Four Sisters Race

As touched on previously, four of the greater Gorch Fock-class training barques (USCGC Eagle, FGS Gorch Fock II, NRP Sagres, and NMS Mircea) met up in Norfolk earlier this summer as part of Sail250 and carried on to New York.

Now, headed to Boston for the final leg of the tour, they are racing under canvas, with no “iron topsails” (auxiliary engines) involved, a rematch of sorts to the famous 1976 Five Sisters Cup run by the class for OpSail76.

As noted by the USCG: “Yesterday, their commanding officers, sail masters, and cadets gathered for a commemorative breakfast. Today, friendship gives way to friendly competition. Fair winds and following seas to every crew.”

Sal has the full details.

Could Nimitz Become AVTN-68?

Everyone’s favorite Disco vintage super carrier and almost-Kidō Butai vanquisher just transited to her new home at Norfolk after being the center of the Sail4th naval parade/International Naval Review 250/FLEETEX 250 in New York.

Note: she still has an MQ-25 Stingray CBARS demonstrator on her deck.

She pulled “back” into her new home at Norfolk yesterday, passing her docked sisters USS Eisenhower (CVN 69) and Truman (CVN 75). It is appropriate, as Norfolk was her original home from 1975 to 1987 before her West Coast days at Bremerton/Everett (1987-2001, 2012-2026) and San Diego (2001-2012).

USS Nimitz (CVN 68) arrives at Naval Station Norfolk (NSN), Virginia, July 9, 2026. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Frankie M. Guage)

The 51-year-old carrier departed Navy Base Kitsap (Bremerton) on 7 March and has spent the past four months in a series of goodwill port calls and exercises throughout the Americas for Operation South Seas, a fitting send-off for what is likely her final cruise under her own power.

But not so fast.

Captain Joseph Furco, Nimitz’s commanding officer, recently told a press conference that the old girl may have some life left in her, specifically as a training carrier.

But not just for Carrier Quals, but actually taking out crews of flattops that are long sidelined in construction or refit, to give them some underway time. Remind them what it is to be a CVN on the ocean.

“All of those [Kennedy] sailors have not had the opportunity to go to sea,” Capt Furco noted. “I can take this ship to sea with 1,000 sailors from Kennedy, or [carrier USS John] Stennis [(CVN 74)] or [carrier USS Harry S] Truman [(CVN 75)] with their extensive [scheduled maintenance] yard periods and give sailors a taste of what their job is like outside the academic setting.”

Those sailors would normally discuss their roles, such as controlling aircraft on a flight deck, in simulations, but with Nimitz the Navy “could get them out here controlling aircraft. You can get them down on the reactor and turn the dials and run the steam through the pipes”. Nimitz could help certify crews, platforms, and pilots, he said.

Designed in the 1960s and commissioned in 1975, Nimitz is slated to be inactivated in FY 2027, beginning the process of dismantling the ship, according to the Navy Shipbuilding Plan released in May.

Her fuel rod matrix, revitalized in her 37-month (1998-2001) Refueling and Complex Overhaul (RCOH), is on its last legs, and her AW4 reactors were only designed to be refueled once. A 142-page RAND report on the subject says the fuel is exhausted after 23 years, and it’s been 25 since CVN-68 completed her RCOH.

Still, Furco would be the person most qualified on the planet to know if his reactors are only filled with radioactive memories or there are still a couple of electrons in there with a “I didn’t hear no bell” attitude about them, so if he thinks 68 can still clock in for training missions, he is probably correct.

With that in mind, and acknowledging she can’t undertake another serious deployment into harm’s way, perhaps it is time to re-rate her as an AVT, akin to USS Forrestal’s 1992-93 retirement stint as AVT-59 and Lexington’s 1978-1991 run as AVT-16.

A Training Squadron 9 (VT-9) T-2C Buckeye aircraft takes to the air after performing a touch-and-go landing on the flight deck of the aircraft carrier USS Forrestal October 10, 1991. PH1 Scott M. Allen 330-CFD-DN-ST-92-02118

T-2C Buckeye aboard USS Lexington (AVT-16) April 1989. U.S. Navy photograph 330-CFD-DN-ST-89-08969. Photographer Jim Bryant. Via NARA. National Archives Identifier: 6445247

Plus, such a move would allow a dedicated platform for T-45 Carrier Qualifications (CQ) for the next year or two, provided Nimitz could keep it up, freeing other CVNs from having to perform the task.

Her sister, Eisenhower, which just came out of overhaul, recently conducted 428 traps and 143 touch-and-go landings, qualifying 24 aviators over three days underway.

A U.S. Navy T-45C Goshawk jet trainer aircraft takes off from the flight deck of Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Dwight D. Eisenhower (CVN 69), June 27, 2026. Eisenhower is underway in the Atlantic Ocean conducting carrier qualifications for student naval aviators assigned to Naval Air Training Command.(U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Miguel Santiago)

U.S. Navy Lt. Miguel Smith launches a T-45C Goshawk jet trainer aircraft off of the flight deck of Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Dwight D. Eisenhower (CVN 69), June 27, 2026. Eisenhower is underway in the Atlantic Ocean conducting carrier qualifications for student naval aviators assigned to Naval Air Training Command. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Miguel Santiago)

Further, it could help wring out the T-45’s remaining underway CQ potential, as the type is set to retire in the 2030-2035 time frame.

The two remaining contenders to replace the T-45, the SNC Freedom Jet and a Leonardo-Textron-Beechcraft M-346N, will not be carrier-capable, as the Navy’s new Undergraduate Jet Training System will eschew the traditional cats-and-traps evolutions for simulator work, because what can go wrong?

The SNC Freedom Jet and a Leonardo-Textron-Beechcraft M-346N. While the SNC trainer is a clean-sheet design, the M-346N is a navalized, American-built variant of the Italian Leonardo M-346 Master/Yak-130.

What’s a little tinnitus among friends?

Or, “Pardon, I didn’t catch that…” for the rest of your life.

Official period caption: “American howitzers shell German forces retreating near Carentan, France. 11 July 1944.”

Note the shoulder patch has been obscured by the censors. Photographer: Franklin. U.S. Signal Corps Archive SC 191933

The above was taken among the attached artillery train of the U.S. 4th “Ivy” Division, either of the 29th, 42nd, or 44th Field Artillery Battalions, all of which fielded 105mm M1 howitzers at the time.

The Ivy Division first came ashore at Utah Beach on D-Day, and the above image was snapped as it was inching its way towards Paris, which it would help liberate in August. They went on to keep fighting across Northern France and into Germany, slugging through the Hürtgen Forest and clocking in during the Battle of the Bulge.

Recognized as a Liberator unit, they marched into the Dachau subcamp near Haunstetten in late April 1945 and were the most welcome thing anyone could set their eyes on.

Logging 299 days of combat, Ivy accumulated 22,660 casualties, 155 percent of the division’s authorized strength.

One of its members was 25-year-old budding author Jerome David “J. D.” Salinger, who finished the war as a staff sergeant in the MI section of the 4th’s 12th Infantry Regiment. Fluent in French and German, he interrogated captured Wehrmacht and SS officers, including those taken around Dachau.

Salinger later remarked postwar, “You never really get the smell of burning flesh out of your nose entirely, no matter how long you live.”

SSG Salinger, 4th Infantry Division, ETO

SOCOM’s Black Arrow in the Quiver

From yesterday’s DOD/DOW contract announcements, emphasis mine:

Leidos Inc., Reston, Virginia, is being awarded a $27,202,497 fixed-price incentive (firm-target) contract modification (H9240826CE001P0001), for the procurement of All Up Rounds for the AGM-190A Small Cruise Missile program, in support of U.S. Special Operations Command (USSOCOM). Fiscal 2025 procurement funds in the amount of $548,665; and fiscal 2026 procurement funds in the amount of $23,653,832, will be obligated at time of award. The total award amount is $24,202,497. The work will be performed in Huntsville, Alabama, and is expected to be completed by Feb. 26, 2029. Contract funds will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year. USSOCOM, MacDill Air Force Base, Florida, is the contracting activity.

Meet the AGM-190A Small Cruise Missile

In the interest of “quantity has a quality all its own,” the AGM-190 Black Arrow SCM is almost as basic as it gets.

It weighs right at or under 200 pounds.

The above means the warhead is probably around 50 pounds, but you have to add all the kinetic energy behind it as a bonus factor. That’s more than enough to flatten a medium-sized building, sink or at least disable a patrol boat, obliterate a small bunker, destroy a SAM or radar installation in the open, get a ground kill on any size aircraft not in a hardened shelter, end any armored vehicle, et al.

