HMS Calcutta (D82)
{{Short description|C-class light cruiser of the Royal Navy}}
{{other ships|HMS Calcutta}}
{{EngvarB|date=August 2014}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2014}}
{{Infobox ship begin}}
{{Infobox ship image |Ship image=HMS Calcutta.jpg |Ship caption= }} {{Infobox ship career |Hide header= |Ship country=United Kingdom |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United Kingdom|naval}} |Ship name=Calcutta |Ship ordered= |Ship awarded= |Ship builder=Vickers Limited, Barrow-in-Furness |Ship laid down=18 October 1917 |Ship launched=9 July 1918 |Ship christened= |Ship acquired= |Ship commissioned=28 August 1919 |Ship recommissioned= |Ship decommissioned= |Ship in service= |Ship out of service= |Ship renamed= |Ship reclassified=Converted to anti-aircraft cruiser in 1939 |Ship refit= |Ship captured= |Ship struck= |Ship reinstated= |Ship fate=Sunk 1 June 1941 by air attack off Alexandria, Egypt |Ship homeport= |Ship identification=Pennant number: 74 (Aug 19);{{cite book |last1=Colledge |first1=J J |title=British Warships 1914–1919 |date=1972 |publisher=Ian Allan |location=Shepperton |page=49}} 82 (Nov 19); I.82 (1936); D.82 (1940){{cite journal |last1=Dodson |first1=Aidan |title=The Development of the British Royal Navy’s Pennant Numbers Between 1919 and 1940 |journal=Warship International |date=2024 |volume=61 |issue=2 |page=134–66}} }} {{Infobox ship characteristics |Hide header= |Header caption= |Ship class={{sclass2|C|cruiser|0}} light cruiser |Ship displacement=* {{convert|4290|LT|t}} standard
|Ship length=* {{cvt|451|ft|6|in|m}} oa
|Ship beam={{cvt|43|ft|6|in|m}} |Ship draught={{cvt|14|ft|3|in|m}} |Ship propulsion=*Parsons geared turbines
|Ship speed={{convert|29|kn|lk=in}} |Ship range=Carried 300 tons (950 tons maximum) of fuel oil |Ship endurance= |Ship test depth= |Ship boats= |Ship capacity= |Ship complement=330–350 |Ship time to activate= |Ship sensors= |Ship EW= |Ship armament=* 5 × BL 6 inch Mk XII naval gun guns
|Ship armour=* {{convert|3|in|mm|0|abbr=on}} side (amidships)
|
1+1/2|in|mm|0|abbr=on}} side (bows)
|Ship aircraft= |Ship notes= }} |
HMS Calcutta was a {{sclass2|C|cruiser|0}} light cruiser of the Royal Navy, named after the Indian city of Calcutta. She was part of the Carlisle group of the C class of cruisers. She was laid down by Vickers Limited at Barrow-in-Furness in 1917 and launched on 9 July 1918. Calcutta was commissioned too late to see action in the First World War and was converted to an anti-aircraft cruiser in 1939. Calcutta served during the Norwegian Campaign and the evacuation from Dunkirk in 1940. She was used to escort allied convoys across the Mediterranean and was sunk on 1 June 1941 by Luftwaffe aircraft off Alexandria, Egypt.
Construction and design
Calcutta was laid down at Vickers' Barrow-in-Furness shipyard on 28 January 1917 and launched on 9 July 1918, completing in August 1919.{{Harvnb|Preston|1985|p=61}}
The ship was {{convert|451|ft|6|in|m}} long overall and {{convert|425|ft|m|2}} between perpendiculars, with a beam of {{convert|43|ft|6|in|m}} and a draught of {{convert|14|ft|3|in|m}}.{{Harvnb|Whitley|1999|p=71}} Displacement was {{convert|4290|LT|t|lk=on}} normal and {{convert|5250|LT|t}} deep load. Six Yarrow boilers fed steam to two sets of Parsons geared steam turbines rated at {{convert|40000|shp|lk=in}}, giving a design speed of {{convert|29|kn|lk=in}}.
