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HMS Curacoa was a C-class light cruiser built for the Royal Navy during the First World War. She was one of the five ships of the Ceres sub-class and spent much of her career as a flagship . The ship was assigned to the Harwich Force during the war, but saw little action as she was completed less than a year before the war ended.
HMS Curacoa (1809), a 36-gun fifth rate launched in 1809. She was reduced to 24 guns in 1831 and broken up in 1849. HMS Curacoa (1854), a wood screw frigate launched in 1854. She was flagship of the Australia Station during the New Zealand Wars and was broken up in 1869. HMS Curacoa (1878), a screw corvette launched in 1878 and sold in 1904.
HMS Umbra United Kingdom: 564 [70] Leinster: Irish Sea Ferry United Kingdom: 10 October 1918: SM UB-123 Germany: 562 [71] HMS Cressy: Armored cruiser United Kingdom: 22 September 1914: SM U-9 Germany: 555 [72] Euterpe: Troopship Austria-Hungary: 11 August 1918: F 7 Italy: 547 [73] HMS Formidable: Pre-dreadnought battleship United Kingdom: 1 ...
HMS Curacoa was a 31-gun Tribune-class screw frigate launched on 13 April 1854 from Pembroke Dockyard. [1] She served in the Mediterranean Station between 1854 until 1857 and was in the Black Sea during the Crimean War. She was part of the Channel Squadron between 1857 until 1859.
HMS Curacoa was a Comus-class corvette of the Royal Navy, built by John Elder & Co., Govan, launched in 1878, and sold in 1904 to be broken up. [2] She served on the Cape of Good Hope and West Africa Station , the Australia Station and as a training cruiser in the Atlantic.
Two of her crew and 27 gunners were killed. [5] [6] V 2003 Loodsboot 7 Kriegsmarine: World War II: The Vorpostenboot was torpedoed and sunk in the North Sea off Terschelling, Friesland, Netherlands by HMMGB 18, HMMGB 21, HMMGB 81, HMMGB 86, HMMTB 230 and HMMTB 234 (all Royal Navy). 21 crew were killed. [7] [8] M-118 Soviet Navy
List of shipwrecks: 3 October 1941 Ship State Description ARA Corrientes Argentine Navy ARA Corrientes. The Buenos Aires-class destroyer collided with ARA Almirante Brown ( Argentine Navy) and sank in the South Atlantic 54 nautical miles (100 km) north east of Mar del Plata with the loss of ten of her 169 crew.
Thirteen passengers and 9 crew were killed. On 5 September the gunboat Chohakusan Maru ( Imperial Japanese Navy ) tried to tow the damaged ship but flooding was increasing so Kozan Maru was run aground and abandoned at 22°06′N 119°50′E / 22.100°N 119.833°E / 22.100; 119