Tag Archives: navy

Warship Wednesday, June 12, 2024: Good ol’ Walrus Skull

Here at LSOZI, we take off every Wednesday to look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1833-1954 period and will profile a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places.- Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday, June 12, 2024: Good ol’ Walrus Skull

This image, as are most in this post, via the Danish National­museet system, call no. THM-3787

Above we see the humble little inspektionsskibet (inspection ship) Ingolf of the Royal Danish Navy at anchor in Umanak (Uummannaq), Greenland in the summer of 1934, some 90 years ago.

She was a brawler for her type and task, and if you look closely at the front of her wheelhouse, you just may see her unofficial ship’s mascot, a walrus skull. 

Meet Ingolf

Ingolf was ordered in 1932 with inspiration drawn from the large inspection ship Hvidbjornen (1,050 t, 196 feet oal, 2x87mm, 1 aircraft, 14 knots, circa 1928).

Hvidbjørnen with Heinkel HM 8 seaplane abord. Ingolf would be about 20 feet longer, a little faster, and with a more powerful battery of 4.7-inch guns. THM-18978

You can see the resemblance in Ingolf. THM-18464

Our subject’s name comes from the Old Norse name Ingólfr, meaning the wolf of the king Yngvi. The Dane had previously used the name several times, most recently for an iron-hulled sail-rigged steam schooner cruiser (skonnert-krydseren) that, commissioned in the 1870s, had spent the last two decades of her life as a training ship and polar exploration/survey vessel before retiring in 1926.

The old Krydseren Ingolf

It was (and is) a popular boy’s name, including for use in the Danish royal family.

A young Prince Ingolf of Denmark, shown with Danish Guards. Currently titled as Count Ingolf of Rosenborg, he is a grandson of Danish King Christian X and twice great-grandson (through both his mother and father’s lines) of King Frederik VIII of Denmark.

Constructed in Copenhagen at Orlogsværftet, the Danish naval shipyard, Ingolf was officially a fishery protection vessel intended for service off Greenland, Iceland (a Danish dependency until WWII) and the Faeroes Islands. However, she was a decent little gunboat by any measure.

With some 1,180 tons standard displacement, she ran 213 feet overall with a tubby (roughly 6:1 ratio) 35-foot beam and the capability of floating in just 16 feet of water. Powered by two Thornycroft boilers driving a VTE engine, she could make 16.5 knots on a single screw.

Her main battery consisted of a pair of 4.7-inch P.K. L45 M.32 mounts in shielded turrets fore and aft, a single 57mm L40 M.1885 gun, two 20mm/56 Madsen Rek. K. AAA guns, and two 8mm Madsen light machine guns.

Ingolf in Greenland in the summer of 1936, one of her 4.7-inch mounts being cleaned. Note the light shield of the mount and the fatigue coveralls of her crew, along with the wooden deck. THM-21466

THM-19320

THM-19087

THM-19072

The 57mm gun was typically used for saluting and “shots across the bow,” saving the 4.7-inchers for “war use.” THM-19102

The same model 57mm gun, dating back to the 1880s, was used by the Icelandic Coast Guard on their cutters until the early 2000s. THM-18893

Note the Madsen LMG in an AAA mount. THM-19341

The crew was just 66 men, of which a light platoon-sized landing/survey party could be spared for work ashore in her remote patrol area. The ship carried several whaleboats and survey ships for the task.

Amazing for her size, she was designed from the outset to carry an armed floatplane, which would be craned off and on for operations. More on this later.

Going well beyond Hvidbjornen, when compared to the five other Danish G-I-F fisheries protection/survey flotilla vessels that routinely sailed from Denmark to patrol those waters– Hejmdal (705 t, 175 feet oal, 2x75mm, 13 knot, circa 1935), Beskytteren (389 t, 143 feet oal, 1x57mm, 2x37mm, 11.8 knots, circa 1900), Hejmdal (817 t, 174 feet oal, 2x75mm, 12 kts, circa 1935), Islands Falk (730 t, 183 feet oal, 2x75mm, 2x47mm, 13 knots, circa 1907) and Freja (322 t, 124 feet oal, 2x75mm, 10 knots, circa 1938)– Ingolf was by far the largest, fastest, and strongest of the lot.

It was also intended to use her as a kadetskib, or school ship for naval cadets, a role her old schooner cruiser namesake had often filled.

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Commissioned on 23 April 1934, he had an almost idyllic life, at least until 1939. 

Ingolf seen aft across to port lying at the quay at the Royal Yacht Club, Brussels 1934. THM-3731

Ingolf in the North Atlantic, summer 1936. The little round bottom boat, with her low speed and 6:1 length-to-beam ratio, must have been a zesty ride in high seas. THM-21440

The inspection ship Ingolf fires salutes in this very artistic image. THM-3788

The inspection ship Ingolf is docked in Nykøbing.

Note the walrus skull mounted to the front of her wheelhouse. FHM-165451

FHM-165458

It remained a fixture of her career.

inspektionsskibet Ingolf

Inspektionskibet Ingolf and Maagen at Godthaab. Maagen (110 t, 71 feet oal, sail/diesel 8 knots, 1x37mm gun) was one of several small twin-masted light draft vessels classified invariably as an inspection cutter (inspektionskutter) or orlogskutter (naval cutter) that were permanently deployed to Greenland, Iceland, and the Faeroes used for inspection, coastal survey, and civil administration, typically with a single officer, a CPO, and 6-8 enlisted, often locals. They would steam with the larger Inspektionskibet whenever in the area and perform such yeoman tasks as towing targets during gunnery exercises.

Aircraft

Throughout her service, Ingolf and her smaller OPV companion, Hvidbjornen, would carry two types of light scout or torpedoflyet (torpedo-carrying) aircraft.

The first of these was the Heinkel H.E.8, of which the Danish Marinens Flyvevæsen bought (8) or built from kits (16) two dozen between 1928 and 1938. Classed by the Versailles-restricted Heinkel as two-seat “mail planes” they were easily modified to carry two Madsen light machine guns (one fixed forward-firing, one flexible) and eight hardpoints for small 28-pound bombs.

Heinkel seaplane HM 87 being taken on board in Ingolf, Godthåb summer of 1936. Capable of 130 knots, they had an 800nm range. THM-21432

Heinkel seaplane HM 87 aboard Ingolf in Gotthåb Harbor, 1936. THM-21439

Heinkel HM 87 being craned. Note the kayak in the background. THM-19052

Heinkel HM 87 is taken on board Ingolf in Godthaab ship harbor, August 1936, after photo flights for the Royal Danish Navy’s Chart Archive. To the stern of the gunboat is the 3,800-ton Danish gunnery training cruiser, Niels Juel, with twin 5.9-inch mounts forward. THM-32196

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The second, and by far more formidable, floatplane used by the Danes from our subject was the Hawker Dantorp H.B. III, a type made specifically for the Danish Navy in 1933. Powered by an 850 hp Armstrong Siddeley Leopard IIIA air-cooled 14-cylinder twin-row radial engine– the most powerful radial engine in the world at the time– the three-place scout bomber carried a forward firing Vickers machine gun, a flexible Lewis gun for the gunner/radio operator, and up to 1,500 pounds of bombs or a single torpedo.

Dantorp torpedo plane No. 202 during practice on Isefjorden summer 1936. Note her steelfish centerline. They could reportedly stay aloft for an eight-hour patrol, albeit at 100~ knots. THM-21438

Torpedo plane No. 202 of the Dantorp type on board Ingolf. Talk about a tight squeeze! Note the Dannebrog national flash on the tail of the plane. THM-38091

The boom for launching and retrieving the torpedo plane ran off the mainmast. Just two Dantorps were ordered by the Danish Navy, No. 201 and No. 202. THM-3212

War!

Under the command of CDR Christian Vilhelm Evers (Søofficerskolen 1913) WWII began with Ingolf at the disposal of the Danish naval academy and would remain tasked with training cadets, along with her near sister, Hvidbjørnen.

Ingolf shown during WWII, note the Dannebrog painted on her side, a standard practice that Danish ships used in both world wars, used to try at armed neutrality. THM-9122

Same as above, THM-9123. Note she still has her walrus skull in this shot.

With the socialist government neutering the Danish forces even before the relatively bloodless German invasion in April 1940.