As built, Calcutta{{'}}s main armament consisted of five BL 6 inch Mk XII naval guns, carried in single mounts, with an anti-aircraft armament of two QF 3-inch 20 cwt guns and two 2-pounder pom-pom autocannon. Eight 21-inch (533 mm) torpedo tubes were carried, in four twin mounts.{{Harvnb|Preston|1985|pp=60–61}} The ship had an armour belt of {{convert|3|in|mm}} amidships, thinning to {{convert|1+1/2|in|mm}} forward and {{convert|2|in|mm}} aft, with an armoured deck {{convert|1|in|mm}} thick protecting the ship's machinery.{{Harvnb|Parkes|1931|p=53}} She had a complement of 432 officers and ratings.
=Modification=
In August 1938 Calcutta started conversion at Chatham Dockyard to an anti-aircraft cruiser. The conversion involved removal of all guns and torpedo tubes, with eight QF 4 inch Mk XVI naval guns in four twin mounts being fitted, with a close-in armament of a quadruple 2-pounder pom-pom and two quadruple Vickers .50 machine gun mounts. The conversion was completed in July 1939.{{Harvnb|Whitley|1999|pp=71–72}}
Service
Following commissioning, Calcutta joined the 8th Light Cruiser Squadron on the North America and West Indies Station, based at the Royal Naval Dockyard in the Imperial fortress colony of Bermuda, as Flagship.{{Harvnb|Whitley|1999|p=72}} In December 1919 it helped put down violence in Trinidad and Tobago during a General Strike there.{{sfn|Kiely|1996|p=66}} On 6 March 1920, the American cargo ship {{ship|SS|Balabac}} caught fire in Port of Spain harbour. Calcutta sent some of her crew to try and fight the fire and used her boats to rescue Balabac{{'}}s crew.{{Old Weather| url = http://www.naval-history.net/OWShips-WW1-06-HMS_Calcutta.htm | vessel = HMS Calcutta | day = 6 | month = March | year= 1920}} Calcutta remained on the North America and West Indies Station until 1926 (when she was under the command of Captain AB Cunningham), when she sustained structural damage from being dashed against a jetty at the Bermuda dockyard in the 1926 Havana–Bermuda hurricane on 21 October. The dockface (or the wall) in the South Yard and old North Yard of the dockyard are on the eastern (Great Sound) shore of the island of Ireland (with the western shore on the open North Atlantic). Calcutta was tied (bow to the North) to the wall at the oiling wharf (at the northern end of the South Yard), where, during an unusually high tide, it was more exposed to the wind blowing eastward over the island, than it would have been in the more sheltered North Yard (where HMS Capetown tore up two bollards but otherwise rode out the storm safely), so forty hawsers were used, but all snapped when the windspeed reached 138 mph (the highest speed recorded before the storm destroyed the dockyard's anemometer). Fortunately, the bow anchor had been dropped, and held as the stern was swung around to the westward, into the channel (the entrance to the dockyard from the Great Sound) between the two breakwaters that protected the two sections of the dockyard, and the starboard beam of the ship contacted the end of the northern breakwater. Calcutta used her propulsion system to fight the wind that would have driven her backwards into the sound, and Executive Officer Commander HM Maltby and fifty other crew members jumped onto the breakwater and lashed the ship to the end of the breakwater, while Sub-Lieutenants Stephen Roskill of HMS Wistaria and Conrad Byron Alers-Hankey (a cousin of Alexander Maurice Alers Hankey, and brothers Maurice Pascal Alers Hankey, 1st Baron Hankey (the creator of the modern UK Cabinet Office) and Donald William Alers Hankey, and descendant of the Reverend William Alers Hankey (1771–1859), an ex-banker and the secretary of the London Missionary Society (LMS) for whom the town of Hankey, South Africa was named) of Capetown swam to attach two more lines to the oil wharf.{{cite book |last=Stranack, Royal Navy |first=Lieutenant-Commander B. Ian D |date=1977 |title=The Andrew and The Onions: The Story of The Royal Navy in Bermuda, 1795–1975 |location=Bermuda |publisher=Island Press Ltd |page=113 |isbn=9780921560036}} The hurricane also sank the sloop {{HMS|Valerian|1916|2}} while at sea.{{cite book |last=Stranack, Royal Navy |first=Lieutenant-Commander B. Ian D |author-link= |date=1977 |title=The Andrew and The Onions: The Story of The Royal Navy in Bermuda, 1795–1975 |url= |location=Bermuda |publisher=Island Press Ltd., Bermuda, 1977 (1st Edition); Bermuda Maritime Museum Press, Royal Naval Dockyard Bermuda, Ireland Island, Sandys, Bermuda, 1990 (2nd Edition) |page= |isbn=9780921560036}}{{cite web|last=Mason|first=Geoffrey B.|title=HMS Calcutta - World War 1 C-type light cruiser: including Convoy Escort Movements|work=Service Histories of Royal Navy Warships in World War 2|publisher=Naval-history.net|url=http://www.naval-history.net/xGM-Chrono-06CL-HMS_Calcutta.htm|access-date=20 September 2015}}{{cite news|title=The Hurricane: End of H.M.S. Valerian|work=The Daily Standard|location=Brisbane|date=26 October 1926|page=4|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article181005900}}
{{cite news |author= |date=1943-10-07 |title=SAVED THE FLAGSHIP |work=Edinburgh Evening News |location=Edinburgh |page=4 |quote=On the day that Admiral Cunningham took over his new job as First Sea Lord one of his young officers of early years was distinguishing himself off the coast of France. Commander Conrad Alers-Hankey was in command of the light forces which routed enemy destroyers off the Sept Isles early on Tuesday.
