

Dates: 1947 - 1979
H.M.S. Alliance (P417)
H.M.S. Alliance (P147) (pennant number changed in May 1961 to S67) is a Royal Navy A-class, Amphion class or Acheron class submarine, ordered as part of the 1943 Emergency War Programme she was laid down towards the end of the Second World War and completed in 1947 by Vickers Armstrong, Barrow-in-Furness. The submarine is the only surviving example of the class, having been a memorial and museum ship since 1981.
The Amphion class submarines were designed for use in the Far East, where the size of the Pacific Ocean made long range, high surface speed and relative comfort for the crew important features to allow for much larger patrol areas and longer periods at sea than British submarines operating in the Atlantic or Mediterranean had to contend with. Alliance was one of the seven A-class boats completed with a snort mast - the other boats all had masts fitted by 1949.
From 9 October 1947 until 8 November the submarine undertook a lengthy experimental cruise in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Africa to investigate the limits of the snort mast, remaining submerged for 30 days.
Between 1958 and 1960 the submarine was extensively modernised by having the deck gun and external torpedo tubes removed, the hull streamlined and the sail replaced with a larger (26 feet 6 inch high), more streamlined one constructed of aluminium. The purpose of these modifications was to make the submarine quieter and faster underwater.
Following the modifications the wireless transmitting aerial was supported on a frame behind the sail; but was later replaced with a whip aerial on the starboard side of the fin, which could be rotated hydraulically to a horizontal position.
The original gun access hatch was retained however, allowing Alliance to be briefly equipped with a small calibre deck gun again when serving in the Far East.
In May 1961 the pennant numbers of British submarines were changed so that all surviving submarines completed after the Second World War were now numbered from S01 upwards, and Alliance was given the number S67.
From 1973 until 1979 she was the static training boat at the H.M.S. Dolphin shore establishment, replacing H.M.S. Tabard in this role. In August 1979, she was towed to Vosper Ship Repairers Limited’s yard at Southampton to have her keel strengthened so that she could be lifted out of the water and preserved as a memorial to those British submariners who have died in service.
Since 1981 the submarine has been a museum ship, raised out of the water and on display at the Royal Navy Submarine Museum in Gosport.
There are two other ships of the Royal Navy which have been named H.M.S. Alliance:
Alliance, a 20-gun ship, originally called Alliante captured from the Dutch Navy off the coast of Norway on 22 August 1795 and used as a store ship. Sold May 1802.
H.M.S. Alliance (W77), lead vessel of her class of 4 tugs, launched 1910 and scuttled in Hong Kong in 1941 to prevent her capture by the invading Japanese forces.