It has a published 400nm range when air-launched at altitude (which means it probably goes further) using Pratt & Whitney’s proven 150-pound-thrust TJ150-7 one-stage turbojet, which is used in several target decoys (the MALD) and UAVs. 

It can be used as either pylon ordnance dropped from things such as an MQ-9 Reaper UAV, used in a roll-on/roll-off palletized Dragon Cart-style system from the back of a C/KC/AC/MC-130, and so on. It can reportedly also be launched from HIMARS, though with a shorter range.

While the actual cost-per-unit is not advertised, it is believed the Black Arrow runs somewhere in the $150-$300K (still pennies on the dollar compared to a $3M TLAM or $1M JASSM), a figure that can be whittled down through large buys.

It is known the Pentagon wants somewhere around 10,000 of these little gems, with 3,000 to start, but if you even try to apply those quantities to the $27 million award, you are looking at more like $2,500-$9,000 a pop, which is too insane to be true especally when you see P&W selling commercial TJ-150 powerpacks for $79,999 apiece, so this week’s buy is probably for a lot fewer missiles. Like for maybe the first block of 100 or 200.

AFSOC debuted the Black Arrow as Havoc Spear quietly last month during SOF Week, describing it as “a low-cost, mission adaptable, modular-design cruise missile that can be rapidly produced.”

Could prove very interesting.

A model AGM-190A small cruise missile stands on display inside Air Force Special Operations Command headquarters at Hurlburt Field, Florida, May 14, 2026.(U.S. Air Force photo by Capt. Brandon DeBlanc)

Hunter’s Fountain

Some 85 years ago this week, the 10,000-ton Dutch Java-Pacific Lijn/VNS passenger steamer SS Jaegersfontaine pulled out of San Francisco on 10 July and, steaming West across a wide and nervous ocean, arrived a little over 8,000 miles away at Rangoon in British Burma on the 28th, making it in a handy 18-knot average.

Built in 1934 at Nederlandsche Scheepsbouw Mij NV, Amsterdam, Jagersfontein means “Hunter’s fountain.” She was a lucky ship, but it was a quirky kind of luck.

Among the accumulated cargo and passengers aboard Jagersfontein on her July 1941 trip to Rangoon were 300 young American men, most slim with sharp eyes and short hair, all civilian employees of the Central Aircraft Manufacturing Company, or CAMCO. Among them were 99 pilots and 201 assorted ground crewmen and support personnel. Nine of the latter were Chinese-American mechanics specifically recruited from New York and San Francisco’s Chinatowns and rushed through a quick school at Allison Engine Works in Indianapolis on one particular powerplant: Allison’s liquid-cooled V-1710-33 twelve-cylinder V-type 1,040 hp piston engine.

You know, the one in the P-40B Warhawk/Tomahawk IIA

Soon after making Burma, Claire Chennault’s 1st American Volunteer Group, better known as the Flying Tigers, was becoming the stuff of legend.

Claire Chennault Flying Tiger P-40 Artist Darrell Lum USAF DF-SC-84-04112

However, as it is with every irregular group on the fringes of institutionalized military logic, they soon were disbanded and absorbed by the regulars, and on 4 July 1942 the crumbs that were left became the USAAF’s 14th Air Force’s brand new 23rd Fighter Group, which, all these years later, is still around as part of the now USAF.

Based at Moody Air Force Base, Georgia, they have flown the A-10 Warthog since 1992, and recently painted one of their birds in the livery of White 48, the Panda Squadron P-40B flown by Army Air Corps Brig. Gen. David Lee “Tex” Hill, an original Flying Tiger (originally a Naval Aviator) who rolled over to the 23rd as a major in 1942 and would finish WWII with 18.25 confirmed victories, 12.25 of those carried over from the AVG.

The A-10C includes the iconic shark teeth nose art and a literal flying tiger over olive drab, a big departure from the rest of the 23rd’s gray-on-gray Compass Ghost schemes.

A heritage A-10C Thunderbolt II is positioned on the flight line at Moody Air Force Base, Ga., April 28, 2026. The aircraft now displays the distinctive Flying Tigers-inspired paint scheme applied by airmen assigned to the 23rd Maintenance Squadron. (Air Force Senior Airman Savannah Carpenter)

A heritage A-10C Thunderbolt II is positioned on the flight line at Moody Air Force Base, Ga., April 28, 2026. The aircraft now displays the distinctive Flying Tigers-inspired paint scheme applied by airmen assigned to the 23rd Maintenance Squadron. (Air Force Senior Airman Savannah Carpenter)

Ever heard a for real strafing run from a P-40?

In related news, the Soaring by the Sea Foundation jumped through a year’s worth of FAA and ATF hoops required to re-install six working M2 .50 cal machine guns into a restored Curtiss P-40N Warhawk in Flying Tigers’ Adam & Eve Squadron livery and, well, did the thing with live ammo, expending approximately 7,000 rounds across ground testing and two days of airborne firing while under the control of Lt. Col. Ray “Hollywood” Fowler, an F-16 pilot with combat tours in the sandbox.

You better believe there is video.

NASA’s (Private) F-5 Tiger Team

In a follow-up to the 250th Color Birds of NASA post on Monday, we would be remiss not to bring up the fact that the agency has a four-plane aerial demonstration team made up of privately owned (not a misprint) F-5 Tigers.

Do what?

Current NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman, 45, is a tech billionaire entrepreneur, alum of Embry-Riddle Aeronautical, a noted private pilot with 7,000 hours in over a dozen types, a commercial astronaut (via SpaceX’s Inspiration4 and Polaris Dawn, which he funded), and co-founder of “red air” defense contractor Draken International (which owns 130 jets including A-4Ks, Mirage F1s, and MiG-21s).

He’s also donated over $35 million to the U.S. Space & Rocket Center in Huntsville and the National Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola to support youth programs.

Talk about a flight nerd!

Isaacman personally owns at least three 1970s vintage F-5s, which he recently had painted in a red-white-and-blue Freedom 250th anniversary NASA livery (with the classic NASA “worm”) and has been using them for incentive flights for agency employees as well as some remarkable flyovers that will live on in aviation art for sure. While the titles haven’t been transferred, they are under “NASA control.”

NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman is seen flying his personal F-5 aircraft, Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026, at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. If you look close, he is wearing a helmet with an Imperial “cog” in TIE fighter style. Photo Credit: (NASA/John Kraus)

One of NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman’s personal F-5 aircraft is seen during an employee incentive flying event, Wednesday, May 13, 2026, at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Rachel Kraft, Artemis communications lead at NASA Headquarters, was flying in the back seat. Photo Credit: (NASA/John Kraus)

NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman flies in his personal F-5 aircraft, Monday, Feb. 2, 2026, at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Isaacman was joined by Secretary of War Pete Hegseth in the back seat for a flight around Launch Complex 39B, the Vehicle Assembly Building, and surrounding areas at Kennedy. Photo Credit: (NASA/John Kraus)

Isaacman’s personal F-5E (FAA N591EM) is a former USAF aircraft (77-1777) registered to his investment company, JDI Holdings LLC of Easton, Pennsylvania, while two of the other NASA Tigers, N592EM (78-0803) and N593EM (79-1918), are two-seater F-5Fs also owned by JDI.

All three had been sent to the Royal Jordanian Air Force soon after construction, then were among 21 RJAF F-5E/F aircraft brought to the U.S. in 2017 by Reno-based Tactical Air Support Inc, which already had five ex-Canadian CF-5Ds at the time and has acquired more of the type since. A private red air contractor founded in 2005, TacAir uses the F-5s (and other types) to support U.S. Navy and U.S. Air Force adversary contracts.

A fourth privately owned F-5 has recently joined the NASA squad in the same livery but is not a JDI-registered airframe.

The FAA currently has 37 privately-owned Tigers (two F-5As, four F-5Bs, 23 F-5Es, seven F-5Fs, and one NF-5B) active with TacAir (TASLO)/United States Aviation Museum owning 23 of those. Comanche (Maverick) Air in Houston, the second largest operator, owns four F-5Es.

The type usually runs around $1M a pop on the commercial market, making them one of the most obtainable “fast movers.” Further, the Navy still operates the type as a MiG-28-style aggressor (supported by TacAir) while some 500 T-38Cs still fly with the USAF, as we have covered recently. 