Ingolf, like much of the Danish fleet, was unable to get off a shot before the government capitulated.

Of course, that didn’t stop extensive Free Danish forces from being formed overseas, most of the Danish merchant marine to sail for the Allies– over 5,000 Danish merchant sailors manned over 800,000 tons of shipping for the Allies, many never to be seen again– and the training ship Danmark, in the U.S. in 1940, to train over 5,000 Americans for while operating for the USCG. Two small Danish Navy fisheries patrol boats, Maagen and Ternen, were in Greenland and would serve the Allies.

While sidelined and fundamentally interned in their own country by the occupying German forces, Ingolf and Hvidbjørnen were one of the few vessels allowed to cruise inside Denmark’s territorial waters as they were still allowed to train cadets. Of course, this was done with empty magazines and near-empty bunkers. 

Thus, they were afloat in the Storebælt (Great Belt)– strait between the islands of Zealand and Funen on 29 August 1943 when the Danish Admiralty flashed orders at 0408 to scuttle or make for Sweden. The Germans had begun their Operation Safari to disarm and disband the remnants of the Danish military. However, before they could reach Swedish waters, they were intercepted by the German minesweeper M 413 and torpedo boat T 18. 

CDR Evers and his crew tried to sink Ingolf by opening the sea valves and wreck her equipment but were stopped before the job was complete by the Germans who, according to reports, boarded and took hostages from among the cadets.

Meanwhile, Hvidbjørnen was more successful and was wrecked.

The last call on the inspection ship Hvidbjørnen before it was sunk in Storebælt off Korsør on 29 August 1943. The sinking took place in connection with the state of emergency on 29 August, after a German force had boarded the ship. FHM-167260

Limping to nearby Korsor, the Danish crews were interned and the proud Ingolf seized.

Operation Safari cost the Danish Navy six men were killed and 11 injured, while 258 officers and 2,961 ratings were taken into custody.

Ice distribution in Tårnborglejeren near Korsør, where the crews from the inspection ships Hvidbjørnen and Ingolf were interned after the Germans declared a state of emergency on 29 August 1943. FHM-174949

Danish sailors interned in KB Hallen. The dormitory is arranged on an indoor tennis court. Note the triple-decker bunks. FHM-170704

When the internment sites were closed in October 1943 the enlisted men were paroled although some officers remained in custody or were deported to Germany. Most of those let go subsequently took to a range of resistance activities.

The Germans renamed Ingolf as Sleipnir, then she was used as a flottentender from January 1943 and later bombed in the last months of the war during Allied air raids in Kiel. Leaking, she was towed out to Heikendorf on the east side of the Kieler Fjord, where she sank.

Ingolf as a wreck among wrecks in Kielshavn, May 1945. FHM-165480

She was later scrapped post-war.

Epilogue

CDR Evers, who commanded Ingolf from 1934-36 and 1939-43, retired from the Navy in August 1945, sat on the board of several Danish utility companies into the 1960s, and passed in 1967, aged 80. He was buried with full military honors at Holsteinborg cemetery

Post-war, the Royal Danish Navy would recycle the name for a second Inspektionsskibet Ingolfs (F350) which was in commission from 1962 to 1991. A 1,700-ton Hvidbjørnen class OPV armed with depth charges and a 76mm cannon, the little 239-foot vessel had both a hangar and flight deck for, first, a French Alouette III, and later a British Westland Lynx helicopter.

Inspektionsskibene af Hvidbjørn-Klassen OPV Ingolf (F350) with Sea Lynx S.181 aloft

Notably, members of the old crew from the circa 1934 Inspektionsskibet Ingolfs visited the new ship with the same moniker in April 1984, posing with the vessel’s embarked Lynx militærhelikopter, S.181.

THM-35660


Ships are more than steel
and wood
And heart of burning coal,
For those who sail upon
them know
That some ships have a
soul.


If you liked this column, please consider joining the International Naval Research Organization (INRO), Publishers of Warship International

They are possibly one of the best sources of naval study, images, and fellowship you can find. http://www.warship.org/membership.htm

The International Naval Research Organization is a non-profit corporation dedicated to the encouragement of the study of naval vessels and their histories, principally in the era of iron and steel warships (about 1860 to date). Its purpose is to provide information and a means of contact for those interested in warships.

With more than 50 years of scholarship, Warship International, the written tome of the INRO has published hundreds of articles, most of which are unique in their sweep and subject.

PRINT still has its place. If you LOVE warships you should belong.

I’m a member, so should you be!

Warship Wednesday May 29, 2024: The Blue Beauty of Sevastopol

Here at LSOZI, we take off every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1833-1954 period and will profile a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places.- Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday May 29, 2024: The Blue Beauty

Via the Archivio di Stato di Livorno

Above we see the sleek and elegant, almost light cruiser lines, of the Italian-built one-of-a-kind Soviet Red Banner Fleet’s Project 20I destroyer leader Tashkent, seen near La Spezia on 11 March 1938 during sea trials in which she would reportedly top 43.53 knots– a blistering speed for any warship of any class. You will note that her armament isn’t installed and she is in a very light condition (3,422 tons vs 4,175 full) however, once her guns and torpedo tubes were mounted and she went for speed trials, she still logged 42.7 knots, raising eyebrows around the globe.

Project 20I

The Russian Navy fell in love with large (for their day), light cruiser-sized, very fast destroyers going back to 1910’s Novik (1,620 t, 335 feet oal, 4x 4″, 8 x tt, 37.3 knots) and the earlier circa 1898 trio of Novik/Izumrud class scout cruisers (3,080 t, 360 feet oal, 6x 4.7″, 5 x tt, 25.8 knots).

Novik was a great destroyer for 1910. At some 1,600-tons full load, he could make 37.3 knots, which is still fast for a destroyer today, and carried four twin 18-inch torpedo tubes (eight tubes total) as well as four 4-inch guns.

With the Russian fleet all but destroyed during the Great War and the follow-on civil war that engulfed the world’s largest country from 1914 through 1922, followed by a half-decade of crippling famine and depression, as part of Stalin’s First Five Year Plan in 1928 a half-dozen Project 1/38 destroyer leaders were ordered to help rebuild. Better known as the Leningrad/Minsk class, they were the largest warships (2,350 tons, 418 feet oal) constructed in the Soviet Union at the time. Speedy ships, capable of some 40 knots, they carried five new pattern 5.1″/50 B-13 guns, eight torpedo tubes, mines, and depth charges, giving them a decent punch. However, they were miserable sea boats with a top-heavy design that made them pitch in almost any sea state outside of a flat calm.

As the Soviets were working with both Germany and Italy throughout the 1920s and 30s on several often murky rearmament initiatives, and Moscow was working with the latter on the Kirov/Maxim Gorky-class (Project 26) “medium” cruisers, went with the spaghetti option for a better-designed destroyer leader.

With high speed, stability, and the same rough armament as the Project 1/38 destroyer leaders as a baseline, the 54.6 million lire Project 20I design submitted by Odero-Terni-Orlando, Livorno, went some 40 feet longer and 500 tons heavier than the Leningrads. A powerplant of British-made Yarrow boilers and Parsons turbines (rather than going with Italian competitor Ansaldo) had an expected capability of 100,000 shp but this reached 125,500 on trials.

Original drawings by Odero-Terni-Orlando Shipyards, Livorno, 1936, via the Archivio di Stato di Livorno

Original drawings by Odero-Terni-Orlando Shipyards, Livorno, 1936, via the Archivio di Stato di Livorno

Original drawings by Odero-Terni-Orlando Shipyards, Livorno, 1936, via the Archivio di Stato di Livorno

While the ship couldn’t keep up her 40+ knots speed for long, she could still eke out a 2,800 nm range at 25 knots or 5,030 nm at a speed of 20 knots, giving them legs enough for overseas work. As such, the Soviets planned a series of 12 Project 20Is (4 for the Pacific Fleet, 3 in the Baltic, 3 in the Black Sea, and 2 for the Northern Fleet ) with the class leader built at Livorno and the other 11 constructed in the Motherland at Yard No. 190 (Zhdanov, Leningrad) and No. 198 (Marti South, Nikolaev).

