HMS Tiger Gun Turret Inkwell, 1932
Adding product to your cart
Length: 18cm (7.5in)
Brass. Inkwell in the form of a twin gun turret made by Thomas Ward (Engineering Division) of Sheffield as a promotional item from metal recovered from the scrapped Royal Naval Battlecruiser. The inkwell was the first produced by the ship breakers Thomas Ward. Its successors, made to the exact same pattern, were cast from metal taken from the British capital ships, Revenge, and Rodney, and the german battleship Helgoland. Raised on a detachable base.
Read more
HMS Tiger was a battlecruiser built for the Royal Navy during the 1910s. The ship was the most heavily armoured British battlecruiser at the start of the First World War in 1914, but was not yet ready for service. The ship was assigned to the 1st Battlecruiser Squadron (1st BCS) for the duration of the war and participated in the Battle of Dogger Bank in early 1915, though she was still shaking down and did not perform well. Tiger next participated in the Battle of Jutland in 1916, where she was only lightly damaged despite suffering many hits by German shells. Apart from providing distant cover during the Second Battle of Heligoland Bight in 1917, she spent the rest of the war on uneventful patrols in the North Sea. The ship was the oldest battlecruiser retained by the Royal Navy after the tonnage limits of the Washington Naval Treaty came into effect in 1922. She became a gunnery training ship in 1924 and then joined the Battlecruiser Squadron in 1929 when its flagship, Hood, underwent a lengthy refit. Upon Hood's return to service in 1931, Tiger was decommissioned and sold for scrap in 1932 in accordance with the terms of the London Naval Treaty of 1930.
