HMS Gala
HMS Gala was a Yarrow type ordered by the Royal Navy under the 1903 – 1904 Naval Estimates., she was the first Royal Navy ship to carry this name. She was launched on 7 January 1905 and was accidentally sunk in a collision with the cruiser on 28 April 1908.
Construction
Gala was one of two s that were ordered from Yarrow as part of an order of 15 Rivers under the 1903–1904 construction programme for the Royal Navy. The ship was laid down on 1 February 1904 at Yarrow's Poplar, London shipyard and launched on 7 January 1905. She was completed in June 1905, being delivered to Chatham Dockyard on 28 June 1905 and commissioning there on 30 June. Gala was the first Royal Navy ship to use this name.The design of Gala was based on the River-class destroyers ordered from Yarrow in the 1901–1902 programme. As such, Gala was - long overall and, with a beam of and a draught of. Displacement was light and full load. Four Yarrow water-tube boilers fed steam to two sets of four-cylinder triple expansion steam engines. The machinery was rated at, with the design required to reach a contract speed of, reaching a speed of during sea trials. Four funnels were fitted, in two closely spaced groups.
The original armament of the Rivers, including Gala was the same as the 30-knotter torpedo boat destroyers that preceded them, with a gun armament of one QF 12-pounder 12 cwt naval gun and five 6-pounder (57 mm) guns and two 18-inch (450-mm) torpedo tubes. While earlier ships of the class had two of the 6-pounder guns mounted on sponsons, these guns were moved on Gala and other 1903–1904 ships to the ship's forecastle, where they were drier. In 1906, based on lessons learned during the Russo-Japanese War, where 6-pounder guns were of limited use, the Admiralty decided to upgrade the armament by landing the five 6-pounder naval guns and shipping three QF 12-pounder 8 cwt guns, with two of the new guns on the forecastle, and the third on the ship's centreline aft. The ships of the class were modified with the new armament between 1907 and 1908.