The NASA F-5 team, flying out of Andrews, made the news in their recent overflight of the National Mall on the 4th for the Freedom 250 events, although the FAA had originally frowned on the plan due to safety concerns.

NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman leads a flyover featuring his personally owned F-5 Tiger over the Great American State Fair, Saturday, July 4, 2026, on the National Mall in Washington. Photo Credit: (NASA/Bill Ingalls)

NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman leads a flyover featuring his personally owned F-5 Tiger during the Great American State Fair, Saturday, July 4, 2026, on the National Mall in Washington. Photo Credit: (NASA/Keegan Barber)

It wasn’t their first air expo, as they flew in Sun n’ Fun in Florida in April.

NASA Freedom 250 at Sun n Fun 26 over Lakeland, Florida (NASA/John Kraus)

NASA Freedom 250 at Sun n Fun 26 over Lakeland, Florida (NASA/John Kraus)

They also plan to attend four more events.

  • July 23–24: EAA AirVenture in Oshkosh, Wisconsin.
  • August 23: Freedom 250 Grand Prix of Washington, D.C.
  • October 3–4: Pacific Air Show in Huntington Beach, California.
  • October 31–November 1: Commemorative Air Force Wings Over Houston Air Show

Warship Wednesday 8 July 2026: Bringer of Evil to the Evil

Here at LSOZI, we take a break every Wednesday to explore the old steam/diesel navies from 1833 to 1954, profiling a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places.- Christopher Eger 

If you enjoy my always ad-free Warship Wednesday content, you can support it by buying me a cup of joe at https://buymeacoffee.com/lsozi As Henk says: “Warship Coffee – no sugar, just a pinch of salt!”

Warship Wednesday 8 July 2026: Bringer of Evil to the Evil

Royal Navy photo via the Imperial War Museum catalog IWM (A 5439)

Above we see the patched-up Queen Elizabeth-class 15-inch “super-dreadnought” HMS Malaya (01) sailing past New York City after a much-needed refit at Brooklyn Navy Yard on the U.S. dime, on 9 July 1941, some 85 years ago this week. Note the Empire State Building in the distance

The Jutland veteran was a child of WWI and had already seen much hard WWII service in the Atlantic and Mediterranean, but more work would be required of the aging battlewagon before she could rest.

The QEs

Entire books have been written about the Queen Elizabeth class battleships, and by much better historians than I, so we’ll just give the kind of 10,000-foot view here before moving on to Malaya, who is about the most often forgotten of her breed.

The 1912 Naval Programme planned for three new battleships, originally intended to be improved HMS Iron Duke type (25,000 tons light, 623 feet oal, 21.5kts on a 29,000shp coal-fired plant, ten 13.5″/45 guns in five twin turrets, and up to 12 inches of armor).

The problem was, with word that both the Americans and Japanese were planning battleships with larger guns (USS New York with ten 14″/45s and Kongo with eight 14″/45 Vickers), gears shifted to design new ships around a battery of 15-inch guns, while adding a bit more speed.

The resulting Queen Elizabeth class ships were a bit bigger, of course, (27,500 tons light and 645 feet oal) were fast for their day (23 knots on a 56,000shp oil-fired plant), well-armored with as much as 13-inches of good Krupp Cemented armor in their belt, tower, and turrets; and packed a punch from eight massive new BL 15 inch (381mm) Mk I naval guns in four twin turrets.

The 15″/42 Mk I, described by Navweaps as “quite possibly the best large-caliber naval gun ever developed by Britain and it was certainly one of the longest-lived of any nation, with the first shipboard firing taking place in 1915 and the last in 1954,” was a bruiser capable of firing a 1-ton shell out to 19,700 (later 32,000) yards, enabling them to outrange most German naval guns of the era. Plus, they proved even more accurate than the 13.5-inch Mk. V guns on Iron Duke.

The barrel of a 15-inch naval gun in the Coventry Ordinance Works. September 1917. Photo by Horace Nicholls. IWM (Q 30141)

Queen Elizabeth-class battleship HMS Malaya on a Sunday morning at Gibraltar in February 1942. General view of Divisions on board the battleship, with the Padre standing on the turret of the stern 15″/42 guns. Photo by LT J.G. Marshall, RN, IWM (A 7377).

Some 184 of these 15-inchers were made by Armstrong Whitworth, W Beardmore, Vickers, Royal Gun Factory, and Coventry Ordnance Works, serving on numerous subsequent British battleship (Royal Sovereign and Vanguard classes), battlecruiser (Glorious, Repulse, and Hood/Admiral classes), and monitor (Marshal Soult, Erebus, and Roberts classes) designs.

15 inch Mk 1 naval gun Sept 1917 Coventry Gun Works. IWM (Q 30141)

The guns were rotated between the 58 turrets built to accept them across ships of six classes, having a life of about 200 rounds before requiring relining, with the example that one gun which served on HMS Valiant during Jutland later wound up being captured by the Japanese at Singapore where it was serving as shore-mounted coastal artillery.

Each QE-class battleship had space for 800 15-inch shells, 100 per gun.

At sea. 1943. Aboard HMS Malaya. Maneuvering “iron ration” 15-inch projectiles in the shell room of the 31,000-ton battleship. (British Admiralty photograph, 16968 MAS). AWM 128469

When it came to fire control, they were built with five 15-foot Barr & Stroud FT type tripod-mounted rangefinders (one in each turret and one in the Gunnery Control Tower), along with three 9-foot RFs in the foretop and Turret Control Tower. While all of this was linked by phone, there were also Evershed bearing indicators which could transmit to each main turret from the GCT along with Barr & Stroud Mark III single range transmitters and receivers. Each ship carried a central Mark IV Dreyer Table while each turret had a Dreyer Turret Control Table. This was not your father’s dreadnought, and most of this gear was installed for the first time on a battleship with the QEs.

The secondary battery was made up of 16 (later 14) 6″/45 Mk XIIs in casemates, while a handful of smaller guns (two 3″/45 QF Mk I, and four 47mm Hotchkiss 3-pounders) gave a thin veneer of theoretical defense against zeppelins and torpedo boats. Four 21-inch torpedo tubes were mounted on the beam, with a magazine able to carry 20 fish, typically Mark IVs during the Great War.

Designed to take damage and keep fighting, they had 26 watertight bulkheads with up to 6 inches of armor, a 13-inch lower belt, 11 inches on the gunhouses and conning tower, and even armored funnel tops to help prevent light aerial bombs from dropping down the stacks into the fire room. Jane’s noted in 1921, “Internal protection on these ships is very fine.”

The first British battlewagons with an “All-Oil” suite, these ships had a lot of power under the hood, nearly twice as much as the Iron Dukes that preceded them by just a couple of years. While Iron Duke had 18 boilers and four Parsons steam turbines using a mix of both coal and oil to generate 29,000 shp for 21 knots, Queen Elizabeth and her class added a third more boilers (24), efficiently burning all-oil, and four turbines to produce 56,000 shp for 23 knots. With forced draft and the boilers overloaded, they could hit 24-25 knots for brief periods of time. For example, on her two-hour full power speed trials in late 1915, Malaya clocked 25 knots but had to generate 76,074shp to do it! Further, the high speed could be maintained longer than on coal-burning ships due to the fact they didn’t have to fight against ash accumulation and stoker fatigue, something that later became an issue with the Germans at Jutland as the battle wore on.

Another big advantage the class had over every coal-burner was that the lack of heavy coal smoke, especially in high speed operations, made them a better gunnery platform simply because the spotters and fire control setters could actually see what was going on around them.

Jane’s 1914 entry for the Queen Elizabeth class battleships, featuring a very clean line drawing:

While it was envisioned from the start that the ships of this class would form their own dedicated “fast division” in the battleline, in the interest of peacetime detached service, all were set up to accommodate an admiral and staff, with QE, Barham, and Warspite later having a stern walk/smoking deck installed, accessed from the admiral’s cabin.

All in all, especally in Britain, these 25-knot/15-inch gunned vessels were considered quite commanding when built and would maintain their “Rex Montis” status even after other RN battleship classes followed on, with the later Royal Sovereign/Revenge class being basically a slower (21 knots on 18 boilers) and cheaper version of the QEs, the 1920s Nelson “Treaty” class twins likewise still being slower (23 knots) although arguably better armed with nine all-forward 16″/45s, and even the much faster (28 knot) King George V class ships of the late 1930s only carrying 14″/45s, albeit with the latter having a markedly better armor scheme.

