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{{Short description|British seaplane carrier}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2017}}
{{Good article}}
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|Ship image=HMSRaven2.jpg
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{{Infobox ship career
{{Infobox ship career
|Hide header=
| Hide header =
|Ship country=United Kingdom
| Ship name = SS ''Rabenfels''
| Ship owner = Hansa
| Ship operator =
| Ship country = Germany
| Ship flag = {{shipboxflag|German Empire|civl}}
| Ship ordered =
| Ship builder = [[Swan Hunter & Wigham Richardson]], [[Wallsend]]
| Ship original cost =
| Ship yard number =
| Ship way number =
| Ship laid down =
| Ship launched = 5 November 1903
| Ship completed = December 1903
| Ship christened =
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| Ship in service =
| Ship out of service =
| Ship identification =
| Ship fate =
| Ship notes =
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{{Infobox ship career
|Hide header=title
|Ship country=United Kingdom
|Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United Kingdom|naval}}
|Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United Kingdom|naval}}
|Ship name=HMS ''Raven II''
|Ship name=SS ''Rabenfels''
|Ship namesake=
|Ship ordered=
|Ship builder=[[Swan Hunter]]
|Ship laid down=
|Ship launched=1903
|Ship acquired=August 1914
|Ship acquired=August 1914
|Ship commissioned=June 12, 1915
|Ship commissioned=12 June 1915
|Ship decommissioned=January 14, 1918
|Ship decommissioned=Late 1917
|Ship renamed=''Raven II'', 5 August 1915
|Ship in service=
|Ship reclassified=Merchant [[collier (ship)|collier]], January 1918
|Ship out of service=
|Ship struck=
|Ship completed=
|Ship fate=Transferred to [[Merchant Navy]], January 1918
|Ship reinstated=
|Ship honours=
|Ship fate=Sold for mercantile service 1923
|Ship status=
|Ship notes=
|Ship notes=
}}
{{Infobox ship career
| Hide header =title
| Ship name = SS ''Rabenfels''
| Ship owner =
| Ship operator =
| Ship country =United Kingdom
| Ship flag = {{shipboxflag|United Kingdom|civil}}
| Ship acquired =January 1918
| Ship maiden voyage =
| Ship in service =
| Ship out of service =
| Ship renamed = ''Ravenrock'', 1918
| Ship fate =Sold to British Dominion Steamship Co., 1923; resold to Karafuto KKK, 1923
| Ship notes =
}}
{{Infobox ship career
| Hide header =title
| Ship name =SS ''Ravenrock''
| Ship owner = Karafuto KKK
| Ship operator =
| Ship country =Japan
| Ship flag = {{shipboxflag|Japan|civil}}
| Ship acquired = 1923
| Ship maiden voyage =
| Ship in service =
| Ship out of service =
| Ship renamed = ''Heiyei Maru No. 7''
| Ship fate =Sold to Inuri KKK, 1935
| Ship notes =
}}
{{Infobox ship career
| Hide header =title
| Ship name =SS ''Heiyei Maru No. 7''
| Ship owner = Inuri KKK
| Ship operator =
| Ship country =Japan
| Ship flag = {{shipboxflag|Japan|civil}}
| Ship acquired = 1935
| Ship maiden voyage =
| Ship in service =
| Ship out of service =
| Ship renamed = ''Heiei Maru No. 7'', 1938
| Ship fate =Sunk, 1941–45
| Ship notes =
}}
}}
{{Infobox ship characteristics
{{Infobox ship characteristics
|Hide header=
|Hide header=
|Header caption=
|Header caption=
|Ship class=
|Ship type=[[Seaplane carrier]]
|Ship tonnage=4,706 [[Gross register tonnage|GRT]]
|Ship displacement=4678 tons gross{{Citation needed|date=January 2010}}
|Ship length={{convert|390.5|ft|m|abbr=on}} pp
|Ship length={{convert|394|ft|5|in|m|abbr=on|1}}
|Ship beam={{convert|51.5|ft|m|abbr=on}}
|Ship beam={{convert|51|ft|6|in|m|abbr=on|1}}
|Ship draught=
|Ship draught={{convert|27|ft|6|in|m|abbr=on|1}}
|Ship draft=
|Ship propulsion=*1 shaft
*1 [[Marine steam engine#Triple or multiple expansion|Quadruple-expansion steam engine]]
|Ship propulsion=1-shaft quadruple expansion
|Ship speed=10 knots
|Ship speed={{convert|10|kn|lk=in}}
|Ship range=
|Ship range=
|Ship complement=
|Ship complement=
|Ship armament=1 × [[QF 12-pounder 12 cwt naval gun|{{convert|76|mm|abbr=on}}]] gun
|Ship sensors=
|Ship aircraft=1–6 × [[seaplane]]s
|Ship EW=
|Ship armament= 1 x 12 pdr (76mm)
|Ship armour=
|Ship armor=
|Ship aircraft=2 seaplanes
|Ship notes=
}}
}}
|}
|}
'''HMS ''Raven II''''' was a [[seaplane carrier]] of the [[Royal Navy]] used during the [[World War I|First World War]]. Converted from the captured German freighter ''Rabenfels'', the ship's aircraft conducted [[aerial reconnaissance]], observation and bombing missions in the Eastern [[Mediterranean]] and [[Red Sea]] during 1915–17 even though the ship was not [[Ship commissioning|commissioned]] into the Royal Navy until mid-1915. She fruitlessly searched the [[Indian Ocean]] for the German [[commerce raider]] {{SMS|Wolf|auxiliary cruiser|2}} in mid-1917. ''Raven II'' was [[Ship decommissioning|decommissioned]] in late 1917 and became a [[Merchant Navy]] [[collier (ship)|collier]] for the last year of the war. She was sold off in 1923 and had a succession of owners and names until she was sunk during the [[World War II|Second World War]] while under Japanese ownership.
'''HMS ''Raven II''''' was a German merchantman converted by the [[Royal Navy]] as a [[Seaplane carrier]].


