed the 10th Cruiser Squadron, operating on blockade duties between the
Shetland Islands and Norway. In October 1914, the 10th Cruiser Squadron was deployed further south in the North Sea as part of efforts to stop German warships from attacking a troop convoy from Canada. On 15 October, the squadron was on patrol off
Aberdeen, deployed in line abreast at intervals of about .
Hawke stopped at 9:30 am to pick up mail from
sister ship . After recovering her boat with the mail,
Hawke proceeded at without zig-zagging to regain her station, and was out of sight of the rest of the squadron when at 10:30 a single torpedo from the German submarine (which had
sunk three British cruisers on 22 September), struck
Hawke, which quickly capsized. The remainder of the squadron realised something was amiss only when, after a further, unsuccessful attack on , the squadron was ordered to retreat at high speed to the northwest, and no response to the order was received from
Hawke. The
destroyer was dispatched from
Scapa Flow to search for
Hawke and found a raft carrying twenty-two men, while a boat with a further forty-nine survivors was rescued by a Norwegian steamer. 524 officers and men died, including the ship's captain, with only 70 survivors (one man died of his wounds on 16 October). == Wreck ==