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Stone frigate training establishment of the Royal Navy From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
HMS Sultan is a stone frigate of the Royal Navy in Gosport, Hampshire, England. It is the primary engineering training establishment for the Royal Navy and home to the Network Rail Advanced Apprenticeship Scheme and the EDF Energy engineering maintenance apprenticeship.
HMS Sultan HMS Siskin RAF Gosport | |
---|---|
Gosport, Hampshire in England | |
Coordinates | 50°48′10″N 001°09′39″W |
Type | Stone frigate |
Site information | |
Owner | Ministry of Defence |
Operator | Royal Navy |
Website | Official website |
Site history | |
Built | 1914 |
In use | 1914–1945 (as RAF Gosport) 1945–1956 (as HMS Siskin) 1956–present (as HMS Sultan) |
Garrison information | |
Current commander | Captain Mark Hamilton[1] |
Airfield information | |
Elevation | 7 metres (23 ft) AMSL |
The site was originally RAF Gosport it was then transferred to the Royal Navy during 1945 as Royal Naval Air Station Sultan (HMS Siskin) (Hence a nearby school being named Siskin School) it was then renamed HMS Sultan on 1 June 1956 when the airfield side was closed down and a Mechanical Repair Establishment was moved here from the Flathouse area by Portsmouth Dockyard.
The site was also home to HMS Centurion between 1970 and 1994, as a drafting depot and a pay and accounting centre.
It is the primary engineering training establishment for the Royal Navy. It is also home to the Network Rail Advanced Apprenticeship Scheme[83][84] and the EDF Energy engineering apprenticeship within the Babcock Engineering Academy.[85]
It is home to:
HMS Sultan is home to a number of units of the Volunteer Cadet Corps:
A Better Defence Estate, published in November 2016, indicated that the Ministry of Defence intended on disposing of HMS Sultan by 2026. It was proposed that Submarine Engineer Training would move to HM Naval Base Clyde in 2024, Mechanical Engineering Training to HMS Collingwood in 2025 and the Admiralty Interview Board to HM Naval Base Portsmouth in 2026.[92] In March 2019, the Ministry of Defence announced that closure would be delayed to 2029 at the earliest.[98]
However, in December 2022, the Ministry of Defence announced that the closure had been reversed and HMS Sultan was to remain open. An MOD spokesperson said: "We can confirm that we are retaining HMS Sultan for which we have an enduring requirement."[99]
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