Alers-Hankey won the D.S.C. at Dunkirk when in command of the destroyer Vanquisher. Since then he has been twice mentioned in dispatches.
As a sub-lieutenant in the West Indies he once had the distinction of saving the flagship, the cruiser Calcutta. A hurricane parted all the wires securing the Calcutta to the centre mole, and the ship was being swept down on to the jetty. Alers-Hankey dived overboard with a rope secured to a stout hawser. He made fast the hawser, which finally stopped the ship's way. The captain of the Calcutta was Capt. A. B. Cunningham.}}
Following repair and a period in reserve, Calcutta was recommissioned on 18 September 1929 as the flagship of the 6th Cruiser Squadron serving on the Africa Station, based at Simon's Town, South Africa, serving on that station until returning to the United Kingdom and paying off into reserve in 1931.
=Second World War=
Following conversion to an anti-aircraft cruiser, Calcutta joined the Home Fleet in August 1939 and in September was allocated to the Humber Force, acting as an anti-aircraft escort for convoys in the North Sea. She returned to the Home Fleet in February but continued to escort convoys as well as the Fleet.
In April 1940, Germany invaded Norway and Calcutta was one of the units of the Home Fleet deployed in response. From 22–23 April, Calcutta, along with the cruiser {{HMS|Birmingham|C19|2}}, the destroyer {{HMS|Maori|F24|2}}, the sloop {{HMS|Auckland|L61|2}} and the French destroyers {{Ship|French destroyer|Bison|1928|2}} and {{Ship|French destroyer|Foudroyant|1929|2}}, escorted the French troopship Ville d{{'}}Alger which was landing troops at Namsos but the operations were disrupted by poor weather.{{Harvnb|Rohwer|Hümmelchen|1992|p=18}} On 30 April, operations began to evacuate British and French troops from Åndalsnes, with Calcutta providing anti-aircraft cover for the evacuation operations. Calcutta and Auckland evacuated the rearguard from Åndalsnes on the night of 1/2 May, with Calcutta embarking 756 officers and men.{{cite web|last=Kindell|first=Don|title=Naval Events, May 1940 (Part 1 of 4): Wednesday 1st – Tuesday 7th|work=British and Other Navies in World War 2 Day-by-Day |publisher=Naval-history.net|url=http://www.naval-history.net/xDKWW2-4005-14MAY01.htm|access-date=20 September 2015}}
At the end of May 1940, Calcutta took part in Operation Dynamo, the evacuation of the British Expeditionary Force from Dunkirk.{{Harvnb|Rohwer|Hümmelchen|1992|p=21}} She evacuated 656 troops on the night of 27/28 May 1940,{{Harvnb|Winser|1999|pp=15, 83}} when she operated off La Panne,{{cite web|last=Kindell|first=Don|title=Naval Events, May 1940 (Part 4 of 4): Wednesday 22nd – Friday 31st|work=British and Other Navies in World War 2 Day-by-Day |publisher=Naval-history.net|url=http://www.naval-history.net/xDKWW2-4005-14MAY04.htm|access-date=26 September 2015}} and a further 1,200 troops on the night of 28/29 May.{{Harvnb|Winser|1999|pp=16, 83}} Calcutta again operated off Dunkirk on the night of 31 May/1 June,{{Harvnb|Winser|1999|p=26}}{{cite web|last=Kindell|first=Don|title=Naval Events, June 1940 (Part 1 of 4): Saturday 1st – Friday 7th|work=British and Other Navies in World War 2 Day-by-Day |publisher=Naval-history.net|url=http://www.naval-history.net/xDKWW2-4006-19JUN01.htm|access-date=26 September 2015}} and was slightly damaged by near-misses by German bombs on 2 June.{{Harvnb|Winser|1999|p=30}}