Jane’s noted in their 1921 edition:

“In appearance and general design, these five ships are the finest in the British Navy. Their decks are remarkably clear, and internal arrangements are very spacious. Taken all around, they present the most successful type of capital ship yet designed.”

Each vessel was constructed at a different yard, with class leader Queen Elizabeth built at Portsmouth Dockyard, Warspite at Devon Dockyard, Barham at John Brown (Clydebank), Valiant at Fairfield (Govan) and Malaya at Armstrong. This allowed them to be built more or less simultaneously, laid down within 364 days between October 1912 and October 1913, and all commissioned between January 1915 and February 1916, a remarkable achievement for any era. Could you imagine designing, ordering, building, and delivering five of the best capital ships in the world at the time in just under five years?

The first four were paid for under the 1912 Estimates while the fifth, Malaya, was a gift. In all, the Admiralty put down just over £15 million for the class, or £1.4 billion in today’s equivalent, which is still a bit of a bargain.

A sixth unit, Agincourt, was ordered under the 1914 Programme but as she had not been laid down the order was cancelled shortly after the outbreak of war.

Meet HMS Malaya

Our subject was the first of HM’s warships named after the Malay states of Selangor, Perak, Negeri Sembilan and Pahang, which had been first colonized by the British in 1826 and were British protectorates, organized as the Federated Malay States in 1895.

She was fully funded at significant cost (£2,945,709) by the FMS Council and flew the states’ distinctive white-red-yellow-and black striped tiger flag in a four-triangle naval ensign, sans cat, from her bow on special occasions.

The Jack was basically a British P&O Lines House Flag with blue and red swapped and the former replaced with black.

The ship received a set of silk flags presented by the European Ladies of the Federated States; a 30-foot White Ensign, a 15-foot Union Jack, a 15-foot Malayan Jack, and two miniature Malayan Jacks for the ship’s chapel.

HMS Malaya, anchored in her original pre-1927 twin-stack configuration. Note the White (St George’s) Ensign on her stern, the National (Union) Jack on her bow, and the FSM Jack on the top of her Foremast head.

The tiger, however, was carried over to the ship’s crest, complete with a fearsome Malay Keris Sundang (kris) sword.

In a similar vein, there had been a short-lived plan for Canada by its Prime Minister Borden (in consultation with First Sea Lord Winston Churchill) to pay some $35 million for three additional Queen Elizabeth-class vessels, to be named HMCS Acadia, Ontario, and Quebec, but that didn’t materialize, and Canada never did get a proper battleship of its own.

Malaya was the only member of her five-ship class constructed at Armstrong Whitworth, South Tyneside, laid down as Yard No. 867 on 20 October 1913. She hit the water, eight months after the Great War began, on 18 March 1915. Outfitted and delivered, she commissioned on 1 February 1916, the last member of her class to enter service.

When she entered the fleet, she carried pennant No. 3A (her sisters were all wildly different, in RN fashion, carrying 10, 57, 97, and 34, respectively).

Malaya’s first skipper was 45-year-old Capt. Algernon D.E.H. Boyle, RN, a regular with a reputation for being a naval marksman who earned the Goodenough Medal in 1891 for his top gunnery marks as a cadet and 21 years later became the Captain of the Devonport Gunnery School. Before moving into the unfinished captain’s cabin of Malaya in November 1915, Boyle had a full career, shipping out on HMS Royal Sovereign, Indefatigable, and Dreadnought, then commanding the old battlewagon HMS Hibernia and the cruisers HMS Edgar, Cumberland, and Bacchante.

Jutland

Commissioned just 120 days before the great naval clash at Jutland/Skagerrak, our subject was one of the youngest capital ships of either side, only beaten by the ill-fated German battlecruiser SMS Lutzow, which had only commissioned on 20 March 1916.

Of the 29 British battlewagons at the engagement, Malaya and three of her four sisters (Queen Elizabeth was undergoing maintenance in dry dock) were clustered together in the 5th Battle Squadron of the Grand Fleet under the command of RADM Hugh Evan-Thomas, whose flag was on Barham.

The Famous 5th Battle Squadron, consisting of the Queen Elizabeth class, of which four fought at Jutland. 1920 watercolor by Frank Watson Wood.

HMS Warspite and Malaya seen from HMS Valiant at 14:00 hrs on 31 May 1916 during the Battle of Jutland. Two hours later they would be in the thick of it. IWM Q 114833

The 5th took part in the initial “Run to the South,” coming up just behind VADM David Beatty’s battlecruisers. Sailing into the maelstrom that Beatty found himself in, they punished the advancing High Sea Fleet’s own battlecruisers of Von Hipper’s Scouting Group, being sandwiched between two German battle lines as they provided cover for Beatty’s “Turn to the North.”

In all, 5BS came into action against the German battlecruisers at 16.08 and fired their last shots at 19.30.

Admiral Beatty’s Battle Cruisers at Jutland; with HMS ‘Lion’ leading, 31 May 1916, about 19.20. The ships left to right are HMS Defence, Warrior, Lion, Princess Royal, Tiger, New Zealand, Barham, Warspite, Valiant and Malaya (the last four being battleships). By William Lionel Wyllie RMG PW2246

British battleships of the Fifth Battle Squadron at the Battle of Jutland, 31 May 1916 by Arthur Douglas Wales-Smith

5th Battle Squadron at Jutland Arthur Douglas Wales Smith RMG BHC0663

The four sisters delivered an estimated 24 hits on the German battlecruisers SMS Lutzow and Seydlitz. Lutzow, already damaged from hits from HMS Lion and Princess Royal, eventually sank, a bit of quick payback for the punishment she helped deliver to the battlecruiser HMS Invincible and armored cruiser HMS Defence at the start of the battle. Seydlitz, a famous “shell magnet,” somehow limped back home with 5,300 tons of seawater onboard and her topside wrecked.

German battle cruiser Seydlitz burns in the Battle of Jutland, May 31, 1916

Of the 1,355 shells fired by 5BS at Jutland, Malaya fired the most (421), with flagship Barham firing 335, Warspite 311, and Valiant 288. In fact, Malaya was only bested by the battlecruiser HMS New Zealand, which fired 430 shells. Of note, the 1,355 rounds fired by the 5BS are nearly a third of the 4,354 shells fired by the entire Grand Fleet, while its four battleships made up only about an eighth of the capital ships in the British line.

The four sisters also showed they could take massive punishment and keep fighting, with Warspite suffering 30 casualties from 15 direct hits from German 11- and 12-inch shells, with one jamming her steering gear and leaving her in a “death circle” long enough for a struggling cruiser, HMS Warrior, to escape. Barham took six large caliber hits which caused over 70 casualties. Our Malaya, the last ship in 5BS’s battle line, suffered eight 12-inch hits, which left her with a 4-degree list from a waterline hit, along with 65 killed and 68 wounded–  the worst butcher’s bill of any surviving British battleship in the battle.

The fact that Malaya wasn’t hit more during the escape from the High Seas Fleet is likely due to a subterfuge by quick-thinking Captain Boyle, who ordered his starboard secondary battery of 6-inch guns to fire deliberately well short into the sea to throw up a wall of waterspouts to confuse the German spotters as to their shot fall and range. The battery, however, had 104 of its 121 men killed or wounded when the final German 15-inch shell hit it square, causing fierce cordite fire.

The rest of Malaya’s Great War

Immediately after the battle, the 5BS was in bad shape, with Warspite sent for repairs in No. 1 dry dock at Rosyth, Barham sent for repairs at Devonport, and Malaya repaired in the floating dock at Invergordon.

Only Valiant did not require any extensive repairs and, in fact, emerged remarkably unscathed, a lucky ship indeed!

Malaya would remain in Invergordon for eight weeks to patch up her damage.

HMS Malaya at the Invergordon dry dock between June and July 1916, undergoing repairs after Jutland. Invergordon Archives Photo No. 1397.

A great stern shot with her four screws. HMS Malaya at the Invergordon dry dock between June and September 1916, undergoing repairs after Jutland. Invergordon Archives Photo No. 1375.

Rejoining the Grand Fleet, the freshly-repaired Malaya sortied again on 18 August to meet the Germans and intercept the High Seas Fleet on the way to raid the port of Sunderland, courtesy of Room 40 signals intelligence. However, Scheer had the benefit of a U-boat screen and two zeppelins, so the two battle lines never got to within 50 miles of each other before he turned back home on the 20th. The guns remained quiet, with the only blows delivered between the two fleets being from submarine torpedoes.