Armament, as designed, would be six 5.1″/50 guns in three twin B-2LM mounts, a twin 3″/50 ZAU 39-K AAA mount, a half dozen 37mm ZAU 70-K “Boforski” AAA singles, and provision for another half dozen of the country’s soon to be famous new 12.7mm DShK 56-P-542 guns.

A torpedo battery of nine 21-inch tubes in three triple turnstiles, with enough reloads to allow for 18 fish, gave her an offensive punch. She could also carry 110 Model 1931 sea mines on rails along with two stern depth charge racks for 20 small (50-pound charge) BM-1 and four large (300-pound charge) BB-1 style ash cans.

Torpedo tubes, Tashkent

Meet Tashkent

Our subject was named for the ancient Central Asian Silk Road city that is the current capital of Uzbekistan and was a traditional Russian naval warship name going back to an 89-ton armed gunboat on the Tsar’s Aral flotilla in the 1870s and a Bolshevik river gunboat of the Volga military flotilla during the Russian Civil War.

Ordered from OTO Livorno in September 1935 in conjunction with the NKTP, she was laid down in January 1937, launched that December, and accepted (unarmed) by Soviet representatives in March 1939. Her contract price was paid in a mix of French francs and British pounds sterling.

Russian destroyer Tashkent under construction at the OTO shipyard in Livorno, Italy in 1937

While it had been planned to send her to the Baltic Fleet where the Leningrad yard would have ready access to her while they made eight copies for service from Murmansk to Vladivostok, the fact that the toothless destroyer would have to transit Spanish waters– where German Kriegsmarine ships and Italian “pirate” submarines were operating in the tail end of the Spanish Civil War, led Moscow to order Tashkent to Odesa in the Black Sea.

Sailing sans any guns under the guise of a passenger ship– complete with a Sovtorgflot or Soviet Commercial Fleet flag, a partial Italian crew, and tarpaulins with faux portholes painted on them stretched across her superstructure– she passed through the Bosphorus and arrived in Odesa on 6 May 1939, turned over to the Soviet Navy some 85 years ago this month.

Following a series of workups after which her Italian contract yard personnel were released, she went to Nikolaev for a temporary armament fit that included old-style 5.1″/50 B-13 singles as her planned twin turrets weren’t yet available. She nonetheless kept her blueish-gray Italian livery until 1941, earning her the nickname of the “Goluboy kreyser” or Blue Cruiser.

You have to love those Italian cruiser lines

Destroyer Tashkent with initial 130-mm B-13 naval guns armament, 1940

War!

With Stalin and Hitler officially on the same side for the first 22 months of WWII, to the horror of Eastern Poland and the Baltics, Tashkent only got into the fighting past Barbarossa but she quickly made up for lost time.

Under Capt. (3rd rank) Vasily Nikolaevich Eroshenko (Frunze 1930), Tashkent was at Nikolaev, finally receiving her twin 5.1″/50 mounts and dark wartime scheme in June 1941 but soon was able to sortie to Sevastopol where she would lead a scratch destroyer squadron that included three smaller (2402 t) Russki Project 7 type tin cans– Bodriy, Besposhchadny, and Bditelny.

With her twin turrets installed

Dispatched to help defend threatened Odesa on 22 August, she spent a week there, delivering NGFS (540 5.1-inch shells) to Red Army troops fighting advancing German and Romanian divisions until she was damaged by a 12-bomb near miss from German bombers on 30 August that forced her to limp back to Sevastopol at 12 knots to repair split seams and flooding of frames 192-205. She left a detachment of her crew behind in Odessa to join the doomed 1st Naval Infantry (Marine) Regiment ashore.

Cobbled back together with cement and steel patches in drydock under a blacked-out camouflage screen with volunteer yard workers only allowed onboard after dark, and with the Germans advancing on the Crimea and isolating Sevastopol by early October, Tashkent was withdrawn with the rest of the fleet to the Eastern Black Sea.

Tashkent and submarine Shch-212 in Poti, Georgia 1942

Tashkent moored with the submarine D-5 6.26.1942

She soon returned in early December to land 700 tons of vitally-needed ammunition in the besieged city and in January came back to deliver a brigade of Siberian Riflemen from the newly formed 386th Rifle Division, on both runs remaining in the area pulling naval gunfire support until her 5-inch magazines were exhausted.

Ship’s boy Borya Kuleshin, later holder of the Order of the Red Star, aboard Tashkent, his PPShka at the ready.

Tashkent shelling German positions near Sevastopol, while still in the harbor

With Siberian Riflemen

Further resupply runs/NGFS stints to Sevastopol by Tashkent would occur regularly over the next five months, earning her legendary status as the guardian angel of the city. Her ability to make high-speed 30+ knot runs through the 250 sea miles from Novorossiysk to Sevastopol made her invaluable, akin to the Japanese cruisers and destroyers running supplies and troops via “The Slot” down the New Georgia Sound to Guadalcanal in 1942.

To be sure, other Black Sea ships of all stripes made similar runs, but none as many times as the Blue Cruiser, which in the spring and summer of 1942 would carry 19,300 troops to the city along with over 2,500 tons of munitions and supplies.

Her final blockade run on 26 June to Sevastopol brought 944 replacement soldiers, a half-battery of light field guns, 760 Mosin rifles, 125 PPSh burp guns, 20 tons of ammunition, 26 tons of food, and 4.5 tons of other vital cargo. She left just after midnight the next morning with a cargo of 2,100 evacuees, primarily women and children along with war correspondent and novelist Evgeny Petrovich Petrov.

Among her cargo were the panels of the huge circa 1904 panoramic painting “Defense of Sevastopol” of Crimean War fame by Franz Roubo.

Sevastopol fell within the week.

On her way to Novorossiysk at 33 knots, Tashkent was spotted just after dawn by Luftwaffe aircraft, and formations of Junkers Ju 87 Stuka and Ju 88 bombers soon began dropping strings of bombs across her path, with waves coming every 5-10 minutes for four hours.

According to Soviet reports, her crew counted 86 aircraft and 336 bombs which, while miraculously no direct hits were logged (although over 100 passengers were lost or wounded), the unarmored Italian stallion popped so many seams and buckled so many plates that she shipped 1,700 tons of water and buried her bow.

Still, she made it close enough to Novorossiysk by 0900 for ground-based Red Air Force planes to provide top cover against the bombers and, linking up with the Project 7U destroyer Sobrazitelny which offloaded several hundred refugees, made it to port– albeit under tow.

Tashkent is approaching the destroyer Sobrazitelny to reload evacuees from Sevastopol. June 27, 1942

Evacuees from Sevastopol move from the damaged destroyer leader Tashkent to the destroyer Soobrazitelny

There, the barely floating wreck unloaded the rest of her precious cargo and was inspected by the mustachioed commander of the North Caucasian Front, Marshal Semyon Budyonny of the old 1920s Konarmiya.

Semyon Budyonny aboard Tashkent

Five days later, a 64-bomber raid on Novorossiysk left Tashkent riddled with bombs and, suffering an explosion of her torpedo magazine, settled on the bottom with almost half of her crew dead, hospitalized, or missing.

Salvage divers found no less than seven large holes in her hull, ruling out a service return.

Her guns were able to be recovered and went on to partially arm the destroyers Ognevoy and Ozmotelny along with an ersatz armored train, while her crew went to other units, for instance, her skipper, Capt. Eroshenko, reporting to the old Svetlana-class cruiser Krasnyi Kavkaz (Red Caucasus, ex-Admiral Lazarev) as that ship’s skipper in August 1942.

He would survive the war and retire from service in 1960 following command of the cruiser Chkalov, elevated on the retired list to a rear admiral.

Eroshenko’s grave at the Serafimovskoye cemetery in St. Petersburg includes the Tashkent in profile. He passed in 1970 at 64 and held just about every decoration the state could bestow a sailor.

Tashkent would later be raised in late 1944, but it was only to salvage her for scrap.

 

Epilogue

Of Tashkent’s planned 11 Russian-made sisters, none took to the water.

No doubt building on lessons learned from the construction of Tashkent for the Russians, the Italians ordered a dozen very similar (5420t, 466 ft oal, 8 x 5.3″/45, 8 x tt, 41 knots) Capitani Romani class scout cruisers were ordered via OTO starting in 1939 but only four were competed.