Following the completion of the evacuation from Dunkirk, British Forces continued to operate in France, with Operation Aerial taking part in the second half of June 1940 to evacuate the remainder of British forces from ports in the west of France. Calcutta took part in Operation Aerial, providing anti-aircraft cover for evacuations from Saint-Jean-de-Luz in the far south-west of France, near the border with Spain from 23 to 25 June, when the Armistice between France and Germany ended the evacuations. On the return journey, Calcutta was in company with the Canadian destroyers {{HMCS|Restigouche|H00|6}} and {{HMCS|Fraser|H48|2}}, when on the evening of 25 June Calcutta collided with Fraser off the Gironde estuary, cutting the destroyer in two. The front of Fraser sank quickly, while the aft part was scuttled by Restigouche.{{Harvnb|Winser|1999|p=51}}{{cite web|title=Operation Aerial - Evacuation from Western France, June 1940|work=Admiralty War Diaries of World War 2|publisher=Naval-history.net|url=http://www.naval-history.net/xDKWDa-Aerial.htm|access-date=26 September 2015}} Calcutta was undamaged.{{Harvnb|The Naval Review|April 1959|p=174}}
On 30 August Calcutta set off from Gibraltar as part of Operation Hats, which had the purpose of strengthening the British Mediterranean Fleet based in Egypt while simultaneously escorting a supply convoy to Malta. Calcutta formed part of Force F, the reinforcements for the Mediterranean Fleet, and together with sister ship {{HMS|Coventry|D43|2}} and the battleship {{HMS|Valiant|1914|2}} delivered personnel and stores to Malta on 2 September after Force F met up with the Mediterranean Fleet, reaching Alexandria on 6 September.{{Harvnb|Rohwer|Hümmelchen|1992|pp=31–32}}{{Harvnb|Barnett|2000|pp=228–234}} On 8 October 1940, Calcutta, together with Coventry and four destroyers, formed the close escort of Convoy MF.3 to Malta, reaching Malta on 11 September, with Calcutta and Coventry forming part of the escort of the return convoy MF4.{{Harvnb|Rohwer|Hümmelchen|1992|pp=37–38}}{{cite web|last=Kindell|first=Don|title=Naval Events, October 1940 (Part 1 of 2): Tuesday 1st – Monday 14th|work=British and Other Navies in World War 2 Day-by-Day |publisher=Naval-history.net|url=http://www.naval-history.net/xDKWW2-4010-23OCT01.htm|access-date=26 September 2015}}
Calcutta provided anti-aircraft support for the battleships {{HMS|Warspite|03|2}}, Valiant and {{HMS|Barham|04|2}} when they bombarded Bardia on 3 January, then on 7 January set off from Alexandria as part of the escort of Malta Convoy MW5. This was part of a complex series of operations, with another Malta convoy, Operation Excess being simultaneously run from Gibraltar. Convoy MW5 arrived unharmed at Malta on 10 January, but the escort for the Operation Excess convoy was heavily hit by German dive bombers, sinking the cruiser {{HMS|Southampton|83|2}} and badly damaging the aircraft carrier {{HMS|Illustrious|87|2}} and the cruiser {{HMS|Gloucester|62|2}}.{{Harvnb|Rohwer|Hümmelchen|1992|pp=47–48}}{{cite web|last=Kindell|first=Don|title=Naval Events, January 1941 (Part 1 of 2): Wednesday 1st – Tuesday 14th|work=British and Other Navies in World War 2 Day-by-Day |publisher=Naval-history.net|url=http://www.naval-history.net/xDKWW2-4101-28JAN01.htm|access-date=26 September 2015}} During March 1941, Calcutta escorted a series of troop convoys, known as Operation Lustre, carrying four British divisions from Egypt to Greece.{{Harvnb|Rohwer|Hümmelchen|1992|p=53}} An Italian attempt to attack these convoys resulted in the Battle of Cape Matapan in which three Italian heavy cruisers were sunk.{{Harvnb|Rohwer|Hümmelchen|1992|p=56}}
