Dance-class minesweeper

Class overview
Name: Dance class
In service: 1917–1920
Completed: 14
Lost: 2
Retired: 12
General characteristics
Type: Minesweeper
Displacement: 265–290 long tons (269–295 t)
Length: 130 ft (40 m)
Beam: 26–27 ft (7.9–8.2 m)
Propulsion:
  • Machinery: Vertical compound
  • Boilers: Cylindrical
  • 450 ihp (340 kW)
Speed: 9.25–10 knots (17.13–18.52 km/h; 10.64–11.51 mph)
Range: 37–41.5 tons oil
Complement: 22–26 men
Armament:
  • 1 × 3-pounder except:
  • 1 × 12-pounder + 1 × 6-pounder (Gavotte)
  • 1 × 6-pounder AA (Step Dance)

The Dance-class minesweepers were series of minesweepers of the Royal Navy. They were originally designed as a shallow-draft twin-screw tunnel tugs, and were taken over by the British Admiralty as coastal minesweeping sloops. They were completed between November 1917 and September 1918 under the Emergency War Programme, during World War I.[1][2]

Ships

Fourteen ships were built in the Dance class, and each was named after a type of dance, the ships were:[3]

  • Cotillion – October 1917; Used to sweep coast of Flanders. Sold in May 1920. Builder: Day, Summers (265 tons)
  • Coverley – October 1917; Used to sweep coast of Flanders. Sold in May 1920. Builder: Ferguson Bros.(265 tons)
  • Fandango – April 1919; Used to sweep coastal areas of Northern Russia. Mined and sunk 3 July 1919.
  • Gavotte – December 1917;Used to sweep coast of Flanders. Given back to War Office in 1920. Builder: Goole Co.
  • Hornpipe – October 1917; Used to sweep coast of Flanders. Sold in May 1920. Builder: Murdoch & Murray. (265 tons)
  • Mazurka – October 1917; Used to sweep coast of Flanders. Sold in May 1920. Builder: Murdoch & Murray. (265 tons)
  • Minuet – October 1917; Used to sweep coast of Flanders. Sold in May 1920. Builder: Day, Summers (265 tons)
  • Morris Dance – April 1919; Used to sweep coastal areas of Northern Russia. Sold in May 1920.
  • Pirouette – December 1917; Used to sweep coast of Flanders. Given back to War Office in 1920. Builder: Rennie Forrest
  • Quadrille – October 1917; Used to sweep coast of Flanders. Sold in May 1920. Builder: Ferguson Bros. (265 tons)
  • Sarabande – December 1917; Used to sweep coast of Flanders. Given back to War Office in 1920. Builder: Goole Co.
  • Step Dance – April 1919; Used to sweep coastal areas of Northern Russia. Sold in May 1920.
  • Sword Dance – April 1919; Used to sweep coastal areas of Northern Russia. Mined and sunk 24 June 1919.
  • Tarantella – December 1917; Used to sweep coast of Flanders. Builder: Hamilton

References

  1. Hoole, Rob (January 2006). "To Sweep No More". www.mcdoa.org.uk. Retrieved 20 May 2017.
  2. "Minesweepers & Trawlers – World War 1". Harwich & Dovercourt | History, Facts & Photos of Harwich. Harwich & Dovercourt. Retrieved 21 May 2017.
  3. "Dance Class – World Naval Ships Directory". www.worldnavalships.com. Retrieved 21 May 2017.
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