The destroyer San Marco (D563) (ex Giulio Germanico from the Capitani Romani class) passes through Venice post-war, with American DP 5″/38s installed.

The Soviets recycled Tashkent’s name as a Kara-class (Project 1134B) ASW cruiser built at Nikolaev in the 1970s that remained in service until 1992. She was later sold to a breaker in India.

As seen from the screening destroyer USS John Young (DD 973), foreground, the Soviet large anti-submarine ship Tashkent during operations with the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson (CVN 70), circa 1985. USN Photo DN-SC-85-12178

Beyond that, our subject has numerous monuments and markers around the Black Sea area, postage stamps, and the like while the Black Sea Museum maintains a large-scale model and relics.

She has been extensively remembered in maritime art and model box art.

1940 destroyer Tashkent with B13 singles – box art Trumpeter

1942 Sevastopol siege era destroyer Tashkent – box art Trumpeter

Italian built Tashkent Soviet Russian navy destroyer leader in Black Sea WWII by Adam Werka

Tashkent’s last run

In 1970, the Leon Saakov-directed Mosfilm technicolor war drama, More v gone (“The Sea is On Fire”), recalled Tashkent’s last trip to Sevastopol and evac run to Novorossiysk and, while there is clearly a lot of up talk to the glorious worker’s paradise, is stirring and was made with lots of help from the Red Banner Fleet.


Ships are more than steel
and wood
And heart of burning coal,
For those who sail upon
them know
That some ships have a
soul.


If you liked this column, please consider joining the International Naval Research Organization (INRO), Publishers of Warship International

They are possibly one of the best sources of naval study, images, and fellowship. http://www.warship.org/membership.htm

The International Naval Research Organization is a non-profit corporation dedicated to the encouragement of the study of naval vessels and their histories, principally in the era of iron and steel warships (about 1860 to date). Its purpose is to provide information and a means of contact for those interested in warships.

With more than 50 years of scholarship, Warship International, the written tome of the INRO has published hundreds of articles, most of which are unique in their sweep and subject.

PRINT still has its place. If you LOVE warships you should belong.

I’m a member, so should you be!

Warship Wednesday (on a Thursday) May 23, 2024: Taking One’s Place for Overlord

Here at LSOZI, we take off every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1833-1954 period and will profile a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places.- Christopher EgerWarship Wednesday (on a Thursday) May 23, 2024: Taking One’s Place for Overlord

Warship Wednesday (on a Thursday) May 23, 2024: Taking One’s Place for Overlord

Naval History and Heritage Command photo NH 60867

Above we see Royal Navy’s D (Danae)-class light cruiser HMS Durban (D 99) at Honolulu harbor, 22 May 1928, with a good view– captured by a U.S. Navy photographer– of one of her four sets of triple 21-inch torpedo tube mounts trained out, with a pair of torpedoes visible in lower tubes! She was on her way to Bermuda to take up a position on the West Indies Station after spending six years in Hong Kong, the hard life of a British cruiser in the 1920s, you see.

Designed for the Great War, Durban missed her dance but made it to the next one– although she never saw the end.

“The Ds”

A heavier and more seaworthy (not to mention better armed) follow-up to the Royal Navy’s five sprawling classes of “C” type light cruisers, the Admiralty wanted a full dozen more advanced “D” class units and began ordering them in 1916 under the Emergency War Program, with class leader HMS Danae.

British C-class cruisers HMS Cairo and Calcutta, seen in October 1927 at Boston’s Charleston Navy Yard. The D class cruisers were basically these ships, lengthened some 20 feet, and given better armament. Leslie Jones Collection BPL

Some 4,850 tons (pushing 6,000 later) they were rakish ships, with a 472-foot overall length and a perfect 1:10 ratio beam of 47 feet to match. Powered by a half dozen Yarrow boilers pushing a pair of geared steam turbines– which the British had really figured out by this point in time– they were planned to make 29 knots. However, on trials, some bested this.

They also had limited aircraft facilities. 

Danae class cruiser HMS Diomede and a Fairey IIIF Seaplane, March 1933. While able to support seaplanes, they could not carry them. The aviation platform installed on these cruisers was a simple flying-off pad for light, wheeled STO aircraft, such as the Sopwith Pup. Image AAE 0096

Armament was a main battery of a half dozen 6″/45 BL Mark XIIs in single shielded mounts– good guns that could fire a 112-pound HE shell to 23,770 yards at a rate of as many as seven shells per minute with a well-rehearsed crew. These were arranged in a straight line down the center of the ship with each able to fire broadside but only two able to fire ahead and two astern.

HMS Danae by Dr Dan Saranga via Blueprintscom

A pair of QF 3-inch 20 cwt L/45 Mk. I AA guns– meant more for counter zeppelin use than planes– four 3-pounders, as well as a couple of Lewis guns, rounded out the armament with her brace of 12 torpedo tubes in four triple mounts, enabling six torpedoes in a broadside, closing us out.

The Danae class cruisers HMS Dragon, Danae, and Despatch off Bermuda, 1931.

Meet Durban

Our subject, the second RN warship named for a then-colonial South African city, was laid down at Scotts Shipbuilding and Engineering Company, Greenock, in January 1918, at a time when the German High Seas Fleet had been bottled up for more than a year. The Kaiser threw in the towel and his fleet was soon littering the floor of Scapa Flow, which slowed down Durban’s construction.

Durban in the stocks via Two centuries of shipbuilding by the Scotts at Greenock, National Library of Scotland

HMS Durban was only completed by the Devonport Dockyard in November 1921 and joined the fleet, one of only eight cruisers to carry a Mark III* Dreyer Table and one of only 10 to carry the new 12-foot U.B.3 Combined Height and Rangefinder as part of her fire control system.

Durban was one of the lucky ones. Of the dozen classmates ordered, four– Daedalus, Daring, Desperate, and Dryad— were all canceled. Meanwhile, only four– Danae, Dauntless, Dragon, and Delhi— actually saw a few weeks of wartime service.

With the London Naval Treaty limiting the RNs cruiser tonnage, two of the class, Diomede and Dunedin, were loaned promptly to the nascent Royal New Zealand Navy from 1924—25 until 1937 when such treaty limits were cast aside.

In truth, it was surprising that Durban never saw service during the same period with a South African Navy, although she did call on her namesake city at least once. This was likely because the circa 1920s and 30s South African Naval Service was cash-strapped in the extreme and, while they operated the old 4,000-ton Mersey-class cruiser HMS Thames (as SATS General Botha) it was as a dockside training hulk, with her guns and boilers removed and the former engine and boiler rooms converted into a gym!

Happy Interbellum Cruises

Durban’s first detail was to the 5th Light Cruiser Squadron on China Station, where she arrived in early 1922 before transferring six years later to the West Indies Station.

HMS Durban seen in Durban in December 1926 (City of Durban Archives)

Her time in China included sending ashore various naval landing parties in Nanking and Shanghai during periods of unrest.

Via the Gordon Smith collection, Naval-History.net, taken by Chief Yeoman of Signals George Smith, DSM, Royal Navy 1904-28:

Signalmen near one of Durban’s 6 inch guns in 1927 Shaghai. Via the Gordon Smith collection, Naval-History.net,

HMS Durban, likely China station. Note her extensive awnings. Via the Gordon Smith collection, Naval-History.net,

HMS Durban in China 1927, the Gordon Smith collection, Naval-History.net,

Durban Naval landing party on the forecastle (not known if Shanghai or Nanking) 1927. the Gordon Smith collection, Naval-History.net,

Durban Naval Landing Party Inspection 1927. the Gordon Smith collection, Naval-History.net,

Durban Naval Landing Party Attack 1927 the Gordon Smith collection, Naval-History.net,

Durban Resurrection Bay Alaska 1928, the Gordon Smith collection, Naval-History.net,

While on Atlantic service, she made at least one call at Boston and was photographed by Boston Globe photographer Leslie Jones.

HMS Durban in Navy Yard July 14 1930. Leslie Jones via Commonwealth

Visitors on board HMS Durban Navy Yard July 14, 1930.Leslie Jones via BPL

She returned home after service with the South Atlantic Division for an extensive overhaul that added a new style of advanced range finders. Also added were more AAA guns: a total of three 4-inch (in place of the older two 3″L/45s) 2-pounder pom-poms, two Vickers machine guns, and eight Lewis guns.

