Ottoman torpedo boat Alpagot

Alpagot was one of the two Akhisar-class torpedo boats built in Italy for the Ottoman Navy in the early 20th century. The ship was launched on April 30, 1904 at the Ansaldo shipyard in Genoa, and was commissioned in June 1904. She took part in the Italo-Turkish War, during which she was sunk in Preveza on September 30, 1911.

Technical data
The Akhisar-class torpedo boats had a hull made of steel, divided into nine watertight compartments. Their overall length was 51 m (50.5 m between perpendiculars), their width was 5.7 m and their draft was 1.4 m. They weighed 165 t. The boats were powered by two vertical three-cylinder triple-expansion steam engines with a total power of 2400 HP, to which steam was supplied by two boilers that came from locomotive engines (also made by Ansaldo). The maximum speed of the boats, which were propelled by two screws, was 24 knots The ships carried a reserve of 60 tons of coal.

Their artillery armament consisted of two single 37 mm quick-firing Hotchkiss guns. Torpedo weapons consisted of two 450 mm deck-mounted single rotatable torpedo launchers mounted behind and in front of the bridge.

The ship's crew consisted of 4 officers and 26 non-commissioned officers and sailors.

Construction
The torpedo boats of the Akhisar-class were ordered by the Ottoman Empire from Italy in December 1902 and a contract was signed that month for the delivery of two vessels.

Alpagot was built at the Ansaldo shipyard in Genoa (shipyard number 132). The keel of the ship was laid in 1904, and was launched on 30 April 1904.

Operational history
Having joined the Ottoman Navy in June 1904, Alpagot took part in training in May 1909 as part of the reforming program of Admiral Douglas Gamble, commander of the British naval mission in Istanbul. During this training, the flagships OTTOMAN IRONCLAD Mesudiye, OTTOMAN IRONCLAD Asar-ı Tevfik and OTTOMAN CRUISER Mecidiye were positioned between Büyükada and Maltepe, while OTTOMAN CRUISER Peyk-i Şevket, OTTOMAN CRUISER Berk-i Satvet, OTTOMAN DESTROYER Samsun and her sister OTTOMAN DESTROYER Yarhisar guarded the passages between the Princes' Islands. The torpedo boats OTTOMAN TORPEDO BOAT Draç, Mosul, Kütahya, Alpagot, Hamidiye, Demirhisar and Sivrihisar sailed from Sivriada and joined the fleet, practicing torpedo attacks against larger ships. Representatives of the United Kingdom observed the exercise from the OTTOMAN DESTROYER TENDER Tirimüjgan. Although the exercise was not in realistic combat conditions, it was the first naval exercise of the Ottoman Navy in twenty years. At the end of the exercise, all ships passed in front of the royal yacht Ertuğrul, which was waiting off Sarayburnu.

On 30 September 1911, during the Italo-Turkish War, Alpagot and the torpedo boat OTTOMAN TORPEDO BOAT Hamidiye were stationed in the port of Preveza when they were attacked by gunfire from the Italian destroyers Artigliere and Italian destroyer Corazziere (1910). The two torpedo boats were unable to return fire before they were sunk.