==Description==
The German merchantman ''Rabenfels'' was built by [[Swan Hunter]] in 1911. On the outbreak of [[World War I]], the ''Rabenfels'' was seized at [[Port Said]], [[Egypt]]. Commissioned into the [[Royal Navy]] on June 12, 1915, she was not renamed as HMS ''Raven II'' until August, 1915.
''Raven II'' was {{convert|394|ft|5|in|m}} long, had a [[beam (nautical)|beam]] of {{convert|51|ft|6|in|m|1}}, and a [[draft (hull)|draught]] of {{convert|27|ft|6|in|m}}.<ref name=l1>Layman, p. 41</ref> She was rated at 4,706 [[Gross register tonnage|GRT]]. The ship had one propeller shaft powered by one [[Marine steam engine#Triple or multiple expansion|quadruple-expansion steam engine]] that used steam generated by an unknown number of coal-fired [[boiler (steam generator)|boiler]]s. ''Raven II'' had a maximum speed of {{convert|10|kn|lk=in}}.<ref>Gardiner and Gray, p. 67</ref>


==Career==
HMS ''Raven II'' carried two seaplanes, and operated in the Eastern Mediterranean (1915–1916) and the Indian Ocean (1916–1917). The aircraft operated included [[Short Type 184]], [[Sopwith Schneider]], [[Sopwith Baby]] and [[Short Admiralty Type 827]].
The German freighter [[steamship|SS]] ''Rabenfels'' was built by [[Swan Hunter & Wigham Richardson]] and completed in December 1903. On the outbreak of war in August 1914, she was seized by the British authorities whilst in [[Port Said]], [[Egypt]] and was requisitioned for service under the [[Red Ensign]] in January 1915 to operate [[seaplanes]].<ref name=l1/> No special modifications were made to the ship; the aircraft were stowed on the aft hatch covers and handled with her cargo booms.<ref name=tc7>Turncoat Carriers, p. 287</ref> ''Aenne Rickmers'' operated two French [[Nieuport VI]].H [[floatplane]]s that had been off-loaded by the {{ship|French seaplane carrier|Foudre||2|up=yes}}; they were flown by French pilots with British observers.<ref name=l1/> Later, the ship operated included British [[Short Type 184]], [[Sopwith Schneider]], [[Sopwith Baby]] and [[Short Admiralty Type 827]] [[floatplane]]s.<ref>Layman, pp. 40, 43</ref>


