She was lost on October 2, 1942 after a collision with the Queen Mary about 37 miles North of Ireland.
NO
HMS Hood was sunk during the Battle of the Denmark strait on the 24th of May 1941.
HMS K13 sunk in a fatal accident during sea trials in early 1917 and was salvaged and recommissioned as HMS K22.
The HMS Sheffield was sunk by an Argentinian Exocet missile in the Falklands Way in 1982. Twenty people died in the attack and many more were injured.
There have been six ships named Achilles, none of which appear to have sunk. The most famous of these six was the HMS Achilles of the Royal Navy. It was built between 1905 and 1907. The ship served during World War 1, and sunk the German ship, Leopard. She was reclassified to a training ship in 1918, and was disassembled (scrapped) in 1921.
NO
Yes, it was topedoed and was sunk, and i believe the crew were picked up by the HMS Belfast and returned to England, my dad served on her.
Hood with with the battleship HMS Prince of Wales (later sunk by planes in the Pacific).
HMS Hood was sunk during the Battle of the Denmark strait on the 24th of May 1941.
HMS jingle bell sunk.
HMS Pheonix in 1647 USS Philadelphia 1799 HMS Zebra 1815
HMS Hood was sunk during the Battle of the Denmark strait. Her wreckage was found halfway between Iceland and Greenland.
HMS K13 sunk in a fatal accident during sea trials in early 1917 and was salvaged and recommissioned as HMS K22.
The British battleship and battlecruiser HMS Prince of Wales and HMS Repulse were sunk by land based bombers in the South China Sea on 10 December 1941; three days after Pearl Harbor. HMS Prince of Wales was history's first battleship sunk by aircraft while at sea (while fighting back).
The HMS Sheffield was sunk by an Argentinian Exocet missile in the Falklands Way in 1982. Twenty people died in the attack and many more were injured.
The HMS Prince of Wales and the HMS Repulse were sent to Singapore to aid in it's defense and both were sunk by Japanese aircraft.
There have been six ships named Achilles, none of which appear to have sunk. The most famous of these six was the HMS Achilles of the Royal Navy. It was built between 1905 and 1907. The ship served during World War 1, and sunk the German ship, Leopard. She was reclassified to a training ship in 1918, and was disassembled (scrapped) in 1921.