HMS COLLINGWOOD AT SEA IN 1915

(MP061). Frank Watson Wood (1862-1953). Watercolour. Signed and dated 1915..

Limited Edition: 200

Print size: 16.5 x 10.5 ins (42 x 26.5cms) approx.

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COLLINGWOOD (Captain J C Ley RN) was present at Jutland on 31 May 1916 as part of the 1st Battle Squadron commanded by Vice Admiral Sir Cecil Burney KCB KCMG, Second-in-Command of the Grand Fleet with his flag in MARLBOROUGH (Captain G P Ross RN). Transferring to the 4th Battle Squadron towards the end of the war COLLINGWOOD went into Reserve in Devonport in 1919 and for a while acted as gunnery training ship. But as with most warships of her generation the signing of the Washington Treaty on 6 February 1922 spelled her premature end and she was sold for scrap in December 1922. This watercolour, which belongs to the Royal Navy Trophy Store, now hangs in the shore training establishment COLLINGWOOD at Fareham, Hampshire, together with one of the old battleship’s Jutland battle ensigns, another one having been given to HRH Prince Albert (the future King George VI) who was serving in the battleship at Jutland.

HMS Collingwood, under the command of Captain J.C. Ley RN, was a prominent vessel in the 1st Battle Squadron during the Battle of Jutland on May 31, 1916. This historic ship was part of Vice Admiral Sir Cecil Burney’s Grand Fleet, with its flag in the battleship Marlborough. Later, Collingwood transferred to the 4th Battle Squadron and went into Reserve in Devonport in 1919. It briefly served as a gunnery training ship before its untimely decommissioning and scrapping in December 1922, following the signing of the Washington Treaty on February 6, 1922.