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Ark Royal is probably the most famous name in the
history of the British Navy with five warships having used
that name by the end of the 20th Century. The first Ark
Royal was built at Deptford on the River Thames for Sir
Walter Raleigh in 1587. Queen Elizabeth's navy acquired
that ship to serve as the English flagship during the
Spanish Armada campaign of 1588. The British Navy bought a
merchant ship nearing completion to create the second
Ark Royal. That ship entered service as a seaplane
carrier a few months before the outbreak of World War One
in 1914. After the navy ordered a new aircraft carrier in
1934, they renamed the seaplane carrier Pegasus so
the name Ark Royal could be used for the new ship.
The third Ark Royal had to be designed to comply
with the Washington Treaty limits of 1922. Her first
deployment during the Second World War was to the South
Atlantic in search of the German pocket battleship Graf
Spee. Although Ark Royal failed to locate
the German warship, a ferocious battle with three British
cruisers forced Graf Spee to put into
Montevideo/Uruguay for repairs. The German warship was
scuttled a few days later as her captain received reports
British capital ships were amassing outside the port.
Ark Royal’s next deployment in July 1940 took
her to the French Navy base at Mers El Kebir/Algeria. With
the commander of that base refusing demands his ships
should join the war against Germany, Ark Royal and
other British warships were ordered to destroy the French
ships in the harbor. Ark Royal took part in a second
attack of that type on the French Navy base at Dakar in
September 1940.
In March 1941, Ark Royal began patrols in the
North Atlantic in search of the German battleships
Scharnhorst and Gneisenau. These warships had
been carrying out attacks on supply convoys traveling
between America and Britain. Although they both made it
safely back to the German held port of Brest/France, the
German battleship Bismarck was not as fortunate, as
on May 26th 1941, Ark Royal’s Swordfish
aircraft tracked her down. That battle ended with
Bismarck’s rudder being damaged beyond repair.
British warships were then able to close in to finish her
off. Ark Royal’s next deployment was to
escort convoys traveling to and from Malta. On November
14th 1941, an attack by the German submarine U-81 succeeded
in hitting her with one torpedo. As the explosion opened a
hole in Ark Royal’s side about 130 feet
long and 30 feet deep, her crew had to be transferred to
another ship while a salvage team fought to control the
damage. The salvage team was forced to leave the carrier
after her list reached a critical level. Thirteen hours
after the torpedo hit, Ark Royal capsized and
sank in the Mediterranean off Gibraltar.
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