HMS Sylvia was a Doxford three funnel - 30 knot destroyer ordered by the British Royal Navy under the 1896 â 1897 Naval Estimates, launched on 3 July 1897 and entering service in January 1899. She was the sixth ship to carry this name to serve with the Royal Navy.
Sylvia remained in service on the outbreak of the First World War, being employed for patrol and escort duties in home waters for the duration of the war, and taking part in the sinking of the German submarine in September 1917. She was withdrawn from use in 1919 and sold for scrap later that year.
The British Admiralty placed orders for sixteen 30-knotter torpedo-boat destroyers as part of the 1896âÂÂ1897 shipbuilding programme, as well as three "specials" intended to reach a higher speed. Two of the sixteen 30-knotters, Sylvia and were ordered from William Doxford and Sons. As with other early Royal Navy destroyers, the detailed design of the Doxford ships was left to the builder, with the Admiralty laying down only broad requirements such as speed, armament and the use of a "turtleback" forecastle.
Sylvia and Violet were enlarged and more powerful derivatives of Doxford's two 27-knotter destroyers ordered under the 1893âÂÂ1894 Programme ( and . They had an overall length of and a length between perpendiculars of , a beam of and a draught of . Displacement was light and deep load. Four coal-fired Thornycroft water tube boilers fed steam at to triple expansion steam engines rated at and driving two propeller shafts. Sufficient coal was carried to give a range of at . Three funnels were fitted.
Armament was the standard of the 30-Knotters, i.e. a QF 12 pounder 12 cwt ( calibre) gun on a platform on the ship's conning tower (in practice the platform was also used as the ship's bridge), with a secondary armament of five 6-pounder guns, and two 18-inch (450 mm) torpedo tubes. The ship had a crew of 58 officers and other ranks.
Sylvia was laid down on 13 July 1896 as yard number 253 at the William Doxford and Sons shipyard at Pallion, Sunderland, and launched on 3 July 1897. Full power trials on 22 April 1898 and 22 July 1898 proved unsuccessful, with Sylvia being unable to meet the required speed. On 3 October 1894, another attempt at the 3 hour trial had to be stopped when a boiler tube burst, but later that month she was reported to have successfully carried out the required speed trials. During her builder's trials she made her contracted speed requirement. Sylvia was completed and accepted by the Royal Navy in January 1899. She was the fourth ship of that name built for the Royal Navy.
On 18 January 1899, Sylvia joined the Portsmouth Fleet Reserve. After commissioning she was assigned to the Portsmouth Instructional Flotilla and spent her entire career in Home Waters.
In March 1900 she was commissioned by Lieutenant William Bowden-Smith and the crew of HMS Chamois to take her place in the Instructional Flotilla.
She underwent repairs to re-tube her boilers during spring 1902, and was in the dockyard at Sheerness to repair defects in her steering gear in September that year.
On 30 August 1912 the Admiralty directed all destroyers were to be grouped into classes designated by letters based on contract speed and appearance. As a three-funnelled destroyer with a contract speed of 30 knots, Sylvia was assigned to the C class. The class letters were painted on the hull below the bridge area and on a funnel. In March 1913, Sylvia was listed as part of the 7th Destroyer Flotilla, a patrol flotilla based at Devonport and tendered to the depot ship . Sylvia remained part of the 7th Flotilla on the eve of the First World War in July 1914.
The Patrol Flotillas had a role of defending the coast of Britain against enemy minelaying or torpedo craft, while providing warning of any larger raids by enemy warships. At the outbreak of war, the 7th Flotilla was redeployed to the Humber River for operations off the East coast of Britain. On 7 November, the 7th Flotilla was ordered to detach twelve destroyers to Scapa Flow to provide local defence of the Grand Fleet naval base, with Sylvia leaving for Scapa on 8 November.
While formally still attached to the Grand Fleet, by February 1917, Sylvia was part of the local defence force for the Orkneys, and was employed in escorting ships from Lerwick, Shetland from 17 February. On 23 March 1917, the German submarine attacked and sunk the Norwegian steamer near Kinnaird Head with gunfire and demolition charges. On hearing gunfire, Sylvia came to investigate and forced the submarine to submerge. On 20 May, Sylvis was one of three destroyers escorting a convoy of seven merchant ships from Norway to Britain, when the German submarine torpedoed and sank the Norwegian steamer . Sylvia rescued Arnfinn Jarls crew, then spotted U-19s periscope and attacked with a depth charge. Sylvias commanding officer, Lieutenant Peter Shaw, was awarded a Distinguished Service Cross for Sylvias response, which may have prevented U-19 from sinking more ships in the convoy. On 26 May, Sylvia was escorting another, east-bound, convoy when U-19 attacked again, sinking the Norwegian steamer . Sylvia also attacked submarines with depth charges on 29 May and 5 June 1917.
On the morning of 29 September 1917, the minesweeping trawler Monravia sighted a submarine east of Lerwick, and Sylvia and the destroyer were ordered out from Lerwick to investigate. The submarine was the German , which was waiting to lay mines on the approaches to Lerwick. At about 2:00 pm, UC-55 was preparing to lay mines when she suddenly lost control of her depth-keeping, and sank to below her rated diving depth before surfacing. She was then sighted by Monrovia and the destroyer , which was escorting a merchant ship, and both Sylvia and Tirade turned to attack the submarine, which was surrounded by hostile ships. Tirade hit UC-55 at least twice with 4-inch shells, while Sylvias commanding officer also claimed to have hit the submarine with shellfire. UC-55, unable to dive, and with a jammed rudder, had no hope of escape, and her her commanding officer ordered the submarine's crew to abandon ship and the submarine scuttled. UC-55 sank stern first just before Sylvia reached the submarine, dropping two depth charges, followed by Tirade, which dropped two more depth charges. There was a large underwater explosion, and UC-55 broke up. Nineteen of UC-55 crew survived, with Sylvia picking up ten men. Ten men were killed.
Sylvia was still listed as being attached to the Grand Fleet in January 1918, but by February had transferred to the Firth of Forth, in what became known as the Methil Convoy Flotilla. By May that year, Sylvia had moved again, rejoining the 7th Destroyer Flotilla based on the Humber. She remained part of the 7th Flotilla at the end of the First World War.
By March 1919 Sylvia was paid off and laid-up in reserve at the Humber awaiting disposal. HMS Sylvia was sold on 23 July 1919 to Thos. W. Ward of Sheffield for breaking at New Holland, Lincolnshire on the Humber Estuary.