HMS 
                  Coventry was built by Swan Hunter and launched 6th July 1917. 
                  She was converted to an Anti-Aircraft cruiser in 1937 and finally 
                  sunk in an air attack in the Mediterrranean 14th September 1942. 
                  HMS 
                    Coventry was in the 5th Light Cruiser squadron from February 
                    1918 till May 1919, and served in the Baltic in this time. 
                    Commissioned with the pennant (D43) in May 1919 she was accepted 
                    into the Atlantic fleet, until in 1920 when HMS Coventry became 
                    the HQ ship for naval Inter allied Disarmament Commission. 
                    She went into refit in late 1920 and once the refit was completed 
                    she joined the 2nd Light cruiser squadron and she became flagship 
                    to the Rear admiral Atlantic Fleet, Andrew Cunningham. A Torpedo 
                    explosion while in Malta in March 1923 caused the death of 
                    two of her crew. 
                  At 
                    the outbreak of World War II HMS Coventry was serving with 
                    the Home Fleet between 1939 and 1940, and was damaged on 1st 
                    January 1940 in a German air attack on the Shetland Islands, 
                    north of Scotland. She was assigned to the Mediterranean fleet 
                    in 1940, and was torpedoed and damaged by the Italian submarine 
                    Neghelli in the eastern Mediterranean. HMS Coventry also participated 
                    in the Battle of Cape Spartivento.
                  On 
                    18th May 1941 the first Victoria Cross of the Mediterranean 
                    campaign was awarded poshumously to Petty Officer Alfred Edward 
                    Sephton for "great courage and endurance" while 
                    on HMS Coventry as she was being attacked by Geman Stuka dive 
                    bombers while off Crete. HMS Coventry had gone to the assistance 
                    of a hospital ship which was being attacked by German dive-bombers. 
                    When the enemy engaged HMS Coventry, raking her with machine-gun 
                    fire, Petty Officer Sephton was mortally wounded, a bullet 
                    actually passing through his body and injuring an able seaman 
                    beside him. Although in great pain and partially blinded, 
                    he stuck to his instruments and carried out his duties until 
                    the attack was over. He died of his injuries next day. Petty 
                    officer Sephton was buried at sea. His V.C. was on display 
                    at Coventry Cathedral but was stolen on 25 September 1990.
                  HMS 
                    Coventry (Capt. Ronald John Robert Dendy, RN) was taking part 
                    in Operation "Agreement", a Commando raid agains 
                    Tobruk harbor which ended in a complete disaster for the British 
                    due to the unexpectedly tenacious resistance of Italo-German 
                    troops and the prompt reaction of Axis' air units in the area. 
                    At 1140 hrs, 14th September, HMS Coventry was north of Marsa 
                    Matruh with her escort group (Force "D"), consisting 
                    of destroyers Belvoir, Dulverton, Hursley, Croome. The cruiser 
                    became the main target for a German group of 16 Ju-88s of 
                    I/LG.1 (X° Fliegerkorps) from Iraklion (Crete), under 
                    Capt Joachim Helbig. Each plane carried 1 x 500- and 3 x 250 
                    kg bombs.
                  In 
                    a dive-bombing attack, HMS Coventry sustained 4 direct hits, 
                    3 of the bombs detonating in the engineering spaces, while 
                    the 4th wrecked the bows. HMS Coventry went dead in the water, 
                    badly on fire, with 63 killed. At 1515 hrs, in position 32º48'N, 
                    28º17'E. the ship was scuttled by HMS Zulu. Sadly, Zulu 
                    herself was sunk barely one hour later by 19 Ju-87s. 
                  
                  
                  
                  