The light cruiser HMS Pathfinder had the unhappy distinction of being the first ship ever to be sunk by a torpedo fired by submarine. The only ship which had been sunk by a submarine before her was the USS Housatonic during the American Civil War. She was the lead ship of the Pathfinder class, having a sister ship HMS Patrol[?].
She was built by Cammell Laird[?], Birkenhead, launched on July 16, 1904 and commissioned on July 18, 1905.
Pathfinder was sunk off St. Abbs Head Berwickshire[?] in Scotland on Saturday September 5, 1914 by the German U-21 submarine commanded by Leutnant zur See Otto Hersing. At the time, she was the leader of the 8th Destroyer Flotilla based at the Rosyth[?], Scotland. The ship was struck in a magazine, which exploded causing the ship to sink within a few minutes with the loss of 259 men. There were 11 survivors.
There was also an HMS Pathfinder in the Second World War. She was a P Class Destroyer, penant G 19. Built by Hawthorn Leslie & Co., launched on 10 April 1941; commissioned on April 13, 1942. She was involved in the sinking the German submarines U-162 and U-203, but was bombed off Ramree Island[?], Burma on February 11, 1945.
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