A port quarter view of the Queen Elizabeth-class battleship HMS Malaya at Scapa Flow on 27th August 1916. This photograph was taken from HMS Queen Elizabeth. Ahead of her and to the left of the picture are two of her sister ships, Barham and Valiant. Note the plated-over apertures for the two rear BL 6-inch Mk XII naval guns that were never fitted. Photo via Clydebank Battlecruisers

HMS Warspite, HMS Malaya, HMS Valiant and HMS Barham in formation.

With that, our battleship spent the next two years in a cycle of limited patrol work as the High Seas Fleet became stationary. Malaya had some modernizations during this period, as did her sisters, to include the addition of another inch of plating over magazines on their lower and middle deck levels, removing two of the 6″/45 open mounts, and adding two additional 3″/46 Mk 1 guns to increase anti-air defense.

Speaking of aircraft, it was at about this time that the class was fitted with short (20-30 foot) flying-off platforms constructed atop turrets “B” & “X” to be used for little Sopwith Scout (Pup) single-seaters or two-seat Sopwith 1 1/2 Strutters.

Malaya circa 1918 with Sopwith on her turret. IWM (Q 75202)

These aircraft were micro-sized scout fighters, running just 19 (Pup) to 25 (Strutter) feet long and had a max take-off weight of 2,100 pounds (just 1,200 for the Pup), making them basically a step up from powered kites. They had teeth in the form of .303 caliber machine guns, and vetted the flying-off theory, with a Pup flown from a platform on the cruiser HMS Yarmouth downing the German Zeppelin L 23 off the Danish coast in 1917.

 

HMS Malaya Sopwith 1 1/2 Strutter being hoisted onto the flying-off platform, with the gun tube being used as a crane

Sopwith 1 1/2 Strutter takes off from the launch pad of turret B of the battleship HMS Malaya

She met the Germans one more time in the war: when the Grand Fleet stood by to escort the 74 ships of the HSF to internment at Scapa Flow in late November 1918.  By that time, she was carrying pennant 06, after briefly carrying 84 for the first three months of the year. She would shift to her final pennant, 01, in November 1919.

By then, it was a totally different world.

Interbellum

HMS Malaya in her original configuration, with her crew manning the rails. Note she has unoccupied flying off platforms on her B and X turret tops and her glad rags flying. This would date the photo to between April 1918 and 1922, with the latter more likely.

In February 1920, Malaya carried the Allied Peace Commission from England to Germany to enforce the peace treaty, part of a series of ancillary tasks performed over the next two decades by the battleship, punctuated by refits and rebuilds.

Queen Elizabeth-class battleship HMS Malaya travels through the Suez Canal, 25-27 December 1920. Note her flying off platforms but no aircraft.

Jane’s for the class, circa 1921:

In November 1922, she was tapped to carry the disgraced last Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, Mehmed VI, from Istanbul into exile on Malta after the 600-year Sultanate was abolished by the new Turkish republic.

Ottoman Sultan Mehmed VI; the shot at the end is of him arriving at Malta on Malaya.

Mehmed only remained on Malta a few months, living in an apartment in the Pini Barracks, before leaving for Arabia as a guest of King Hussein (yes, the same guy who led the revolt against the Sultan in 1916) and finally dying in Italy in 1926.

Malaya at Malta sometime between May 1926 and 1927.

Between September 1927 and February 1929, Malaya was in the shipyard as part of an 18-month modernization. This saw massive anti-torpedo bulges fitted bulges were fitted which increased her beam from 90 feet to 104. These added 815 tons to the ship but were thought to be able to resist a direct hit from a 700-pound warhead.

Her engineering suite was rebuilt with her two funnels trunked into one. Gone were her flying off platforms, two torpedo tubes, and her 3″/45s, replaced by four newer 4″/45 QF Mk Vs. By this time, her displacement had increased to 30,000 tons but, with the upgraded plant, was still capable of 23.5 knots. Her four sisters received similar conversions between 1924 and 1934, for £1 million per hull.

HMS Malaya in 1929 after conversion

Jane’s on the class, circa 1929:

HMS Barham in heavy seas, while participating in exercises of the Atlantic and Mediterranean Fleets near the Balearic Islands, circa the later 1920s, as seen from HMS Rodney. Barham is followed by the battleship Malaya and the aircraft carrier Argus. U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command Photograph. NH 61776

Queen Elizabeth-class battleship HMS Malaya pictured in Norway, June 15th 1932. Norwegian State Archives.

Placed in ordinary once again from October 1934 to December 1936, Malaya’s second major reconstruction saw her receive extra main deck armor over her engine rooms (3.25 inches) and magazines (5 inches) to help protect against more modern bombs. Her old conning tower was replaced with a lighter one with just 5 inches of armor (down from 11) to help trim topside weight. She landed her 4″/45s that were mounted in the 1920s as well as her final two torpedo tubes. She then picked up four new 4″/45 QF Mk XVIs, two octuple 40mm 2-pounder Vickers pom-pom mounts, and four .50 cal Vickers Mk III quads.

Queen Elizabeth-class battleship HMS Malaya in 1936, after her second modernization. 

Meanwhile, an athwartship D-II-H catapult was fitted before the main mast with hangar space established for up to four seaplanes, putting her back in the aviation business for the first time in more than a decade. She carried Fairey IIIFs for a minute then switched to Fairey Swordfish I “Stringbag” floatplanes operated by 700 Squadron, Fleet Air Arm. Such “Catapult Flight” detachments, depending on how many aircraft they had, would typically have 2-4 flying officers/observers and 8-12 maintenance ratings.

Fairey Swordfish V4367, 700 Sqn, being hoisted aboard HMS Malaya, 1 October 1941

V4367 in color plate via Profile Publications No. 212, 1972.

With a 75,000 shp plant due to a new six-pack of Admiralty 3-drum boilers and new turbines, she was rated for 25 knots even though her displacement had swelled to 35,100 tons, full.

By the late 1930s, Malaya and sister Barham had lagged behind sisters Queen Elizabeth, Warspite, and Valiant in terms of upgrades. While the latter three sported a new profile from a more extensive 1930s £2.1 million rebuild (as opposed to Malaya and Barham’s more miserly £976,000 refit), the others still looked mostly the same.

Importantly, the ships which got the more expensive refit saw their gun houses tweaked to be able to elevate their barrels to 30 degrees (from the old 20), which, when combined with a new streamlined ballistic cap (6crh) on their shells, pushed the range of their 15″/42s out to an amazing 32,000 yards. Malaya and Barham never got that elevation upgrade, though they did get a slight range boost to 23,700 yards when using the new 6crh capped shells.

HMS Malaya unleashes a broadside in 1939

Jane’s even considered the two as separate from the rest of the class, as noted by their entry.

Barham and Malaya 1938 Janes.

The U.S. Navy did the same, as shown in ONI 202.

As the Arab revolt engulfed British-controlled Palestine, Malaya was sent to Haifa in August–September 1938 to wave the flag and try to impress the locals.

She also clocked in on the Spanish Civil War Neutrality Patrol, policing the coastlines controlled by Franco’s Nationalists, which included the peripheries of Gibraltar.

HMS Malaya in service with the Mediterranean Fleet between 1937-1939, with Spanish Civil War neutrality stripes just visible on the side of B Turret.

HMS Malaya, HMS Warspite and HMS Nelson, March 1938. Note the neutrality stripes 

HMS Resolution together with HMS Warspite, HMS Malaya, HMS Royal Oak and HMS Rodney in Torbay, August 8, 1939. Note the lingering neutrality stripes

Another War

When the Germans marched into Poland in September 1939, Malaya was deployed with the Mediterranean Fleet at Alexandria as part of the 1st Battle Squadron with her sisters Warspite and Barham.

HMS Nelson, HMS Rodney, HMS Malaya, HMS Valiant, HMS Queen Elizabeth and HMS Barham, October 1939

Joining with the carrier HMS Glorious, the squadron, along with a cruiser-destroyer screen, sailed through the Suez to conduct anti-raider sweeps of the Indian Ocean throughout October and November, with the group later designated Force J.

It was in this period roaming from Aden to Durban and back that Malaya and company was on the fruitless prowl for the pocket battleship Graf Spee in mid-November when the raider sank the small British tanker Africa Shell (706 GRT) off the eastern coastline of Mozambique and stopped the Dutch merchant Mapia.