For the first two months of 1915, the ship and her aircraft supported Allied operations in Syria, Palestine and the Sinai Peninsula. Aside from reconnaissance duties, they delivered and recovered Allied spies as well as observed for ships performing [[naval bombardment|coastal bombardments]]. Around 20 March, ''Rabenfels'' arrived in [[Moudros|Mudros]] to load the aircraft and crew of the damaged [[HMS Anne (1915)|''Aenne Rickmers'']] (later HMS ''Anne'').<ref name=tc7/> The ship was commissioned into the Royal Navy on 12 June 1915 and renamed HMS ''Raven II''.<ref name=l1/> On 17 August, both ''Anne'' and ''Raven II'' spotted for the French [[armoured cruiser]] {{ship|French cruiser|Jeanne d'Arc|1899|2}} as she bombarded [[Tarsus, Mersin|Tarsus]].<ref name=tc7/> In January 1916, she was assigned to the [[East Indies and Egypt Seaplane Squadron]] together with the carriers {{HMS|Empress|1914|2}}, {{HMS|Ben-my-Chree||2}} and ''Anne''. The squadron was under the command of the [[General Officer Commanding]], Egypt and its primary duty was to watch Turkish positions and movements in southern Palestine and the Sinai in early 1916.<ref>Turncoat Carriers, p. 289</ref>
HMS ''Raven II'' was decommissioned January 14, 1918 and, renamed ''Ravenrock'', served as a stores carrier, collier and troopship in Government service until January, 1921. She was sold back to mercantile service in 1923.

At the end of March, ''Raven II'' was sent to the Red Sea to attack Turkish troops threatening [[Aden]]; she carried one two-seat Short floatplane and five Sopwith Schneiders for this operation. After a preliminary reconnaissance mission, on 2–3 April her aircraft dropped ninety-one {{convert|20|lb|adj=on}} bombs as well as leaflets urging the Arab auxiliaries to desert. The ship returned to the Syrian coast for patrols and was transferred to [[Kastellorizo]] in early July to conduct [[aerial reconnaissance]] and bombing missions in that area. ''Raven II'' was transferred to the [[Gulf of Aqaba]] later that month to take aerial photographs of the head of gulf as well as the east coast of the Red Sea. Her aircraft observed for the [[monitor (warship)|monitor]] {{HMS|M21||2}} as she bombarded a Turkish encampment in the Sinai. One aircraft was forced to land, but it was taken in tow by the monitor and delivered back to ''Raven II''.<ref>Turncoat Carriers, p. 290</ref>
The East Indies and Egypt Squadron reassembled in late August with ''Raven II'', ''Anne'' and ''Ben-my-Chree'' and the aircraft from the three carriers attacked the Turkish supply dump at [[El Afule]] for thirty minutes. The squadron then steamed south along the Palestinian coast where they encountered two Turkish supply dhows. One was sunk by the escorting {{ship|French destroyer|Arbalète||2|up=yes}} while the other was captured. The squadron flew off seven aircraft that attacked an encampment at [[Bureir]] and a nearby railroad [[viaduct]]. ''Raven II'' was then sent to the [[Antalya|Adalia]] area on the Turkish coast where her aircraft bombed a factory at [[Fineka]] and searched for U-boat bases<ref>Turncoat Carriers, pp. 291</ref> On 1 September, the ship was in Port Said preparing for another [[sortie]] into the Red Sea when she was hit by a bomb dropped by a German aircraft (probably the first successful air attack on an aviation vessel).<ref name=tc2/> Although ''Raven II'' was only lightly damaged, ''Anne'' was sent in her place. ''Raven II'' relieved Anne on 26 October in the Red Sea and her aircraft bombed Turkish forces advancing on [[Rabigh]] and [[Yenbo]] on 10 December. Shortly afterwards, the ship was transferred back to the Eastern Mediterranean where her aircraft attacked a bridge over the [[Ceyhan River]] with one {{convert|65|lb|adj=on}} bomb and eight {{convert|16|lb|adj=on}} bombs on 27 December.<ref name=tc2/>