The entry for the D class in Jane’s circa 1931.

Re-commissioned at Portsmouth on 6 March 1934 for service with the Third Cruiser Squadron in the Mediterranean, Durban was sent to the Med for two years.

Open-source naval journals carried the news of this cyclic movement of HMs cruiser force, with Durban often appearing in the pages of such volumes, with ONI dutifully cataloging each piece of news.

“Cruiser returning home. HMS Durban, which is to be relieved by H.M.S. Exeter on the American and West Indies Station.” note the ONI stamp. NH 60999

Eighth Cruiser Squadron – HMS Durban, which has come home to undergo an extensive refit at Chatham, and is being replaced by the Danae on the American and West Indies Station. Photo: Abrahams & Sons, Devenport. NH 60800

“Fifth Light Cruiser Squadron. HMS Durban which is to be recommissioned for further service on the China Station.” Photo: Abrahams & Sons, Devenport. NH 60998

The U.S. ONI kept extensive files on foreign warships, which included the best photographs that could be taken during port calls or whenever a vessel passed through the Panama Canal. Several of the D-class got close enough to be immortalized in the ONI collection– for instance, sister HMS Delhi when she called at Long Beach in 1932.

Durban had her visit from a Navy shutterbug on 22 May 1928 while in Honolulu, as this series will show:

Returning to the Home Isles in September 1936, she was in ordinary when the Germans marched into Poland three years later. Plans were afoot to refit the class with a battery of newer 4.5-inch guns instead of their old-style 6-inchers, but that was shelved as there simply weren’t enough funds.

War!

Assigned to the 9th Cruiser Squadron, Durban was reactivated and dispatched to perform convoy defense in the South Atlantic between Freetown and the Cape.

Soon transferred to her old 5th Squadron beat on China Station, she arrived in Singapore by Halloween 1939 and sailed for Hong Kong soon after. Deployed for trade defense and patrol, her primary duty going into 1940 was to keep tabs on German shipping plying the Dutch East Indies ports and then, later, join in the chase of the Hilfskreuzer Atlantis (HSK 2), aka “Raider C.”

Had Durban encountered Atlantis (which carried six 6-inch guns and four torpedo tubes) it could have been a fight similar to that of the German merchant raider Kormoran and Australian light cruiser HMAS Sydney, who clashed in a mutually destructive battle in the Pacific in 1941. Still, there is no doubt that both ships would have given it their best. 

NH 60997

This sort of campaigning in the backwater of the war, at least until December 1941, continued including riding shotgun on the occasional Bombay to Singapore convoy (BM 005, BM 004/2, BM 009, etc).

Meanwhile, the war on the other side of the world was less kind, with sister Dunedin torpedoed and sunk by U-124 off Saint Paul’s Rock in the South Atlantic, on 24 November 1941.

When the Japanese decided to go manic, all the obsolete Durban could do was help pick up the pieces. She escorted the troopships taking the survivors of the lost HMS Repulse and HMS Prince of Wales to Colombo and in January 1942 evacuated Royal Navy staff from Singapore to Batavia in the Dutch East Indies.

While escorting troop and evac convoys between Singapore and the Dutch Indies in February 1942, she came under a Japanese air attack north of the Sunda Strait which left her forward 6-inch gun out of service. Eight ratings were killed and several were wounded.

Ordered to put into Freemantle the next week, she was sent on the slow route via the Indian Ocean to the Brooklyn Navy Yard for repairs– dropping off Admiral Thomas C. Hart, former commander of the doomed U.S. Asiatic Fleet, at Colombo.

On her way to the U.S, Durban came across the German minelayer Doggerbank (Schiff 53) (5154 GRT, built 1929, former British Speybank) as she was sowing a minefield off Capetown, a task that Durban came close to, but not close enough, to stopping, on the evening of 13 March 1942.

As detailed here:

Operation Kopenhagen comprised the laying of a minefield near Capetown, where many shipping lanes converged. Ships from Australia and New Zealand arrived here to make the final leg to Britain, while important troop convoys passed through the area en route to the Middle East. Doggerbank, unlike a normal minelayer, wasn’t equipped with mine rails on a lower deck, which meant that all mines had to be hoisted to the main deck. For operation “Kopenhagen”, 75 of them were prepared, disguised as deckcargo. Schneidewind decided to start the operation during the nighttime hours of March 12. Carefully, the Doggerbank approached the target area on the 12th. Things almost went wrong when in the late afternoon, an aircraft was sighted. It hailed the ship, asking for its name and destination. Schneidewind [her skipper] ordered to signal “Levernbank from New York via Recife to Capetown”, waved a few times with his hat and then left the bridge. His resolute performance worked and the aircraft was apparently satisfied with the answer. Later that evening, a small ship was sighted, which was easily evaded. Sixty mines were laid in the early morning of the 13th.

Schneidewind decided to retreat through the normal shipping lanes around Cape Good Hope to avoid suspicion. The idea was to lay more mines near Cape Agulhas for operation “Kairo”. Around 1945 that evening, a warship appeared on the horizon, flashing signals with a red light. Schneidewind himself thought it was a Birmingham-class cruiser, but it was in fact the older HMS Durban, en route to Simonstown for repairs. The signal the cruiser flashed was the standard “NNJ” signal, ordering to hoist the secret letters for identification. Naturally, the Germans didn’t know this signal and simply didn’t send a reply. After coming closer, the Durban asked “What ship”, to which Schneidewind replied, “Levernbank from New York to Durban, good night”. Again, his bold answer worked, as the Durban steamed on and disappeared in the dark.

Durban arrived in New York on 9 April 1942 for a period of repair that would last two months, she would emerge for a week of full power trials and gunnery exercises off Hampton Roads before leaving for Portsmouth Dockyard, where she would arrive at the end of June.

She would also pick up radar– a Type 286 air warning– but, uncommon for her class, retain her torpedo tubes, a feature she would only share with sister Despatch, as the rest of the “D” class cruisers had landed theirs. Likewise, she would have 8 20 mm Oerlikon singles installed in place of the old 2-pounder pom-pom guns. A puny counter-aircraft fit, but better than what she had anyway. To offset this extra topside weight, she lost her aircraft handling capability and landed one of her 6-inchers.

HMS Durban (D99) October 1942, Portsmouth. Note her fresh camo scheme. IWM A 22986

HMS Durban (D 99) Underway in the Solent. Note her wartime camouflage and her five remaining main guns turned to port. IWM FL 8998

Further refits and workups would see her emerge and join a “Winston Special” Convoy (WS 23) in October, sailing from Scotland via the Cape of Good Hope to Egypt and, later, India, ultimately arriving in Bombay in December.

Durban would continue to serve in the Indian Ocean on trade defense, undertaking several additional convoys, until ordered back to Portsmouth in October 1943.

Somewhat hopelessly obsolete by this point in the war– her sisters — she was reduced to a skeleton crew and laid up, with dockyard personnel instructed to remove her armament, sensors, and virtually anything else of value so long as she could still make steam and revolutions.

She had one more run to make.

Normandy

Durban was tapped, along with several older warships, to become part of the Gooseberry breakwater that would shelter the Mulberry Port off the beach at Normandy, allowing the rapid landing of large cargo to move ashore in the days after successful Overlord landings in June 1944.

HMS Durban (D99) stripped off Normandy on 7 June 1944, RCN photo

On D+3, 9 June 1944, Durban was scuttled to form part of Gooseberry 5 off Ouistreham in the Seine Bay, with gunners stationed on the grounded ships helping defend the enterprise.

Arial view of the Mulberry Harbour Port Winston off Arromanches, Normandy

June 1944. A Gooseberry, a line of block ships laid off the beaches at Ouistreham to form a reef before the rest of the Mulberry Port was assembled. The Gooseberry includes the old HMS Durban and the Dutch cruiser Sumatra. Two DUKWs can be seen moving amongst the block ships. Note: Goosberry 5 at Sword beach. Photo by LT Claude Henry Parnall IWM A24055

A Gooseberry, a line of block ships laid off the beaches to form a reef before the rest of the Mulberry was assembled. The Gooseberry includes the old HMS Durban and the Dutch cruiser Sumatra. Photo by LT Claude Henry Parnall A24054

Notably, Durban would soon be joined in the Gooseberry by sister Dragon, which had been operated by the Free Polish Navy since January 1943 but had been damaged off Caen by a German human torpedo on 8 July. Ironically, Durban would herself be hit by another fish launched from a Marder on 3 August while already reefed, after surviving a fierce three-day storm.