With Graf Spee confirmed in the South Atlantic (and duly run to ground in mid-December), Malaya got orders to head to the North Atlantic for convoy duty.

By 24 December 1939 she was in Gibraltar and arrived at Halifax on 2 January 1940. Two weeks later, Malaya sailed with her first of three nearly back-to-back trans-Atlantic convoys, HX 016, later covering HX 026 and HX 032 by mid-April. Notably, while on HX 026, Malaya had to sink one of her merchantmen, the British steamer Rossington Court (6922 GRT), after the latter suffered a crippling collision and had to be abandoned.

One of those return trips from the Clyde to Halifax saw Malaya secretly carrying a load of gold bullion for transfer to Canada for safekeeping, part of Operation Fish.

Separated from HX 032 at Plymouth on 14 April 1940, Malaya got orders to rejoin the unit she had started the war with, the 1BS, reinforcing the Med for the expected entry of Italy into the war. She duly arrived in Alexandria on 3 May.

By early July, she was part of Force C, centered around the carrier HMS Eagle, joined by the battleship HMS Royal Sovereign, and a squadron of destroyers.

Sailing on Operation MA 5, the escort of Convoy MS 1, they met the Italian fleet at sea on the 9th in what is remembered as the Battle of Calabria (Punta Stilo). The swirling surface gun battle was conducted at long range with few hits on either side, with Malaya’s 15 inchers maxing out and falling 2,700 yards short of the Italian battleship Giulio Cesare while sister Warspite, steaming alongside Malaya and carrying improved 30 degree elevation gun houses giving her longer range, was straddled at 26,000 yards by the Italians and in turn made a hit on Cesare from that distance– one of the longest documented gun hits on record in naval combat.

Malaya then helped provide escort for the Aegean convoys AN 2 and AS 2, the bombardment of Italian positions around the fortress of Bardia on 17 August, and Operation Hats (convoys MF 2 from Alexandria to Malta and AS 3 from Piraeus to Port Said).

Then came more convoy support and Operation BN (the first British landings on Crete), with Malaya at the time the 1BS flagship of RADM Rawlings.

Malaya started 1941 in Gibraltar, then sailed on 7 January part of Force H with the battlecruiser HMS Renown and the carrier HMS Ark Royal to cover the passage of additional convoys to Malta and Piraeus. Encountering fierce attacks from Italian SM79s, Force H had to return to The Rock four days later.

L-toR: HMS Ark Royal, HMS Malaya, and HMS Renown departing Gibraltar 

Plastering Genoa

On 9 February 1941, Malaya was part of Force H during Operations Picket, Result, and Grog, and bombarded Genoa. The Brits lost a single aircraft that day (one of Ark Royal’s Swords) but sank four cargo ships and damaged 18 more. During the engagement, Malaya fired 148 rounds of 15-inch CPC, besting HMS Renown’s 125 rounds. The cruiser HMS Sheffield fired 782 rounds of 6-inch HE. As for Ark Royal, her 13 Swords were busy, loaded to the gills with 250-pound bombs and incendiaries.

A salvo from Malaya landed just 50 yards short of the Italian battleship Duilio, at the time undergoing repairs in dry dock north of Molo Giano (Giano Pier). Another of her 15-inch AP shells hit the historic Cathedral of San Lorenzo (Duomo di Genova) but failed to detonate, miraculously coming to rest in the sanctuary between the confessional booths.

Scaring off Scharnhorst and Gneisenau

On 17 February 1941, Malaya left Gibraltar headed to Freetown as part of the escort for Convoy WS6A, arriving 2,000 miles away in Sierra Leone at the end of the month without much delay.

While escorting the 54 merchant ships of Convoy SL 67 from Freetown to Liverpool in March 1941, Malaya was the big-gunned escort flagship and only assisted by the destroyers HMS Faulknor and Forester, the armed merchant cruiser HMS Cilicia, corvette Asphodel, the armed trawlers HMS Kelt, Spaniard, and Turcoman.

On the afternoon of 8 March, Malaya’s embarked Swordfish floatplanes briefly sighted the German battlecruisers Scharnhorst and Gneisenau steaming towards the convoy– tough work for a slow battleship and a couple of tin cans. Commanded by RADM Gunther Lütjens, the two were six weeks into their Operation Berlin anti-shipping sortie.

Following the report of the sighting, Malaya and the two destroyers left the convoy to chase and engage the enemy. After three hours of closing to gun range, the German battlecruisers turned away and applied their greater speed, apparently not wanting to duke it out with Malaya’s 15-inch guns although their own 11″/54 SK C/34s were capable of 40,000 yards, outranging the lone English capital ship which was able to come to within 26,000 yards of Scharnhorst before they turned.

Pity, as it surely would have been a good fight pitting speed vs muscle with Faulknor and Forester as wild cards.

Lutjens then sent in his supporting submarines, U-105 and U-124, to zap Malaya that night so he could revisit SL 67 but, while the two boats sank five merchantmen in the darkness, they somehow failed to locate the giant British battleship in their midst. Lutjens turned back out into the Atlantic in search of easier prey.

As a sidenote, Swordfish P4073 of 700 squadron from Malaya ran out of fuel whilst shadowing Scharnhorst on 8 March 1941. The floating aircraft and crew were recovered by the Spanish liner Cabo de Buena Esperanza off the Canary Islands and interned, with P4073 entering service with the Spanish as HR6-1 of 54 Escuadrilla out of Tenerife for the rest of the war. The crew was later repatriated to Britain in 1942, and the Spanish bought P4073 for 1,200,000 pesetas.

Headed to the Big Apple

Although she managed to escape Lutjens’ two U-boats, Malaya’s luck ran out two weeks later when, while escorting SL-68 some 250 miles west-northwest of the Cape Verde Islands on the night of 20 March 1941, the battleship was hit by a torpedo fired at long range by U-106 (Jürgen Oesten). Suffering no casualties but developing a 7-degree list and shedding speed, Malaya was still afloat and functional but was forced to leave her convoy behind and make for the closest friendly port in Trinidad, making Port of Spain three days later.

From there, she left Trinidad after temporary repairs and made it to the Brooklyn Navy Yard on 6 April, where she became the first British ship repaired in a U.S. yard during the war (keep in mind America was still eight months out from Pearl Harbor and officially neutral.

It was while in Brooklyn that her skipper at the time, Capt. (later ADM Sir) Arthur F.E. Palliser, accepted the transfer of four decommissioned 250-foot Lake class cutters (ex-USCGC Saranac, Mendota, Tahoe, and Pontchartrain) on 30 April 1941 as part of the “Destroyers for Bases” deal. These would become the sloops HMS Banff, Culver, Fishguard, and Hartland, with their new crews provided from among Malaya’s complement. Two of these four cutters-turned-sloops would be sunk by the end of 1942.

An incredible series of RN images were snapped as the repaired Malaya sortied out of the Big Apple, headed back to war in July.

HMS Malaya, escorted by tugs, leaving New York harbor after refit in the United States. Part of the Brooklyn Bridge can be seen in the background. IWM (A 5444)

HMS Malaya, escorted by tugs, leaving New York harbor after refit in the United States. The Statue of Liberty is on the right in the distance. IWM (A 5443)

IWM (A 5435)

IWM (A 5445)

From New York, she sailed for Halifax to join Convoy TC 12 as an escort for four large 20,000-ton troopships (Duchess of York, Empress of Canada, Orion, and Strathmore).

Arriving back in the Home Isles for the first time since April 1940, Malaya arrived in the Clyde on 28 July 1941. Once back home, she received a whole array of new sensors including Type 281 air warning radar and Types 282, 284, and 285 fire control radars along with another 11 20mm Oerlikon singles in place of her four quad .50 cal Vickers.

Back to the Med

On 27 October 1941, Malaya arrived at Gibraltar to join Force H where she became VADM Somerville’s flagship.

A Fairey Mk I Swordfish seaplane catapulted from the deck of HMS Malaya, October 1941. IWM (A 5691)

Within two weeks, she was sailing East as part of Operation Perpetual, carrying aircraft through the Axis gauntlet to Malta aboard the carriers Ark Royal and Argus. While they were able to get close enough to Malta to launch 37 Hurricanes to reinforce the island, on the return voyage, Ark Royal was torpedoed by a German U-boat and sank, a costly trade.

