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It has been suggested that HMS Cobra (1900) be merged into this article or section. () |
HMS Cobra, named after the cobra snake, was a steam turbine powered destroyer of the Royal Navy. She was built speculatively by Armstrong Whitworth, launched on 28 June 1899, and purchased by the Navy on 8 May 1900 for £70,000. She was 223 feet (68 m) long, displaced 400 tons and was armed with one 12 pounder gun, five 6 pounder guns, and two torpedo tubes. Her short career came to an end when she broke her back and sank near Cromer on 19 September 1901. Twelve men, including the chief engineer, were saved; 44 Navy officers and men were drowned, and 23 staff from the contractors. A court-martial enquiry held in October absolved the surviving officers of all blame, finding that "Cobra did not touch the ground or come into any contact with any obstruction, nor was her loss due to any error in navigation, but was due to structural weakness of the ship." This was contested by the manufacturers and other shipbuilders, with incidents of equivalent boats being navigated to Australia or Japan without incident cited. The loss of Cobra and her contemporary Viper, wrecked the same year, prejudiced the Royal Navy against snake names and these names were not reused.
References
- Colledge, J. J. and Warlow, Ben (2006). Ships of the Royal Navy: the complete record of all fighting ships of the Royal Navy, Rev. ed., London: Chatham. ISBN 9781861762818. OCLC 67375475.
- Purchased Destroyers.
- The Loss Of The Cobra, The Times, September 21 & September 23 1901
- The Loss Of The Cobra: Verdict Of The Court-Martial, The Times, October 17 1901, with subsequent correspondence in October & November.


