Hawkins, named after
Admiral Sir John Hawkins, one of the leaders of the fleet that defeated the
Spanish Armada in 1588, has been the only ship of her name to serve in the Royal Navy. The ship was ordered in December 1915,
laid down by
HM Dockyard, Chatham on 3 June 1916,
launched on 1 October 1917 and completed on 23 July 1919.
Hawkins was the
flagship of the
5th Light Cruiser Squadron on the China Station by September 1920 and continued in that role for the next eight years. She returned to Chatham on 12 November 1928 to undergo a refit that involved the removal of her four coal-fired boilers and the remaining eight oil-fired boilers modified to partially offset the loss of the other boilers. The ship's turbines were now rated at to give her a speed of . The coal-fired boiler room was converted into an oil tank which increased her storage capacity to and boosted her range by 20%. Her three-inch AA guns were replaced by an equal number of
Mk V AA guns which were controlled by a Mk I
HACS gunnery director. The ship was now equipped with the 15-inch rangefinder in the HACS director and three 12-inch rangefinders.
Hawkins recommissioned on 31 December 1929 and became the flagship of the
2nd Cruiser Squadron of the Atlantic Fleet until she reduced to the reserve on 5 May 1930. The ship was recommissioned again in September 1932 to become the flagship of the
4th Cruiser Squadron on the East Indies Station, but was again reduced to reserve in April 1935. From July 1937 she was the flagship of Vice-Admiral
Max Horton, Vice-Admiral Commanding
Reserve Fleet. In June 1938 this duty passed to
HMS Effingham. In September 1938
Hawkins became a cadet training ship.
Wartime service When the
Second World War began in September 1939,
Hawkins had her guns and torpedo tubes reinstalled and her anti-aircraft armament was reinforced by the addition of four single two-pounder AA guns. The ship recommissioned as a heavy cruiser in January 1940 and was assigned to the South American Division of the
North America and West Indies Station. She patrolled off the
South American coast, searching for German commerce raiders for most of the next year. The following month, she escorted the
aircraft carrier as she sailed up the
East African coast bound for the
Suez Canal. En route, the carrier's aircraft bombed the port of
Mogadishu in
Italian Somaliland on 2 February. Shortly afterwards,
Hawkins was transferred to Force T which had been formed to support the British invasion of Italian Somaliland with gunfire from
Hawkins and three other cruisers in addition to the aircraft of the carrier . On 10–12 February,
Hawkins captured five Italian merchant ships totalling that had attempted to escape from
Kismayo, including . Ten days later the cruiser briefly joined the escorts of WS-5BX off
Mombasa,
British Kenya, but she was detached on the 22nd in an unsuccessful search for the German heavy cruiser after that ship had been spotted by a British aircraft.
Hawkins remained in the Indian Ocean, escorting convoys and searching for Axis commerce raiders, until she returned to the UK to begin a refit at
HM Dockyard, Devonport, on 4 December. Her light anti-aircraft armament was greatly augmented by the addition of two quadruple two-pounder mounts and the exchange of a pair of two-pounder single mounts for seven single
Oerlikon AA guns. In addition, a
Type 281 early-warning radar, a
Type 273 surface-
search radar and a pair of
Type 285 anti-aircraft gunnery radars were fitted on the roofs of the newly-installed four-inch directors. The repairs were completed by May 1942 and
Hawkins returned to the Indian Ocean where she was assigned to the
Eastern Fleet. During one of these escort missions, the
troop ship was torpedoed with heavy loss of life by the on 12 February 1944. Later that year,
Hawkins returned home, visiting
Scapa Flow,
Lough Neagh and the
Clyde for exercises before participating in the Normandy landings. Initially assigned to the
1st Cruiser Squadron of the
Home Fleet, she was detached to the Western Task Force Gunfire Support Bombardment Force U to support American troops landing at
Utah Beach. On 6 June, the ship bombarded the
coastal artillery positions in
Grandcamp-Maisy and
Saint-Martin-de-Varreville with some effect. The following month she was paid off and was sent to
Rosyth, Scotland, for repairs and to be converted into a training ship. The navy took advantage of the dockyard time and upgraded her anti-aircraft armament by exchanging her quadruple two-pounder mounts for octuple mounts and adding a pair of Oerlikon AA guns during 8–23 August. In September, she participated briefly in
Highball trials in
Loch Striven. The conversion was cancelled in May 1945 and
Hawkins was reduced to reserve and laid up in the
River Fal. In 1947 she was used for target trials to test the effectiveness of and bombs, and was bombed by
Royal Air Force Avro Lincoln bombers from an altitude of off
Spithead in May. A total of 616 bombs were dropped over 27 days, but only 29 struck the cruiser, of which 13 failed to detonate.
Hawkins was transferred to the
British Iron & Steel Corporation on 26 August 1947 and broken up in December that year at the Arnott Young scrapyard at
Dalmuir, Scotland. ==Notes==