On 19 December, Malaya became the only operational Allied battleship in the Mediterranean as sisters Queen Elizabeth and Valiant were knocked out by Italian frogmen in Alexandria. Valiant was knocked out of action for about 6 months (until August 1942), while Queen Elizabeth was off-line for over two years, returning to service in January 1944. Warspite, damaged by German bombs, had left the theater in June 1941, headed to the U.S. for repairs at Bremerton, then would spend 1942 in the Indian Ocean. Tragically, sister Barham had been torpedoed and sunk by U-331 off the Egyptian coast in November 1941.

Nonetheless, Malaya wasn’t kept preserved in a bottle. There was work to be done, including escorting vital troopship convoys (WS 16 and WS 17A) past Gibraltar, getting Spitfires to Malta (Operation Spotter in February 1942, Operations Spotter II, Picket I and Picket II in March), and the epic Harpoon (MW4) Convoy in June during which only two of the six supply ships made it to Malta. Harpoon saw repeated attacks by 175 land-based Italian aircraft, augmented by German Ju-88s, but still managed to get 15,000 tons of desperately needed supplies to the besieged island.

15 June 1942, Malaya under attack by Italian torpedo aircraft off Pantelleria during the Harpoon Convoy. Luce photo.

Light duty

Given a break and temporarily leaving no British battleships in the Med for the first time in over 40 years, Malaya was sent from Gibraltar on 24 June to join the escort for slow Capetown/Durban-bound Convoy WS 20. She then escorted Convoy RT 1 from South Africa to Freetown on the return leg.

Arriving at Rosyth on 8 October, Malaya, showing her age and mechanical deficiencies, entered refit which lasted until late November. Her catapult and seaplane equipment were removed, and she received two twin 4″/50 Mark XVIs, two more 40mm octuple Vickers pom poms, and  Type 273 radar.

She also sported a Western Approaches style camo scheme by this time in her career.

HMS Malaya in camouflage during WWII by Norman Wilkinson

Then came work ups, trials, and exercises in the Firth of Forth and off Scapa Flow that continued for the next year with a few noted breaks to include clocking in briefly on a series of passing convoys (WS 27 and KMF 10A) and sailing with mixed RN/USN task groups in the Atlantic (including the battleships USS Alabama and South Dakota in May 1943 followed by the carrier USS Ranger and cruiser Tuscaloosa that August 1943).

May 1943. IWM caption: One of the 6 inch guns on board battleship HMS Malaya. The crew is wearing anti-flash gear; some are operating the gun or ramming home a shell whilst others supply it with further ammunition. Propellant charges for the guns are contained within the card and leather Clarkson cases which are over two sailors’ shoulders. IWM A 16964

HMS Malaya leads USS South Dakota and USS Alabama through the North Atlantic, May 1943. These operations were part of Operation Camera, which was a feint towards Norway to throw the Germans off the scent of the upcoming Husky landings in Sicily. Later ops with USS Ranger were part of the similar Operation Governor to mask the Avalanche landings in Italy.

Royal Navy battleship, HMS Malaya, in Scapa Flow, Orkney Islands, Scotland, August 1943. NHHC 80-G-81451

King George VI inspects Queen Elizabeth-class battleship HMS Malaya, August 1943, with one of the ship’s four twin 4″/50 Mark XVIs behind him and a Royal Marine-manned Oerlikon 20mm single in the foreground, one of 17 installed at the time. By the end of the war, Malaya had six twin 4″/50s and 47 Oerlikons, plus pom poms. IWA A18624

Testbed

While at Plymouth on 15 October 1943, the battleships Malaya and Valiant exchanged crews, with the latter battleship headed to join the Eastern Fleet in Ceylon to fight against the Japanese. Meanwhile, Malaya was paid off to reserve at Faslane because of her overall poor machinery state.

She was just worn out.

They made some improvements, landing all 12 of her old 6″/45s, which included removing her casemate armor and plating over the empty ports with two-inch plates. Also gone were her Type 273 and 281 radars, replaced with newer Type 277SQ and 281Bs, along with a Type 650 countermeasures suite.

By this stage in the war, she still had her 15″/42s, which, with new maximum load Super Charges that traded gun life for range, were able to fire out to 28,800 yards when using 6crh shells, even with just a 20-degree elevation. She also had 12 4″/45 Mk XIXs, four octuple 40mm Vickers pom poms, and 47 Oerlikons along with Type 281B, 282, 284, and 285 fire controls. In this final form, she had a full load displacement of 37,710 tons but struggled to break 20 knots.

Between 15 and 17 May 1944, Malaya was used as a testbed for a device intended to kill the dreaded German battleship Tirpitz as she hid in her Norwegian fjord.

A 10-minute video exists in the IWM of Malaya acting as a target ship at Loch Striven and Reculver, Scotland, for RAF De Havilland Mosquitos, Vickers Wellingtons, and SBD testing inert experimental Highball “Bouncing Bomb” cases designed by Barnes Wallis. She was swathed in splinter nets and hydrosphere booms so as to prevent damage, although at least two punched a hole in the ship’s side.

While Barnes developed a production 1,200-pound Highball war-shot bomb for Tirpitz with data from the tests on Malaya, they weren’t needed as the German had been capsized by dozens of his 12,000-pound Tallboy earthquake bombs in three raids (Paravane, Obviate, and Catechism) between September and November 1944.

By that time, the abused Malaya was already back in action.

Last Hurrah

For Overlord/Neptune, a total of seven British and American battleships delivered naval gunfire support at Normandy. Of these, five directly participated in the bombardment on D-Day, while the other two remained in reserve and would join the bombardment force later in June. Three were American (USS Arkansas, Texas, and Nevada), while four, including the two that joined later, were British (HMS Ramillies, Warspite, and the sister ships Nelson and Rodney). Additionally, the decommissioned old French Courbet and British HMS Centurion were towed in just after the landings and used as immobile breakwaters/AAA batteries.

Malaya missed out on the first few weeks of the Normandy landings but, in the event the primary battlewagons were forced to retire due to issues or damage, our very worn-out Malaya was recommissioned on 22 June (D+16) and took passage to Portsmouth to make ready to join the gunline, just in case, as a reserve for the reserve. As it happened, with Warspite developing machinery defects and Nelson hitting two sea mines in the campaign, Malaya got the call.

It was in this effort that she fired her final shots in anger,  delivering some 120 15-inch rounds between 30 August and 2 September 1944 against the heavily fortified German garrison on the island of Cezembre near Saint-Malo. Malaya reported having obtained hits on both battery positions and on the barracks. The 12,000 surviving Germans on the island, a mix of “ear and stomach” men and turncoat Russians stiffened by a couple of battalions of Fallschirmjägers, surrendered to troops of the U.S. 83rd Infantry Division on 2 September.

In October 1944, with the campaign moving inland for the final act of the European Theatre and her usefulness in the Pacific in doubt, Malaya was once more paid off into Reserve at Faslane, where she would remain until after VE Day, when she was converted to an unarmed accommodation and training ship for continued use at Portsmouth for Torpedo School duties.

HMS Malaya at Greenock, 1944. IWM (FL 9315)

battleships HMS Ramillies HMS Malaya at HMS Vernon 1947 by Charles Edward Turner via NMM

By the end of the war, she carried six battle honors: Jutland 1916 – Atlantic 1940-41 – Calabria 1940 – Mediterranean 1940-41 – Malta Convoys 1941-42 – English Channel 1944.

Between 28 November 1915 and May 1945, she had 29 captains. Of these, six would become full admirals, another seven would be vice admirals, and five would be rear admirals. Among these would be her first skipper and Jutland commander, the future Admiral Sir Algernon Douglas Edward Harry Boyle, K.C.B., C.M.G., M.V.O., who retired in 1924 after a stint as Fourth Sea Lord.

Her motto was Malem Fero Malis (“I bring evil to the evil”).

The old girl was placed on the Disposal List in 1947 and sold to BISCO the next year for breaking at Faslane. None of her remaining sisters remained out of the scrap yard past 1950.

Epilogue

Our subject was the only ship to carry the name of the British territory, with Malaysia gaining its independence in 1957. It is still a Commonwealth nation, and HMS Malaya’s contributions are well remembered, with several relics of the battleship held in reverence.

Royal Malaysian Navy personnel visiting the Malaysian National Hydrographic Centre, where an original war-flown white ensign from HMS Malaya is preserved.

Her main ship’s bell is in the elite East India Club in London, while her Second Watch bell was given to the Victoria Institution in Kuala Lumpur to replace the school’s original bell, which was lost during the Japanese occupation.