Nonetheless, the harbor worked.

By D+5, with the artificial harbor in place, 10,000 tons of cargo a day would be unloaded, a rate that would increase to 20,000 tons per day by D+20, keeping pace through the end of August.

Epilogue

Today, what is left of Durban remains in 36 feet of water off Ouistreham.

Few artifacts remain ashore of the cruiser, notably her ship’s bell, which has long been housed at the chapel in the Old Fort in Durban.

Her 1942 repair records from the Brooklyn Navy Yard are in the National Archives.

As for Durban’s sisters, the five still afloat after VJ-Day were soon paid off, and all were quickly sold for scrap, with the last, Delhi, leaving for the breakers in 1948.

The Royal Navy never reused the name “Durban” but the South African Navy did, ordering the SAS Durban (M 1499), one of several Ton class mine sweepers built in the UK during the 1950s specifically for the SAN.

She was preserved as a museum in her namesake city from 1991 through 2022.


Ships are more than steel
and wood
And heart of burning coal,
For those who sail upon
them know
That some ships have a
soul.


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Warship Wednesday, May 15, 2024: The Great Grey Raider

Here at LSOZI, we take off every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1833-1954 period and will profile a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places.- Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday, May 15, 2024: The Great Grey Raider

Royal Australian Navy image

Above we see HMAS Kanimbla (C78), her crew, and embarked soldiers crowding her decks, as she pulls into Brisbane after her deployment to Borneo, in September 1945. LCVP K16 (Coxswain Able Seaman William Winkle B/4301) can be seen in the foreground, other landing craft at the ready in their davits, and 20mm Oerlikon cannons facing skyward.

You wouldn’t know it to look at her, but by this point in the war, this Australian LSI(L) had captured 22 ships, a train, and a floating dock in addition to her service as one of the country’s first amphibs.

Meet Kanimbla

Our subject, named for the Kanimbla Valley in New South Wales, was ordered by the Australian McIlwraith, McEacharn & Co from the famed shipyard of Harland & Wolff, Belfast– the same people that built the Titanic— in 1933.

Intended for passenger service between Cairns and Fremantle with 203 First Class and 198 Cabin Cass passengers, she was delivered in 1936.

She was constructed complete with a fully operational radio broadcasting station that would broadcast ashore as she moved around the continent. The equipment was manufactured by AWA in Australia and had been shipped to Ireland for installation while the ship was still under construction.

As detailed by Australian Old Time Radio, “Regular broadcasts commenced on 6,010 KHz., with one-hour programs several evenings each week, with their announcer and singer Eileen Foley. They also had a female orchestra with a pianist, violinist, and cellist performing on air, and at nightly on-board dances.”

Armed Merchant Cruiser

Then, with the outbreak of war, MV Kanimbla became HMS Kanimbla (F23), requisitioned on 5 September 1939 and so commissioned the following month. Her role– outfitted with seven 6-inch guns, two 3-inch high-angle AA guns, a pair of Lewis guns, and some depth charge launchers (but no sound gear or radar)– would be that of an armed merchant cruiser.

While officially a Royal Navy warship, she had an almost exclusively Australian crew of 342, commanded by the redoubtable CDR Frank E. Getting, RAN. Following the installation of her armament at Garden Island Dockyard, she left Sydney on 13 December 1939 for Hong Kong where she took up station, tasked with looking for Axis blockade runners and raiders.

Curiously, at this early stage of the war, she still carried her peacetime McIlwraith McEachern livery, despite her serious armament.

Aerial starboard side view of the armed merchant cruiser HMS Kanimbla by No 2 Squadron RAAF. She is armed with seven 6-inch guns of which four can be seen forward on the forecastle and in the well deck. The portside guns are trained on the broadside. Two of the three after guns can also be seen, immediately behind the superstructure and on the poop. Unlike the forward guns the after guns are not shielded. A covered 3-inch AA gun is mounted abreast the funnel. Windows at the corner and sides of her bridge structure have been plated in. She remains painted in her owners’ colors. (Naval Historical Collection, AWM 300845)

One of her primary roles in this period was that of convoy escort.

In all, in the 20 months between WS 002S, which Kanimbla joined on 8 August 1940, and when she left OW 005/1 on 18 March 1943, our big auxiliary cruiser rode shotgun on no less than 22 convoys. These were primarily slow Indian Ocean troop and material convoys of the WS (Suez Canal to Bombay), BP (Bombay to the Persian Gulf), BA/AB (Bombay to Aden/Aden to Bombay), OW (Australia to Ceylon), and US/SU (Australia to Colombo and the Suez/vice versa) variety.

The most important of these was the Schooner convoy which carried two brigades of irreplicable combat-experienced Australian troops back home from the Middle East on 23 June-7 August 1942, during the height of the invasion scare from Japan– while Port Moresby’s harbor was under Japanese air raids and the Imperial Navy was celebrating sinking four Allied cruisers at the Battle of Savo Island, to include HMAS Canberra with our good Capt. Getting, Kanimbla’s plankowning skipper, in command.

Nonetheless, our subject took two important breaks from her convoy duties during this era.

Rounding up Scandinavians

While steaming near Japan in March 1940, Kanimbla came across the SS Vladimir Mayakovsky, a 3,972-ton Soviet ChGMP steamer out of Odesa that was originally built as the Bela Kun. Smelling something off about the vessel as it A) tried to run for it, (B) was loaded with 4,582 tons of copper and 215 tons of molybdenite, and C) the Soviets at the time at war with the Finns and in occupation of half of Poland and the entirety of the Baltic States, Kanimbla seized the ship and, five days later, was ordered to hand it over to French cruiser Lamotte Picque who forcibly interned it and its 40 member crew at Saigon.

Mayakovsky and her crew sweated it out at Saigon under French guns for six months then was allowed to leave after the local administration relieved its cargo of coffee and ore. The ship somehow survived WWII and was only removed from Soviet service in 1967.

Following the April 1940 German invasion and occupation of the kingdoms of Denmark and Norway, Kanimbla was ordered to the coastal waters of China to intercept merchant ships flying those flags and send them, with polite yet armed detachments aboard, to Hong Kong so they would come under Allied control.

The captured ships, most scooped up at the mouth of the Yangtse River (near Shanghai), included 10 Norwegians: freighters D/S Agnes (1311 grt), D/S Hafthor (1,594 grt), D/S Corona (3264 grt), D/S Talisman (4,765 tons), D/S Wilford (2158 grt), D/S Tonjer (3268 gt), D/S Sheng Hwa (5492 grt), D/S Norwegian, D/S Sygna (3881 gt), and D/S Gabon (4651 grt); as well as one Dane: the beautiful 1,462-ton cable ship SS Store Nordiske of the Great Northern Telegraph Company.

From the collection of the Australian National Maritime Museum:

SS AGNES, Norwegian cargo steamship, from HMAS KANIMBLA, April 1940

SS CORONA, Norwegian cargo steamship, from HMAS KANIMBLA, April 1940

SS HAFTHOR, Norwegian cargo steamship, from HMAS KANIMBLA, April 1940

SS SHENG WHA, Norwegian cargo steamship, from HMAS KANIMBLA, April 1940

SS STORE NORDISKE, Danish cable ship, from HMAS KANIMBLA, April 1940

SS SYGNA, Norwegian cargo steamship, from HMAS KANIMBLA, April 1940

SS TALISMAN, Norwegian cargo steamship, from HMAS KANIMBLA, April 1940

SS TONJER, Norwegian cargo steamship, from HMAS KANIMBLA, April 1940

SS WILFORD, Norwegian cargo steamship, from HMAS KANIMBLA, April 1940

To this was later added the Norwegian flagged Wallam & Co freighter D/S Dah Pu (1974 grt).

True to form, most went on to sail for the Allied cause– typically on charter to the Ministry of War Transport, managed by British India SN Co. Ltd.– with many subsequently lost to enemy action.

