Originally named
Almirante Riveros when ordered from
J. Samuel White in 1912, the ship was renamed
Tipperary when purchased by the RN in 1914. She was launched at the
East Cowes shipyard on 5 March 1915 and completed in June.
Commissioned by
Captain Barry Domvile,
Tipperary initially served as the second flotilla leader with the
3rd Destroyer Flotilla in the Harwich Force. Late in that same year, she took charge of a detachment of destroyers from the 2nd Flotilla, while in March 1916,
Tipperary had rejoined the Harwich Force, being attached to the Fifth Light Cruiser Squadron. In May 1916,
Tipperary was made the leader of the 4th Flotilla, a formation which directly supported the Grand Fleet.
Sinking About 21:58 GMT on 31 May 1916, while
4th Destroyer Flotilla was searching for the German
High Seas Fleet in the
North Sea in the
Battle of Jutland, she encountered the enemy's 7th Flotilla (destroyers). The Imperial German Naval vessels launched torpedoes at the British ships, none of which hit, and 7th Flotilla then turned away. Nicholas Jellicoe's account states that "Between 23:15 and 23:20 a lookout [on HMS
Garland] ... saw what he thought were enemy ships on the starboard quarter". A few minutes later,
Tipperary flashed the recognition signal and was immediately lit up by the searchlights of three German battleships and three light cruisers. From 23:30 to about 23:34, around 150 5.9-inch shells from and were fired at
Tipperary; she was badly stricken by this fire, which left her bridge damaged and most of her forward crew casualties, including her commander,
Captain Wintour. At about 02:00 GMT on 1 June 1916, she was abandoned and sank in the following hours due to battle damage. 150 of her crew of 197 were killed in the action, a number of the survivors were rescued from the sea by the Imperial German Navy and transported back to Germany as prisoners of war. Stoker David Eunson described the sinking: "As we floated away on that awful night, many died of sheer exhaustion and suffering. After drifting for well nigh 5 hours we were picked up at dawn. I saw the
Tipperary, a mass of flames, keel over". ==Aftermath==