By January 1916,
Mounsey had joined the
11th Destroyer Flotilla, part of the
Grand Fleet. On 18 March 1916, the sighting of a submarine off the entrance to
Lough Swilly in the north of Ireland led to a suspension of all sea traffic through the
North Channel.
Mounsey and sister ship , which had just finished refitting on the
Clyde, were briefly stopped from returning to their base at
Scapa Flow until orders were clarified.
Mounsey took part in the
Battle of Jutland, departing from
Cromarty on 30 May with most of the rest of the 11th Flotilla in support of the
2nd Battle Squadron. The 11th Flotilla clashed several times with German forces during the night of 31 May/1 June, with
Mounsey undamaged.
Mounsey, together with the destroyer , was detached from the Fleet on the afternoon of 1 June to escort the battleship to
Rosyth. On 13 April 1917, the Admiralty intercepted radio signals from the German submarine , indicating that the submarine has suffered failure of one of her engines, and was making her way back to Germany from
St Kilda at a speed of .
Mounsey was ordered to lead five more destroyers to patrol off the north of Scotland to intercept
UC-30 early on 14 April, and later that day sighted a submarine that dived away to safety (which was probably the British submarine , also searching for
UC-30). While
UC-30 evaded the searching British forces, the submarine never returned home, possibly sunk by a mine. On 24 June 1917,
Mounsey and the destroyer were escorting an east-bound
convoy on the Scandinavian (
Lerwick–Norway) route, when the convoy came under attack by the German submarine , which fired two torpedoes from distance at the convoy, one of which hit and sank the Swedish merchant ship . In response,
Opal followed back the track of the torpedo and dropped a depth charge on the estimated location of the submarine, but
U-67 escaped unharmed. On 30 July,
Mounsey was again escorting an east-bound convoy from Lerwick when she sighted a submarine at a distance of about .
Mounsey made for the submarine, which dived away, but later that day the submarine torpedoed and sank the Norwegian from the convoy.
Mounsey remained part of the 11th Flotilla in March 1918, but in April that year transferred to the
3rd Destroyer Flotilla, still attached to the Grand Fleet. In May 1918,
Monsey moved again, this time to the
2nd Destroyer Flotilla, assigned to the
Coast of Ireland Station and based at
Buncrana in the north of Ireland. On 6 October 1918, the troopship , part of a convoy carrying American troops to Europe, collided with the liner in heavy seas in the North Channel.
Otranto was badly damaged and was soon forced to stop by flooding, and had drifted close to the coast of
Islay by the time that
Mounsey arrived in response to
Otrantos distress signal.
Mounsey was unable to come alongside
Otranto to take off
Otrantos crew and passengers owing to the very heavy seas, and instead, her commanding officer,
Lieutenant Francis Craven, took the destroyer as close as possible on
Otrantos
lee side so that men could jump over to
Mounsey. Craven took
Mounsey alongside
Otranto four times in total, rescuing 596 of
Otrantos passengers and crew before, with no more room for any more survivors and damaged by impacts with the side of the troopship, was forced to break off the rescue attempts and make for port.
Otranto ran aground on Islay about 30 minutes after
Mounsey left, killing 431. Craven was awarded the
Distinguished Service Order for
Mounseys rescue efforts. ==Disposal==