Action of 17 March 1917
Action of 17 March 1917 | |||||||
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Part of the First World War | |||||||
Map of the Strait of Dover | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Germany | United Kingdom | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Unknown | Richard Grenville Bowyer, Lieutenant, HMS Paragon. | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
8 torpedo boats | 4 destroyers | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
None | 1 destroyer sunk, Lieutenant Richard Grenville Bowyer + 1 destroyer damaged |
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- U-Boat Campaign
- 1st Heligoland Bight
- 22 September 1914
- Texel
- 1st Yarmouth
- Scarborough/Hartlepool/Whitby
- Cuxhaven
- 1st Dogger Bank
- Noordhinder Bank
- 2nd Dogger Bank
- 29 February 1916
- 2nd Yarmouth
- Jutland
- 19 August 1916
- 1st Dover Strait
- 16 March 1917
- 2nd Dover Strait
- 4 May 1917
- Lerwick
- 2nd Heligoland Bight
- 11–12 December 1917
- Action of 15 February 1918
- Zeebrugge
- 1st Ostend
- 2nd Ostend
- Mine Barrage
- Tondern
- 24 October 1918
The action of 17 March 1917 was a German raid on British shipping in the Strait of Dover as well as the harbours of Ramsgate and Margate. Two flotillas of German torpedo boats set out from the coast of Flanders and split. One group attacked the British drifters and destroyers patrolling near Goodwin Sands, while the other attacked the towns of Ramsgate and Margate, shelling the towns and shipping in their harbors. While attempting to fight off the German squadron near Goodwin Sands, the destroyers HMS Paragon and HMS Llewellyn were torpedoed. Paragon was sunk and Llewellyn damaged before the Germans withdrew with no casualties.
References
- Newbolt, Henry (1928). History of the Great War: Naval Operations: Vol. IV. London: Longmans Green. OCLC 220475138.
51°20′N 1°32′E / 51.34°N 1.54°E / 51.34; 1.54
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