Iran

Operation Countenance, the Allied effort to invade and rapidly occupy the neutral nation of Iran, with the Soviets taking the north and the British the south, kicked off on 25 August 1941.

The Persian Gulf side of the operation, led by Commodore Cosmo Graham, aimed to seize the ports of Bandar Shahpur, Abadan, and Khorramshahr with a force that consisted simply of Kanimbla— which was the largest warship in the squadron– assisted by seven light escorts (sloops, corvettes, armed yachts, trawlers, et. al).

Up the river Khar Musa, the Gulf railway terminus port of Bandar Shahpur (now Bandar-e Emam Khomeyni) had a pair of Iranian gunboats watching over eight German and Italian merchant ships that had been sheltering there in large part since 1939. This was tasked to Force B (Bishop) under the command of Captain (later RADM) W. L. G. Adams, OBE, RN.

In an operation overnight on 24/25 August codenamed Bishop, Kanimbla, with Capt. Adams and 300 men of two companies the Indian 3/10th Baluch Regiment embarked on the 11th, and accompanied by HM Indian Sloop Lawrence (L83) and the HM Armed Trawler Arthur Kavanagh, crept up the river and made their surprise entrance just before dawn. Two small tugs and several local dhows which had been “requisitioned” to shuttle around groups of Baluch troopers and armed Australian Jack Tars, disguised in local mufti, preceded the group.

At sea off Bandar Shapur, Iran. 1941-08. Dhow 8 manned by RAN personnel from HMS Kanimbla who were visible on deck, but during the operation to capture German and Italian shipping and occupy Bandar Shapur were dressed as Arabs. AWM 134373

The German and Italian merchies were still in their full-color peacetime livery, and their crews enjoyed themselves in the backwaters of old Persia.

Captured outright were the 331-ton Italian-built Iranian gunboats Chahbaaz (Shahbaaz) and Karkas, slow Fiat diesel-powered 169-footers that mounted 3-inch guns. Likewise, the Commonwealth force easily seized the government railway jetty complete with a train and floating dock that were the property of the Iranian navy. That night, the surrendered Iranian officers, led by the local port captain, dined aboard Kanimbla and were treated to whisky and cheroots afterward.

Iranian patrol boat KARKAS at Bandar-e Šāhpūr 1941

Bandar Shapur, Iran. 1941-08. Port side view of a captured Iranian gunboat Karkas manned by Australians alongside Railway Jetty in the harbor.

The gunboats would spend the rest of the war (dubbed Hira and Moti) as training and patrol ships at Bombay with the Royal Indian Navy then were later repatriated to the Shah in 1946.

Scuttled were five German Deutsche Dampfshiffahrts Gesellschaft (Hansa Line) freighters: MS Weißenfels (7866 grt), MS Wildenfels (6224 grt) — which was later refloated, repaired, and entered British service as SS Empire RajaMS Marienfels (7575 grt) which was repaired and turned into SS Empire Rani, and MS Sturmfels (6,288 tons) likewise repaired to British service as SS Empire Kumari.

Attack on Bandar Shapur, enemy ships on fire

Attack on Bandar Shapur, Iran, enemy ships on fire, August 1941

One ship in particular, the German freighter MS Hohenfels (7,862 grt) was involved in a spectacular save by Kanimbla’s crew.

Sydney Morning Herald, 20 September 1941 reported the event:

R.A.N. MEN SAVE NAZI SHIPS Daring in Iran LONDON, Sept. 19 (A.A.P.). Australian naval ratings, assisted by Indians, carried out a daring exploit when seven of eight Axis ships were saved from scuttling at Bandar Shahpur (Iran) after the British landing, reports the Tehran correspondent of the “Daily Telegraph.”

The Navy prepared an expeditionary force consisting of dhows, tugs, and launches. The Australians and Indians had been practicing old-time tactics of boarding, including the use of grappling irons. The little fleet set out before dawn, and when it stole in, the lookout in the nearest Axis ship, the Hohenfels (7,862 tons) did not suspect anything until it was too late.

The Australians and Indians scrambled aboard the ships, and groping in the dark holds, turned off the sea cocks, plugged the holes, cut the wires to gelignite charges, and dowsed deliberately-lit fires. All this was done so quickly that there were no British casualties. Six of the seven ships saved are at present being repaired in India. The seventh is being salvaged. The eighth was burnt out.”

Hohenfels aground off Bandur Shapur in August 1941, with her pre-war colors intact. Captured and salvaged by HMS Kanimbla, she went to work for the Admiralty as Empire Kamal 1941, then Van Ruisdael 1944, and Ridderkerk 1947, before she was scrapped in Hong Kong in 1962.

Bandar Shapur, Iran, 1941-08. HMS Kanimbla, manned by an Australian crew, flanked by small boats and tugs

German ship, most likely HOHENFELS, under tow in the Persian Gulf after capture at Bandar Shapur

Also put on the bottom by its crew at Bandur Shapur was the 5,225-ton Italian Società Anonima di Navigazione freighter Caboto (raised and dubbed SS Empire Kohinoor), a fate shared by the handsome American-built Enrico Insom tanker Barbara (3,065 grt) which was rebuilt as SS Empire Taj. The SAN Garibaldi tanker Bronte (4769 gt) was wrecked.

Bandar Shapur, Iran. 1941-08-25. Italian merchant ships were set on fire by the ships’ crews as seen from HMS Kanimbla, manned by RAN personnel. The ships identified are HMIS Lawrence; Caboto; Bronte; HMS Arthur Cavanagh; Barbara and Dhow 8. AWM 134380

Besides the assembled crews of the eight Axis vessels, a battalion-sized force of German civilians was scooped up ashore. As noted by Christopher Buckley, the Commonwealth troops and sailors “had the satisfaction of rounding up more than 300 German tourists, all clad in the sports coats and the grey flannel trousers of conscientious holidaymakers, all by the curious coincidence attracted to this little port ‘by the excellence of the bathing and the purity of the air.'”

Looking down from HMS Kanimbla to where 72 Germans, so-called “tourists”, wait beside a train to travel to a prisoner of war camp after being captured by the Baluchs and shore party of the Kanimbla.

LSI Blues

The Australian military’s first amphibious warfare ships were the three Landing Ship, Infantry (large), or LSI(L)s: HMAS Kanimbla, HMAS Manoora, and HMAS Westralia. Whereas these liners had given great service (as seen above) as armed merchant cruisers, by 1943 the war in the Pacific had shifted to an island-hopping campaign in which the Ozzies would need troop carriers that could put infantry ashore in the littoral.

This led to the above cruisers being shifted to the RAN directly (hence the HMAS rather than the HMS), repainted in a camo scheme, given room for 800 to 1,200 embarked troops, and a way to land them in the form of 24 landing craft, vehicle, personnel, (LCVP)s carried in large double davits, each capable of carrying a platoon to the beach. These craft were hull numbered to the ship, for instance, with Kanimbla’s listed as K1 through K24.

LCVP being swung aboard HMAS Westralia during the landing of the 2/4 Infantry Battalion on Morotai, 18 April 1945.

LCAs leave HMS Rocksand, a landing ship, infantry, for the island of Nancowry in the British occupation of the Nicobar Islands, October 1945

The Admiralty loved LSIs, and converted some 40 of them by the end of the war including several operated by Canada (HMCS Prince David and HMCS Prince Henry) and even one by the Royal New Zealand Navy (HMNZS Monowai). As in the case of the trio of Australian LSI(L)s, most were former passenger liners.

In April 1943, our subject began her conversion and recommissioned as HMAS Kanimbla on 1 July 1943.

Group portrait of the crew of HMAS Kanimbla. Note that most of the Officers in the front rows are members of the RAN Reserve (RANR) or RAN Volunteer Reserve (RANVR). AWM P02303.001

With her 6-inch guns no longer needed, Kanimbla traded them in for a couple of 3-inch AAA guns, a single 4-incher over the stern as a stinger, and a mix of Oerlikon, Pom Pom, and Bofors mounts to help ward off Japanese aircraft.

