Serdity was
laid down in
Shipyard No. 189 (Sergo Ordzhonikidze) in
Leningrad with the
yard number 298 on 25 October 1936 as a
Gnevny-class destroyer with the name of
Likhoy. She was relaid down as a Project 7U destroyer on 15 October 1938, and
launched on 21 April 1939. The ship was renamed
Serdity on 25 September 1940 before acceptance by a state commission on 15 October, although she did not officially join the
Baltic Fleet until 12 April 1941, when the Soviet
naval jack was raised aboard her. In the days after the 22 June beginning of
Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union,
Serdity participated in minelaying with her sister ships of the 2nd Division on 24 and 26 June. The destroyer moved north to the
Kuivastu roadstead on 27 June due to the German advance, and after the departure of the remainder of the Light Forces Detachment for
Tallinn she was left to
defend the
Gulf of Riga with her sister and the elderly destroyer . The destroyer expended 115 130 mm shells during the 6 July Battle of
Irbe Strait against the German minesweeping support ship
Minenräumschiff-11 (the former
Osnabrück) and her attached
minesweepers. Under the flag of Light Forces detachment commander
Kontr-admiral Valentin Drozd, she and the destroyer covered minelaying by
guard ships
Tucha and
Sneg on 18 July. By 14:00 of that day she returned to the Kübasaar roadstead near
Saaremaa, but quickly turned back after receiving a message that a German convoy had been spotted. Due a lack of coordination with
Soviet Naval Aviation, both destroyers came under
friendly air attack and at 15:31 a bomb dropped by a
Tupolev SB bomber exploded close to
Serdity, killing one and wounding three sailors and knocking out a boiler and both rangefinders in the
conning tower.
Steregushchy, which escaped unscathed, engaged the German convoy escorts, but was only joined by
Serdity at 17:24 when they had lost sight of the convoy. After escaping without serious damage from a German bombing raid on the return journey,
Serdity anchored in
Heltermaa roadstead off
Hiiumaa by 19 July. On that day she came under sudden attack by four
Junkers Ju 88 bombers of
Kampfgruppe 806 while anchored. Efforts to raise steam proved futile and one of her boilers was destroyed by a bomb that penetrated the deck, knocking out power. A second bomb holed the hull and displaced fuel oil from her tanks, starting a fire that engulfed the forward superstructure and both forward
boiler rooms. Although the crew flooded the aft 130 mm
magazine, damage control was hindered by the lack of power. The fire spread aft and caused the explosion of ammunition and depth charges, destroying the aft section. Due to the shallow depth of the anchorage, the hull rolled to starboard and remained above the water. The destroyer remained afloat for slightly more than an hour after the air raid, and her survivors were taken off by
Steregushchy and the destroyer . A total of 35 crewmembers were killed and more than 30 were wounded during the sinking. What was left of the hull was destroyed by the explosion of the forward magazines. The destroyer was officially struck from the Soviet Navy on 27 July. Postwar, the wreck was raised in pieces and towed to Tallinn for scrapping between 1949 and 1952. ==Notes==