In 2007, the school presented this bell to the Royal Malaysian Navy, and it is on display at the National Hydrography Centre, Pulau Indah Naval Base, in Selangor.

Several preserved 15-inch Mark I naval guns survive, leaving a chance that at least one of them may have cycled through Malaya’s gun houses over her career.

A replica of her unexploded 15-inch shell that hit the Cathedral of San Lorenzo in Genoa during Operation Grog in 1941 is maintained in the church’s sanctuary.

Her last surviving crewmember was likely Alec King, who gave an interview in 2019 at age 96.

She also lives on in maritime art.

HMS Malaya by Norman Wilkinson, National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, BHC3470.

HMS Malaya under tow, a view looking back at the bows of the battleship from a tug, sailing with two other tugs on either side. By Stephen Bone, War Artists Advisory Committee commission, 1944. IWM (Art.IWM ART LD 4145)

HMS Malaya leaving anchorage. By Stephen Bone, War Artists Advisory Committee commission, 1944. Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum. BORGM 00313

HMS Malaya Refueling Destroyers at Sea by Rowland Langmaid, National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, BHC1584

Thanks for reading!

Meminisse est ad Vivificandum – To Remember is to Keep Alive

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Is the Gen 6 Glock 45 worth it?

Glock debuted the new Generation 6 models late last year, and we’ve evaluated the popular G45 variant over the past few months– with some interesting takeaways.

Any conversation about the Glock 45 that is longer than a fortune cookie scroll needs to start with the G19X.

Debuted in January 2018, the Gen 5 (ish) G19X was originally developed as Glock’s submission for the U.S. Army’s Modular Handgun System trials before being adapted for commercial sale. The company’s first “crossover” design (hence the “X”) blended a full-size G17 grip with a compact G19 slide assembly and a hybrid frame with a G19-length dustcover to accommodate it.

Just nine short months after the debut of the G19X, Glock delivered the Gen 5 G45 to market, which was basically a black G19X with some very minor tweaks.

Announced at the International Association of Chiefs of Police Conference, the G45 was billed as the perfect duty gun, blending all the best attributes of the G19 and G17 while adding Gen 5 features to boot —front slide serrations, ambi controls, a modular backstrap system, and the Glock Marksman Barrel. It soon became a smash hit in Glock’s catalog, especially after optics-ready MOS models were introduced in 2019.

Then Glock ended its Gen 5s in place of the transitional Gen V last November, then announced the new (and MOS-less) Gen 6 guns just a confusing month later.

We’ll get into it more below, but in a nutshell, the Gen 6 brings a different slide, internals, and trigger system but keeps everything dimensionally the same (so legacy holsters still work) while delivering a much better optics mounting system than MOS while retaining the same manual of arms and being reverse compatible with existing 17+ capacity double stack 9mm mags.

The Glock Gen 6 G45
The new Glock Gen 6 G45. (All photos: Chris Eger/Guns.com)
The Glock Gen 6 G45
As with other G45s, it is a hybrid design with a compact slide assembly and full-sized frame. 

Full 1,800-word review over in my column at Guns.com

Corsairs, old and new

7 July 1967: American Aerospace Museum founder Lynn Garrison in “Blue Max” (N693M), his privately owned ex-Aéronavale Vought F4U-7 Corsair (BuNo 133693) leading a trio of brand-new LTV A-7A-4a-CV Corsair IIs (BuNo 153168, 153174, 153175) of the similarly brand new U.S. Navy Attack Squadron VA-147 “Argonauts” over NAS Lemoore before the squadron’s first deployment to Vietnam aboard USS Ranger (CVA-61).

Talk about the Vinn diagram between jet stall speed and prop max speed

Of the above aircraft, Garrison’s old-school bent-wing bird would be destroyed in a crash near Chula Vista on 10 May 1987, with two fatalities.

However, the newer birds, as noted by Baughner, were all lost within 15 months of the above image.

The CAG bird, 153175, NE-300, suffered an engine failure over the Gulf of Tonkin on Halloween 1968. The pilot ejected and was rescued.

Meanwhile, BuNo 153174 was written off after an accident on 11 February 1968 and 153168 had a similar fate on 28 September 1968.

NASA’s Next Moon Mission includes a Coastie and an Army Astronaut

Following up on yesterday’s NASA color birds article on their patriotic-themed 42-year-old F-15D and F-18B, let us take a look at the interesting lineup of Artemis III astronauts.

While we noted Artemis II was replete with Hornet drivers, both U.S. Navy and RCAF, the quartet at bat for AIII has a very different flavor.

With no USAF or Navy personnel, it is commanded by a Marine Hornet vet joined by an Italian test pilot, a Coastie and an Army astronaut.

The NASA Artemis III crew poses for an official portrait (from left: CDR Andre Douglas, USCGR; Col. Luca Parmitano, AM; Col. Randy Bresnik, USMC (Ret); Col. Frank Rubio, U.S.Army).

NASA astronaut Randolph “Randy” James Bresnik, Mission Commander, is a 58-year-old retired Marine colonel and Citadel graduate who flew F-18Cs with VMFA-212 on three overseas deployments before seeing combat in OIF with the Vikings of VMFA(AW)-225 and wrapping up his service as ops officer of VMFA-232. In NASA service, he flew on one of the last Shuttle missions (STS-129) and logged 138 days aboard the ISS, catching Soyuz MS-05 up and back for that one.

The Pilot for AIII is ESA (European Space Agency) astronaut Luca Salvo Parmitano, a 49-year-old colonel in the Italian Air Force who formerly flew zippy little AMXs before shifting gears to become a test pilot. He’s racked up 366 days in space between two stints on the ISS, both carried back and forth via Soyuz.

Things start to get really interesting with mission specialist CDR Andre Douglas, USCGR.

Douglas is a USCGA grad (regimental commander, class of ’08) who went on to earn advanced engineering degrees from the University of Michigan, Johns Hopkins, and George Washington University. He spent four years on active duty, including as an engineering officer on the old 210-foot Reliance-class USCGC Vigilant (WMEC-617) working out of Florida, then reactivated his commission in the reserve in 2024. A Group 23 class ‘naught, this will be his first time in space, the only “rookie” on the crew.

Douglas, 40, is the only third Coast Guard astronaut since 1996, following in the footsteps of Capt. (ret.) Daniel Burbank and CDR (ret.) Bruce Melnick. Burbank, now a professor of mechanical engineering at the Coast Guard Academy, spent 188 days in space on two Space Shuttle missions and one mission aboard the ISS. Previously, Melnick, a 20-year veteran of the U.S. Coast Guard, logged over 300 hours in space.

AIII’s fourth member is the very well-traveled Col. Frank Rubio (USMA 1998) of the U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command. One of just 20 Army astronauts since 1978, Rubio has the American record for the longest single spaceflight, having spent 371 consecutive days aboard the ISS on Expeditions 68 and 69 from September 2022 to September 2023, during which he logged 5,963 orbits of the Earth, traveled more than 157 million miles, and conducted three spacewalks totaling 21 hours and 24 minutes.

Colonel Rubio on the ISS in 2017. Photo 221001-A-D0431-1001

Rubio definitely “walked the walk” before heading to NASA, flying over 1,100 hours in Army aircraft– including more than 600 as a Blackhawk pilot in Bosnia, Afghanistan, and Iraq- before serving as a member of the Black Knights parachute team, a flight surgeon at Redstone Arsenal, and as a battalion surgeon with “The Originals” of the 10th Special Forces Group.

New: Army Space Branch

Of note, the Army recently established its new Space Operations Branch, giving FA40 Space Operations Officers a dedicated “forever home” and, for the first time, joining it with newly created 40D enlisted Tactical Space Operations Specialists.

While FA40s have served the Army since 1999, they previously lacked an enlisted counterpart. The Army previously sheep-dipped enlisted personnel from the Air Defense Artillery, Signal, and Military Intelligence branches to temporarily execute space missions.

U.S. Army Space Branch will continue to use the USAF/USSF Space Operations Badge in Basic, Senior, and Master grades. The badge dates back to 1982 when it was first adopted by the Air Force and has been authorized for Army use since 2006.

The Master Space Badge, seen above Army jump wings.

NASA Looking for Folks for Year-long Simulated Mars/Moon missions

And in further NASA news, the agency is “recruiting research participants for the agency’s next simulated deep space mission. Beginning no earlier than August 2027, research volunteers will spend one year living and working in interplanetary environments at the agency’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, operating under isolated conditions expected during crewed missions to the Moon or Red Planet.”

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