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At Japan, 1945 (USS Missouri in background)
Career
Ordered:  
Laid down: 1 January, 1937
Launched: 21 February, 1939
Commissioned: 11 December, 1940
Decommissioned: 1949
Fate: sold for scrap
Struck: 1957
General Characteristics
Displacement: 44,460 tons
Length: 745 feet/227.2 m
Beam: 103 feet/31.4 m
Draught: 35.5 feet/10.8 m
Propulsion: 140,000 hp
Speed: 27.5 knots (28.5 in an emergency)
Range: 4,750 nm at 18 knots
Complement: 1,314 to 1,631
Armament: 10 x 14-inch (356 mm) guns
16 x 5.25-inch (133 mm) guns
64 x 2-pounder pom-pom (40 mm)
Aircraft: 4 x Walrus
Motto:  
The second HMS King George V was the name ship of the King George V class of battleships of 1939.

Following the tradition of naming battleships after the current monarch, she was originally to be named King George VI (after George VI). However the King instructed the Admiralty to name the ship in honour of his father, George V. King George V was built by Vickers-Armstrong at Walker's Naval Yard, Newcastle upon Tyne and laid down on 1 January 1937, launched on 21 February 1939, and commissioned on 11 December 1940.

She was the flagship of the Home Fleet under the command of Admiral Sir John Tovey, and was involved in the chase for the German battleship Bismarck. On 27 May 1941, she and Rodney poured a large number of shells into to the hull of the ill-fated ship.

While escorting convoy PQ-15 to Murmansk on 1 May 1942, King George V collided with the destroyer HMS Punjabi, resulting in the sinking of the latter ship and minimal damage to the battleship.

In the Mediterranean, King George V covered the Operation Husky landings at Sicily, as well as having the honour of transporting the Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, back to Britain from the Tehran Conference.

From 1944 until the surrender of Japan, King George V served with the British Pacific Fleet, and was present at Japan during the official surrender ceremony.

She was recommissioned as flagship of the Home Fleet in 1946. Just three years later, King George V was decommissioned into the Reserve Fleet and subsequently scrapped at Dalmuir in 1957.

For other ships of the same name see HMS King George V.

Reference


External link


King George V class battleships | World War II battleships of the United Kingdom

キングジョージV世 (戦艦) | HMS King George V | HMS King George V

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "HMS King George V (41)".

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