On 18 April 1941 Calcutta sailed with the Mediterranean Fleet when it escorted the fast transport {{HMS|Breconshire||2}} to Malta, continuing to escort the fleet as it bombarded the port of Tripoli on 20 April.{{Harvnb|Rohwer|Hümmelchen|1992|p=59}}{{Harvnb|Barnett|2000|p=366}} On 24 April, the Mediterranean Fleet launched Operation Demon, the evacuation of British and Commonwealth forces from Greece, with Calcutta taking part in the evacuations.{{Harvnb|Rohwer|Hümmelchen|1992|p=60}}{{Harvnb|Barnett|2000|pp=348–350}} Between 6 and 12 May, Calcutta set out from Alexandria as part of the escort of Malta-bound convoy MW7, before joining the Operation Tiger convoy ferrying tanks from Gibraltar to Egypt.{{Harvnb|Rohwer|Hümmelchen|1992|p=61}}{{cite web|last=Kindell|first=Don|title=Naval Events, May 1941 (Part 1 of 2): Thursday 1st – Wednesday 14th|work=British and Other Navies in World War 2 Day-by-Day |publisher=Naval-history.net|url=http://www.naval-history.net/xDKWW2-4105-32MAY01.htm|access-date=26 September 2015}}
On 20 May, Germany launched an invasion of Crete by airborne troops. The British Mediterranean Fleet deployed to counter any sea-borne reinforcement of the German forces, with three groups of cruisers and destroyers (Forces B, C and D) deployed to the north of Crete to intercept invasion convoys, while a force of battleships and destroyers (Force A1) provided cover in case the Italian Navy attempted to intervene.{{Harvnb|Barnett|2000|pp=352–353}} Calcutta was sent from Alexandria to join Force C, meeting it on 21 May. Force C came under heavy attack by German and Italian aircraft during 21 May, with the destroyer {{HMS|Juno|F46}} being sunk. On 22 May Force C intercepted a convoy of Caïques carrying German troops to Heraklion, escorted by the {{Ship|Italian torpedo boat|Sagittario|1936|2}}. While the convoy was forced to turn back, heavy German air attacks caused the commander of Force C, Rear-Admiral King, to break off the attack. The air attacks damaged the cruisers {{HMS|Naiad|93|2}} and {{HMS|Carlisle|D67|2}} before Force C rejoined the covering Force A1. Further attacks on the combined force damaged the battleships Warspite and Valiant and sank the cruisers Gloucester and {{HMS|Fiji||2}} and the destroyer {{HMS|Greyhound|H05|2}}. Force A1 was ordered back to Alexandria early on 23 May to restock anti-aircraft ammunition.{{Harvnb|Rohwer|Hümmelchen|1992|p=64}}{{Harvnb|Barnett|2000|pp=354–356}}{{cite web|last=Kindell|first=Don|title=Naval Events, May 1941 (Part 2 of 2): Thursday 14th – Saturday 31st|work=British and Other Navies in World War 2 Day-by-Day|publisher=Naval-history.net|url=http://www.naval-history.net/xDKWW2-4105-32MAY02.htm|access-date=2 October 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110823043500/http://www.naval-history.net/xDKWW2-4105-32MAY02.htm|archive-date=23 August 2011|url-status=dead}}
On 27 May, the deteriorating situation on Crete resulted in the evacuation of Allied forces being ordered, with Calcutta along with the cruisers Coventry, {{HMS|Phoebe|43|2}} and {{HMAS|Perth|D29|2}}, the destroyers {{HMS|Jervis||2}}, {{HMS|Janus|F53|2}} and {{HMS|Hasty|H24|2}} and the transport {{HMS|Glengyle||2}} evacuating 6,000 troops from Sfakia on the night of 29/30 May 1941.{{Harvnb|Barnett|2000|pp=360, 362–363}} On the night of 31 May/1 June 1941, a final effort was made to evacuate the remaining troops from Sfakia, with the cruiser Phoebe, the minelayer {{HMS|Abdiel|M39|2}} and the destroyers {{HMS|Kimberley|F50|2}}, {{HMS|Hotspur|H01|2}} and {{HMS|Jackal|F22|2}} picked up a further 3,710 men. Calcutta and Coventry set out from Alexandria on 1 June to provide extra anti-aircraft protection for this force, but the two ships were attacked by two Junkers Ju 88 bombers of Lehrgeschwader 1, which dived out of the sun, giving little warning, about {{convert|100|nmi|km}} north-west of Alexandria. Calcutta was hit by two bombs and sank, with 255 men being rescued by Coventry and 107 men killed or missing.{{Harvnb|Barnett|2000|p=363}}{{Harvnb|Kemp|1999|p=148}}