On 10 March 1917, ''Raven II'' and the {{ship|French armoured cruiser|Pothuau||2|up=yes}} sailed for the Indian Ocean to hunt for the German [[Q-ship]] ''Wolf''. For this mission she carried a Short Baby and two Short 184s. The two ships searched the [[Laccadive Islands]] en route to [[Colombo]], [[Ceylon]], which they reached on 2 April. They then searched the [[Chagos Archipelago]] and the [[Maldive Islands]] and returned to Colombo. Engine problems forced a Short 184 to make an [[emergency landing]] on 21 April in the Maldives; the crew rejoined the ship on 6 May after a series of adventures that inspired [[Rudyard Kipling]]'s story "A Flight of Fact".<ref name=tc2>Turncoat Carriers, p. 292</ref> ''Raven II'' recovered the floatplane and its aircraft continued to fly search missions from Colombo until 21 May. She then joined a convoy bound for Egypt and arrived back in Port Said on 10 June. In early November, the ship's aircraft observed fire for a variety of ships during the [[Third Battle of Gaza]].<ref name=tc2/>

===Commercial service===
HMS ''Raven II'' was paid off shortly afterwards and, renamed ''Ravenrock'', served as a collier under the Red Ensign from January 1918 until the end of the war under the management of Grahams & Co. She was sold to British Dominion Steamship Co. in 1923 and resold later that year to Karafuto Kisen Kabushiki Kaisha (KKK), which renamed her ''Heiyei Maru No. 7''. In 1935, the ship was sold to Inuri KKK and she was renamed ''Heiei Maru No. 7'' in 1938. The ship was sunk during the Second World War, although the circumstances are unknown.<ref>Layman, pp. 42–43</ref>

==Notes==
{{Reflist|2}}


==References==
==References==
* {{cite book |editor1-last=Gardiner |editor1-first=Robert |editor2-last=Gray |editor2-first=Randal |title=Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1906–1921 |year=1985 |location=Annapolis, Maryland |publisher=Naval Institute Press |isbn=0-87021-907-3 |oclc=12119866 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=V2r_TBjR2TYC}}
*{{Colledge}}
*{{cite book|last=Layman|first=R. D.|title=Before the Aircraft Carrier: The Development of Aviation Vessels 1859–1922|year=1989|publisher=Naval Institute Press|location=Annapolis, Maryland|isbn=0-87021-210-9}}
* Dittmar, F. J. & Colledge, J. J., "British Warships 1914-1919", (Ian Allen, London, 1972), ISBN 0-7110-0380-7
* {{cite journal|date=1968|title=Turncoat Carriers|journal=Warship International|publisher=Naval Records Club|location=Toledo, Ohio|volume=V|issue=4|pages=285–94|issn=0043-0374}}
* Gray, Randal (ed), "Conway's All The Worlds Fighting Ships, 1906-1921", (Conway Maritime Press, London, 1985), ISBN 0-85177-245-5

{{WWI British ships}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Raven II}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Raven II}}
[[Category:Seaplane carriers of the Royal Navy]]
[[Category:Seaplane carriers of the Royal Navy]]
[[Category:Tyne-built ships]]
[[Category:Ships built on the River Tyne]]
[[Category:1903 ships]]
[[Category:1903 ships]]
[[Category:World War I aircraft carriers of the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:World War I aircraft carriers of the United Kingdom]]

