Gadzhibey - destroyer of the Fidonisi type , belonging to the number of destroyers of the Novik type .
| Hajibey | |
|---|---|
| Service | |
| Class and type of vessel | Destroyer |
| Organization | Navy of the Russian Empire USSR Navy |
| Manufacturer | Nikolaev admiralty |
| Construction started | October 29, 1915 |
| Launched | August 14, 1916 |
| Commissioned | September 11, 1917 |
| Status | flooded June 18, 1918 |
| Main characteristics | |
| Displacement | 1326 t (normal), 1580 t (full) [1] |
| Length | 92.51 m [1] |
| Width | 9.05 m [1] |
| Draft | 3.2 m [1] |
| Engines | 2 Parsons steam turbines, 5 Tornicroft boilers |
| Power | 28 557 liters from. (on acceptance tests) |
| Mover | 2 |
| Speed | about 30.02 knots (on acceptance tests) |
| Sailing range | 1,500 miles at 20 knots. |
| Crew | 136 people, including 9 officers and 6 conductors |
| Armament | |
| Artillery | 4x1 102-mm / 60 guns (ammunition 600 rounds) |
| Flak | 2 57 mm (until March 1917 - 2 40 mm Vickers assault rifles), 4 7.62 mm machine guns. |
| Mine torpedo armament | 4x3 457-mm TA of the sample of 1913 (14 torpedoes of the sample of 1910 or 45-12 ), 80 min of the sample of 1908 or 1912 |
Service History
Listed on the Black Sea Fleet on July 2, 1915 . Laid down on the slipway of the Nikolaev Admiralty, leased by ONZiV on October 29, 1915 , launched on August 14, 1916 . In 1917 , after the completion of the mooring tests, he moved from Nikolaev to Sevastopol for the final completion and acceptance tests. On September 11, 1917, the destroyer was accepted into the 3rd division of the Mine Brigade of the Black Sea Fleet [2] .
The ship did not take part in the hostilities. On December 3 (16), 1917, the destroyer raised the red flag . On December 15 (28), 1917, the crew of the destroyer shot all of its officers on the Malakhov Kurgan [3] .
In January 1918 he took part in the establishment of Soviet power in Yalta .
April 23, 1918 fired at coastal villages of the Southern coast of Crimea in the area of the Crimean Tatar rebellion under the leadership of Lieutenant M. Khairetdinov and head captain S. M. Mufti-zade. At noon on April 24 arrived at the beam of Alushta . The city was controlled by counter-revolutionary elements and Crimean Tatar militias, who shot Tauris captured on the eve of the SNK SSR on the night of the 24th. The city was shelled from destroyer artillery. The rebellion was crushed by the landing of revolutionary sailors, which was accompanied by excesses and cruelty. Crimean Tatar militia were scattered and retreated [3] [4] .
After the German command presented an ultimatum to the Soviet government on April 25 about the surrender of the Black Sea Fleet (according to the terms and conditions concluded by the Bolshevik government with the countries of the Fourth Union of the Brest Peace ) on April 29, 1918, “Hadzhibey” together with part of the ships left Sevastopol. May 1, 1918 the ship arrived in Novorossiysk ; On June 18, by decision of the Soviet government, the ship was flooded by the crew at a depth of 32-38 meters [2] [5] .
On December 6, 1928, during the special operation, the destroyer Hajibey was raised by the Black Sea Party of Epron and in November 1929 was towed away to Nikolaev for reconstruction. Due to the presence of very large damage to the hull, restoration of the ship was deemed inappropriate. The Hajibey’s case was handed over to Rudmetalltorg in 1930 for disassembly and sale. The main and auxiliary mechanisms of the ship were well preserved and in 1930-1932 were installed on the destroyer Petrovsky (formerly Corfu) during the overhaul of the latter [2] [5] .
Commanders
- captain of the 2nd rank V. Pyshnov ( 1917 - December 15, 1917 [6] );
- Alekseev V.A. ( 1918 ) [5] .
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 Verstyuk A.N., Gordeev S. Yu. Ships of mine divisions. From Novik to Gogland. - M .: War Book, 2006. - S. 116 . - ISBN 5-902863-10-4 .
- ↑ 1 2 3 Verstyuk A.N., Gordeev S. Yu. Ships of mine divisions. From Novik to Gogland. - M .: War book, 2006. - S. 115 .
- ↑ 1 2 Zarubin, A. G., Zarubin, V. G. Without winners. From the history of the Civil War in Crimea. - 1st. - Simferopol: Antikva, 2008 .-- 728 p. - 800 copies. - ISBN 978-966-2930-47-4 .
- ↑ [ http://www.evpatori.ru/k-100-letiyu-respubliki-tavridy.html ON THE 100TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE REPUBLIC OF TAVRIDA. EXHIBITION OF DOCUMENTS FOR THE 100th ANNIVERSARY OF THE REPUBLIC OF TAVRIDA (FROM FUNDS OF THE STATE ARCHIVE OF THE REPUBLIC OF CRIMEA)] . Evpatoria (April 24, 2018).
- ↑ 1 2 3 Chernyshov A. A. “Noviki”. The best destroyers of the Russian Imperial Navy. - M .: Collection, Yauza, EKSMO, 2007 .-- S. 217.
- ↑ Shot by mtharos