References
{{reflist|30em}}
Bibliography
- {{cite book|last=Barnett|first=Correlli|title=Engage The Enemy More Closely: The Royal Navy in the Second World War|year=2000|publisher=Penguin|location=London|isbn=0-141-39008-5}}
- {{Cite Colledge2006}}
- {{cite book|last=Friedman|first=Norman|title=British Cruisers: Two World Wars and After|year=2010|publisher=Seaforth Publishing|location=Barnsley, UK|isbn=978-1-59114-078-8 |author-link=Norman Friedman}}
- {{cite book |last=Kiely|first=Ray | title = The Politics of Labour and Development in Trinidad|year=1996| publisher = Press University of the West Indies| isbn= 9789766400170}}
- {{cite book|last=Kemp|first=Paul|title=The Admiralty Regrets: British Warship Losses of the 20th Century|year=1999|publisher=Sutton Publishing|location=Stroud, UK|isbn=0-7509-1567-6}}
- {{cite book|last=Lenton|first=H. T.|title=British & Empire Warships of the Second World War|publisher=Naval Institute Press|location=Annapolis, Maryland|year=1998|isbn=1-55750-048-7|author-link=Henry Trevor Lenton}}
- {{cite book|last=Parkes|first=Oscar|title=Jane's Fighting Ships 1931|year=1973|orig-year=1931 |others=First published by Sampson Low, Marston, London|publisher=David & Charles (Publishers)|location=Newton Abbot, UK|isbn=0-7153-5849-9|ref={{harvid|Parkes|1931}}}}
- {{cite book|editor1-last=Gray|editor1-first=Randal|title=Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1906–1921 |year=1985 |location=Annapolis, Maryland|publisher=Naval Institute Press |isbn=0-85177-245-5 |name-list-style=amp |chapter=Great Britain and Empire Forces|first1=Antony|last1=Preston|author-link=Antony Preston|pages=1–104}}
- {{cite book|last1=Rohwer|first1=Jürgen|last2=Hümmelchen|first2=Gerhard|title=Chronology of the War at Sea 1939–1945|year=1992|publisher=Greenhill Books|location=London|isbn=978-1-85367-117-3}}
- {{cite journal|author=Walrus|title=The Loss of H.C.M.S. Fraser|journal=The Naval Review|date=April 1959|volume=XLVII|issue=2|pages=46–49|url=http://www.naval-review.com/issues/1950s/1959-2.pdf#46|ref={{harvid|The Naval Review|April 1959}}|access-date=26 September 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150927230755/http://www.naval-review.com/issues/1950s/1959-2.pdf#46|archive-date=27 September 2015|url-status=dead}}
- {{cite book|last=Whitley|first=M. J.|title=Cruisers of World War Two: An International Encyclopedia|year=1999|publisher=Brockhampton Press|location=London|isbn=1-86019-8740}}
- {{cite book|last=Winser|first=John de S.|title=B.E.F. Ships before, at and after Dunkirk|year=1999|publisher=World Ship Society|location=Gravesend, UK|isbn=0-905617-91-6}}
External links
- {{Cite web |title= Royal Navy Log Books – HMS Calcutta |access-date= 15 December 2013 |url= http://www.naval-history.net/OWShips-WW1-06Calcutta.htm}} Transcription of ship's logbooks September 1920 to September 1923
{{coord|32|00|N|28|00|E|display=title}}
{{C class cruiser}}
{{June 1940 shipwrecks}}
{{June 1941 shipwrecks}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Calcutta}}
Category:Ships built in Barrow-in-Furness
Category:Maritime incidents in June 1940
Category:Maritime incidents in June 1941
Category:Cruisers sunk by aircraft
Category:World War I cruisers of the United Kingdom
Category:World War II cruisers of the United Kingdom