HMS Tribune was a British T class submarine built by Scotts, Greenock.
Tribune started the war with operations in the North Sea and off the Scandinavian coast.
She also torpedoed and damaged the German tanker Präsident Herrenschmidt, and attacked the Italian merchant Benevento, but failed to hit her.
She survived the war, was sold for scrap in July 1947, and was broken up in November 1947 by Thos.
Her pennant number N76 was 'posthumously' re-used for an unnamed submarine in the 1951 film "Appointment with Venus", taking British troops out to the Channel Islands to rescue a pregnant pedigree cow from the German occupiers.