Latest revision as of 16:12, 20 January 2023

History
Deutschland
NameSS Rabenfels
OwnerHansa
BuilderSwan Hunter & Wigham Richardson, Wallsend
Launched5 November 1903
CompletedDecember 1903
Vereinigtes Königreich
NameSS Rabenfels
AcquiredAugust 1914
Commissioned12 June 1915
DecommissionedLate 1917
RenamedRaven II, 5 August 1915
ReclassifiedMerchant collier, January 1918
FateTransferred to Merchant Navy, January 1918
Vereinigtes Königreich
NameSS Rabenfels
AcquiredJanuary 1918
RenamedRavenrock, 1918
FateSold to British Dominion Steamship Co., 1923; resold to Karafuto KKK, 1923
Japan
NameSS Ravenrock
OwnerKarafuto KKK
Acquired1923
RenamedHeiyei Maru No. 7
FateSold to Inuri KKK, 1935
Japan
NameSS Heiyei Maru No. 7
OwnerInuri KKK
Acquired1935
RenamedHeiei Maru No. 7, 1938
FateSunk, 1941–45
General characteristics
TypSeaplane carrier
Tonnage4,706 GRT
Length394 ft 5 in (120.2 m)
Beam51 ft 6 in (15.7 m)
Draught27 ft 6 in (8.4 m)
Propulsion
Speed10 knots (19 km/h; 12 mph)
Armament1 × 76 mm (3.0 in) gun
Aircraft carried1–6 × seaplanes

HMS Raven II was a seaplane carrier of the Royal Navy used during the First World War. Converted from the captured German freighter Rabenfels, the ship's aircraft conducted aerial reconnaissance, observation and bombing missions in the Eastern Mediterranean and Red Sea during 1915–17 even though the ship was not commissioned into the Royal Navy until mid-1915. She fruitlessly searched the Indian Ocean for the German commerce raider Wolf in mid-1917. Raven II was decommissioned in late 1917 and became a Merchant Navy collier for the last year of the war. She was sold off in 1923 and had a succession of owners and names until she was sunk during the Second World War while under Japanese ownership.

Description

[edit]

Raven II was 394 feet 5 inches (120.22 m) long, had a beam of 51 feet 6 inches (15.7 m), and a draught of 27 feet 6 inches (8.38 m).[1] She was rated at 4,706 GRT. The ship had one propeller shaft powered by one quadruple-expansion steam engine that used steam generated by an unknown number of coal-fired boilers. Raven II had a maximum speed of 10 knots (19 km/h; 12 mph).[2]

Career

[edit]

The German freighter SS Rabenfels was built by Swan Hunter & Wigham Richardson and completed in December 1903. On the outbreak of war in August 1914, she was seized by the British authorities whilst in Port Said, Egypt and was requisitioned for service under the Red Ensign in January 1915 to operate seaplanes.[1] No special modifications were made to the ship; the aircraft were stowed on the aft hatch covers and handled with her cargo booms.[3] Aenne Rickmers operated two French Nieuport VI.H floatplanes that had been off-loaded by the Foudre; they were flown by French pilots with British observers.[1] Later, the ship operated included British Short Type 184, Sopwith Schneider, Sopwith Baby and Short Admiralty Type 827 floatplanes.[4]

For the first two months of 1915, the ship and her aircraft supported Allied operations in Syria, Palestine and the Sinai Peninsula. Aside from reconnaissance duties, they delivered and recovered Allied spies as well as observed for ships performing coastal bombardments. Around 20 March, Rabenfels arrived in Mudros to load the aircraft and crew of the damaged Aenne Rickmers (later HMS Anne).[3] The ship was commissioned into the Royal Navy on 12 June 1915 and renamed HMS Raven II.[1] On 17 August, both Anne and Raven II spotted for the French armoured cruiser Jeanne d'Arc as she bombarded Tarsus.[3] In January 1916, she was assigned to the East Indies and Egypt Seaplane Squadron together with the carriers Empress, Ben-my-Chree and Anne. The squadron was under the command of the General Officer Commanding, Egypt and its primary duty was to watch Turkish positions and movements in southern Palestine and the Sinai in early 1916.[5]

