HMS Ark Royal
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HMS Ark Royal

1914 seaplane tender


Service Entry
1914
Commissioning Date
December 10, 1914
Manufacturer
Blyth Shipbuilding Company
Operator
Royal Navy
Vessel Type
seaplane tender
Aliases
HMS Pegasus and SS Anita I

* This information from Wikidata is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

HMS Ark Royal (1914) was a pioneering seaplane carrier, the first ship specifically designed and built for this purpose. Laid down on 7 November 1913 by Blyth Shipbuilding Company in Northumberland, she was initially constructed as a merchant tramp steamer, probably intended for the Black Sea trade. Purchased by the Royal Navy in May 1914, she was launched on 5 September 1914 and commissioned on 10 December 1914. Extensive modifications transformed her from a merchant vessel into a seaplane tender, with her superstructure, funnel, and propulsion machinery moved aft, and a large forward deck for aircraft operations. Her flight deck, not a traditional flying-off platform, supported starting and recovering seaplanes, with a substantial hangar measuring 150 feet long, 45 feet wide, and 15 feet high, equipped with workshops and two steam cranes for aircraft handling. Ark Royal’s overall dimensions included a length of 366 feet, a beam of 50 feet 10 inches, and a draught of 18 feet 9 inches. She displaced about 7,080 long tons normally, with a deep load displacement of 7,450 long tons. Powered by a triple-expansion steam engine producing 3,000 indicated horsepower, she achieved a speed of around 10.64 knots. Her armament consisted of four 12-pounder guns and two machine guns, and her crew numbered approximately 180, including 60 aviation personnel. Throughout her service, Ark Royal participated in key operations such as the Gallipoli Campaign, supporting reconnaissance and bombing missions with her aircraft. She supported naval actions, including attempts to attack the German battleship SMS Goeben, and provided anti-submarine patrols over the Aegean Sea. Post-war, she served as an aircraft transport and depot ship supporting White Russian forces and the British campaigns in the Caspian and Black Sea regions. She also supported RAF operations in Somaliland and was later used as a training ship, evaluating aircraft catapult techniques. Renamed HMS Pegasus in 1934, she played a role in WWII as a transport, training vessel, and prototype fighter catapult ship, before becoming a barracks ship. Sold for scrap in 1950, her career exemplified early naval aviation innovation and multi-role versatility in the Royal Navy.

This description has been generated using GPT-4.1-NANO based on the Vessel's wikidata information and then modified by ShipIndex.org staff.

Ships

13 ship citations (1 free) in 11 resources

Ark Royal (1914) Subscribe to view
Ark Royal (1914) (Seaplane Carrier) Subscribe to view
Ark Royal (1914)(British warship) Subscribe to view
Ark Royal (aircraft carrier, Royal Navy ship) Subscribe to view
Ark Royal (commissioned 1914) Subscribe to view
Ark Royal (commissioned 1914), detailed description Subscribe to view
Ark Royal (Great Britain, 1914) Subscribe to view
Ark Royal (seaplancar, built 1914, at Blyth; tonnage: 7020 fl) Subscribe to view
Ark Royal, British Seaplane Carrier (Commr. R. H. Clark-Hall), in the Dardanelles Subscribe to view
Ark Royal, HMS Subscribe to view