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・ HMS Formidable (1777)
・ HMS Formidable (1825)
・ HMS Formidable (1898)
・ HMS Formidable (67)
・ HMS Forres (1918)
・ HMS Fort Diamond
・ HMS Forth
・ HMS Forth (A187)
・ HMS Fortitude
・ HMS Fortitude (1780)
・ HMS Fortune
・ HMS Fortune (1913)
・ HMS Fortune (H70)
・ HMS Forward
・ HMS Forward (1805)
HMS Forward (1904)
・ HMS Forward (shore establishment 1939)
・ HMS Forward (shore establishment 1984)
・ HMS Foudroyant
・ HMS Foudroyant (1758)
・ HMS Foudroyant (1798)
・ HMS Fowey
・ HMS Fowey (1744)
・ HMS Fowey (1749)
・ HMS Fowey (L15)
・ HMS Fox
・ HMS Fox (1773)
・ HMS Fox (1780)
・ HMS Fox (1893)
・ HMS Fox (A320)


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HMS Forward (1904) : ウィキペディア英語版
HMS Forward (1904)

HMS ''Forward'' was one of two scout cruisers which served with the Royal Navy. She was built in the yards of Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company, Govan. She was laid down in October 1903, launched on 27 August 1904 and completed in September 1905. She was initially given a main armament of ten 12 pounder guns but in 1911/12 these were replaced with nine more potent 4 inch guns.
==Career==
HMS ''Forward'' joined the Channel Fleet in 1907, became leader of the 2nd Destroyer Flotilla in 1909, joined the 4th Flotilla in October 1909, the 3rd Flotilla at the Nore Command in 1910, becoming its leader in June 1913. At the start of the war she was part of the 9th Destroyer Flotilla, on the Shetland Patrol.
In 1914 she was transferred to the 7th Destroyer Flotilla on the Humber. On 15 December 1914 she was at Hartlepool, along with and the 3rd division of the 9th Flotilla, while the 4th division was patrolling off Whitby. On the morning of 16 December Hartlepool was the subject of a German raid, led by the battlecruisers and and the cruiser . Hartlepool was a tidal harbour, and at low tide it was difficult for the cruisers to get out to sea. That morning the destroyers , , and had been sent out at 5:30 am, and had reported that the conditions made it risky for the cruisers to come out.
At 8 am, the German ships appeared off Hartlepool and opened fire on the town. Their initial targets were the two gun emplacements that protected the harbour, but they soon opened fire on the docks and harbour entrance. While ''Patrol'' was able to get out to sea (where she was hit and badly damaged), ''Forward'' was delayed by the German barrage. When she did finally get out of Hartlepool, the German battlecruisers had already turned east to make their escape. ''Forward'' was ordered to keep in touch with them, but they soon escaped into the mist.
After the raid ''Forward'' was sent to the 7th Destroyer Flotilla in the Humber. In May 1915 she was one of five of the seven surviving scout cruisers to make up the 6th Light Cruiser Squadron, whose duties were to guard the east coast against Zeppelin raids. This squadron was soon broken up as newer ships became available, and ''Forward'' was sent to the Mediterranean. From June 1916 to the end of the war she served in the Aegean. Early in 1919, under the command of Arthur Bedford, ''Forward'' rescued members of the Tolstoy family from the evacuation of Odessa, about to be captured by the Bolsheviks.〔Lionel Dawson, ''Mediterranean Medley'' (Rich & Cowan, 1933), pp. 26-27〕 She was finally sold off on 27 July 1921.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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