At the end of March, Raven II was sent to the Red Sea to attack Turkish troops threatening Aden; she carried one two-seat Short floatplane and five Sopwith Schneiders for this operation. After a preliminary reconnaissance mission, on 2–3 April her aircraft dropped ninety-one 20-pound (9.1 kg) bombs as well as leaflets urging the Arab auxiliaries to desert. The ship returned to the Syrian coast for patrols and was transferred to Kastellorizo in early July to conduct aerial reconnaissance and bombing missions in that area. Raven II was transferred to the Gulf of Aqaba later that month to take aerial photographs of the head of gulf as well as the east coast of the Red Sea. Her aircraft observed for the monitor M21 as she bombarded a Turkish encampment in the Sinai. One aircraft was forced to land, but it was taken in tow by the monitor and delivered back to Raven II.[6]

The East Indies and Egypt Squadron reassembled in late August with Raven II, Anne and Ben-my-Chree and the aircraft from the three carriers attacked the Turkish supply dump at El Afule for thirty minutes. The squadron then steamed south along the Palestinian coast where they encountered two Turkish supply dhows. One was sunk by the escorting Arbalète while the other was captured. The squadron flew off seven aircraft that attacked an encampment at Bureir and a nearby railroad viaduct. Raven II was then sent to the Adalia area on the Turkish coast where her aircraft bombed a factory at Fineka and searched for U-boat bases[7] On 1 September, the ship was in Port Said preparing for another sortie into the Red Sea when she was hit by a bomb dropped by a German aircraft (probably the first successful air attack on an aviation vessel).[8] Although Raven II was only lightly damaged, Anne was sent in her place. Raven II relieved Anne on 26 October in the Red Sea and her aircraft bombed Turkish forces advancing on Rabigh and Yenbo on 10 December. Shortly afterwards, the ship was transferred back to the Eastern Mediterranean where her aircraft attacked a bridge over the Ceyhan River with one 65-pound (29 kg) bomb and eight 16-pound (7.3 kg) bombs on 27 December.[8]

On 10 March 1917, Raven II and the Pothuau sailed for the Indian Ocean to hunt for the German Q-ship Wolf. For this mission she carried a Short Baby and two Short 184s. The two ships searched the Laccadive Islands en route to Colombo, Ceylon, which they reached on 2 April. They then searched the Chagos Archipelago and the Maldive Islands and returned to Colombo. Engine problems forced a Short 184 to make an emergency landing on 21 April in the Maldives; the crew rejoined the ship on 6 May after a series of adventures that inspired Rudyard Kipling's story "A Flight of Fact".[8] Raven II recovered the floatplane and its aircraft continued to fly search missions from Colombo until 21 May. She then joined a convoy bound for Egypt and arrived back in Port Said on 10 June. In early November, the ship's aircraft observed fire for a variety of ships during the Third Battle of Gaza.[8]

Commercial service

[edit]

HMS Raven II was paid off shortly afterwards and, renamed Ravenrock, served as a collier under the Red Ensign from January 1918 until the end of the war under the management of Grahams & Co. She was sold to British Dominion Steamship Co. in 1923 and resold later that year to Karafuto Kisen Kabushiki Kaisha (KKK), which renamed her Heiyei Maru No. 7. In 1935, the ship was sold to Inuri KKK and she was renamed Heiei Maru No. 7 in 1938. The ship was sunk during the Second World War, although the circumstances are unknown.[9]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d Layman, p. 41
  2. ^ Gardiner and Gray, p. 67
  3. ^ a b c Turncoat Carriers, p. 287
  4. ^ Layman, pp. 40, 43
  5. ^ Turncoat Carriers, p. 289
  6. ^ Turncoat Carriers, p. 290
  7. ^ Turncoat Carriers, pp. 291
  8. ^ a b c d Turncoat Carriers, p. 292
  9. ^ Layman, pp. 42–43

References

[edit]
  • Gardiner, Robert; Gray, Randal, eds. (1985). Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1906–1921. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-907-3. OCLC 12119866.
  • Layman, R. D. (1989). Before the Aircraft Carrier: The Development of Aviation Vessels 1859–1922. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-210-9.
  • "Turncoat Carriers". Warship International. V (4). Toledo, Ohio: Naval Records Club: 285–94. 1968. ISSN 0043-0374.