22 October 1943. Aerial starboard broadside view of the landing ship infantry (large) HMS Kanimbla. Landing craft vehicle personnel are carried in davits along her side and others are stowed in the well deck forward, on deck forward of the funnel, and aft. A single 4-inch Mark XVI on a Mark XX mounting is fitted right aft. A 3-inch AAA gun is fitted on either side of the funnel. Single 20 mm Oerlikon AA guns are fitted port and starboard in the bows, the bridge wings, on the main superstructure abaft the funnel, and on the poop. Note the Type 271 radar lantern above the bridge. The ship is painted dark grey, probably G10, all over. (Naval Historical Collection, AWM 300849)

HMAS Kanimbla as landing ship infantry (LSI) circa 1944-45. AWM 018605

HMAS Kanimbla entering Brisbane in 1944 with LCVPs in davits

HMAS Kanimbla LSI, note her stinger over the stern

Troops descending scrambling nets note LCVPs

Kanimbla and her two half-sisters, augmented by members of the country’s new Beach Commando units, went on to participate in amphibious landings at Hollandia, Morotai, Leyte Gulf, Lingayen Gulf, Brunei, and Balikpapan.

Most of that time was as part of the Allied 7th PHIBFOR, and she dutifully submitted war diary reports in USN format which are now in the National Archives.

At sea, 5 June 1945. A line of landing ship tanks moves behind HMAS Kanimbla, as the convoy makes its way to northwest Borneo for the Oboe 6 operation. AWM 108926

10 June 1945, Matilda tanks of 2/9 Armoured Regiment being driven ashore through the surf from Landing Ship Medium 237, at the north end of Brunei’s Muara Beach during the Oboe 6 Operation. One of the LSI HMAS Kanimbla’s LCVPs (K14) is seen to the left.

A rating returning to Kanimbla after ferrying troops ashore during landing and resupply operations

She earned battle honors for “New Guinea 1944″, “Leyte Gulf 1944”, “Lingayen Gulf 1945”, “Borneo 1945”, and “Pacific 1945″, ignoring her key role in Operation Bishop in 1941, her two years of convoy duty, and her freighter harvesting in 1940. Apart from capturing 22 ships she also steamed more than 470,000 miles during the war.

Post-war, her camo stripped off and guns landed, she settled into a two-year run as the government’s shuttle service, taking Australian troops around the Pacific for occupation duty, and then returning them home.

Kure, Japan. 1947-01-18. After troops have disembarked from HMAS Kanimbla they make their way to Kure Oval where they were formed into units. AWM 13849

View of soldiers embarking on the ship Kanimbla at Rabaul 1946 Collections SWA 7943-AMWA48890

24 November 1947, LCVP K2 approaches HMAS Kanimbla, Port Phillip Bay. SLV Collection Allan C. Green

Speaking of returning home, she also carried demobilized Tongan troops back to their archipelago and, eventually, would repatriate interned Japanese citizens back to their shell-shocked homeland.

KANIMBLA taking Tongan troops to Tonga 1945

Kure, Japan. 1947-01-18. Japanese repatriates are waiting to disembark from HMAS Kanimbla after it arrived from Australia. AWM 132848

Her final mission in government service was to sail from Sydney in late 1948, bound for Britain carrying the RAN crew that would bring back the new Australian aircraft carrier HMAS Sydney.

On Kanimbla’s return voyage to Australia, released from her contract, she called at Genoa and embarked 432 Italian bachelors destined for Melbourne and embarked on the next chapter of her career.

Back to Peace

The only Australian-registered ship to play a role in the migrant trade, Kanimbla spent much of her time between 1947 and 1951 shuttling displaced European immigrants, between their port of entry (Perth) and Port Melbourne where they would be processed and assigned work duties on two year passes.

Then came a decade of commercial trade around the island continent. Her swan song. By this time she was configured for 231 First Class and 125 Second Class for coastal runs, or and 371 One Class cabins for longer cruises.

As noted by Freemantle Ports, “Kanimbla was the largest and last liner to be built for the Sydney – Fremantle service which she plied during the summer months. In winter, Kanimbla operated a service between Melbourne, Sydney and Queensland.”

She continued in this role with Westralia, Duntroon, and Manoora, until eventually, she was the final in the trade.

In April 1958, a large crowd is gathered to bid farewells to Kanimbla as she departs C Shed, Victoria Quay on a scheduled voyage to Adelaide, Melbourne, and Sydney. Steam tug Wyola assisting. Photo by Freemantle Ports.

Westralia and Duntroon were laid up by 1959 and, in 1961, Kanimbla and Manoora followed.

Kanimbla 1960, Victorian Collections

In 1961, Kanimbla was sold to the Pacific Transport Company chartered several times over, renamed TSMV Oriental Queen. She spent the next three years carrying Islamic pilgrims from Indonesia to Jeddah and back on charter to the Indonesian government. Then came a more familiar kind of route service.

TSMV Oriental Queen during her Australian season of Cruises for Dover Pacific Cruises via SS Maritime.

As noted by SSMaritime:

TSMV Oriental Queen began to operate a program of cruises between Australia, New Zealand, and Japan and during one stay in Yokohama, she was used as a floating hotel for Australian and New Zealand visitors to the 1964 Tokyo Olympic Games. Her accommodation now included 4 suites, as well as single, twin, triple, and four-berth cabins.

TSMV Oriental Queen soon became a popular sight in both New Zealand and Australia and became a popular means of crossing the Tasman Sea to and from Australia. As a cruise ship, she offered economical fares. Thus being a hit with both the younger and older generations.

With her cruises so popular it was decided to fit her with an outdoor pool and a Lido Deck, which enhanced her even further as a cruise ship. She also operated several Pacific cruises during 1965 and 1966. Oriental Queen was a regular visitor to both Auckland and Sydney.

Shifting to an even more basic Honolulu and Los Angeles and Yokohama to Guam runs in 1967, she sailed her last in 1973 and was then broken up for scrap in Taiwan.

Epilogue

Her bell is preserved in the Australian National Maritime Museum, which also has several pieces of maritime art depicting our girl.

McIlwraith McEacharn Line Motor Vessel Kanimbla by Charles Bryant ANMM Collection 00037800

HMAS Kanimbla, original painted by Bob Bluey Paton, ex-crew member, Victorian Collections

Kanimbla is depicted arriving in Hong Kong to commence duties with the British Royal Navy under the command of Royal Australian Navy Commander F E Getting. Kanimbla was used on the passenger service between Cairns and Fremantle from 1936 to 1939, when it was requisitioned into the Royal Navy as an Armed Merchant Cruiser. ANMM Collection 00042375

There are also several monuments and markers around the country dedicated to her memory.

In so much as amphibious warfare, once the Royal Australian Navy got rid of its trio of WWII-converted LSIs in 1949, they replaced them with a half dozen small Mark 3 LSTs borrowed from the Royal Navy which would remain in service until 1955. The job shifted to the Army in 1959, accomplished by four LSM-1 class ships picked up surplus from the U.S. Navy. These LSMs, named after Australian generals, operated through Vietnam and were disposed of in 1975.

The RAN only got back into the big ‘phib game in 1994 by picking up a pair of low-mileage former USN Newport class LSTs, which were recast as the Kanimbla class Landing Platform Amphibious (LPAs). With that, USS Saginaw (LST 1188) became the second HMAS Kanimbla (L 51) while her sister USS Fairfax County (LST 1193) became the second HMAS Manoora (L 52). The two served until 2011, replaced by the Bay-class landing ship dock HMAS Choules and two large Canberra-class landing helicopter docks.

HMAS Kanimbla returns to Sydney from humanitarian operations in Banda Aceh and Nias on 30 April 2005


Ships are more than steel
and wood
And heart of burning coal,
For those who sail upon
them know
That some ships have a
soul.


If you liked this column, please consider joining the International Naval Research Organization (INRO), Publishers of Warship International

They are possibly one of the best sources of naval study, images, and fellowship you can find. http://www.warship.org/membership.htm

The International Naval Research Organization is a non-profit corporation dedicated to the encouragement of the study of naval vessels and their histories, principally in the era of iron and steel warships (about 1860 to date). Its purpose is to provide information and a means of contact for those interested in warships.

With more than 50 years of scholarship, Warship International, the written tome of the INRO has published hundreds of articles, most of which are unique in their sweep and subject.

PRINT still has its place. If you LOVE warships you should belong.

I’m a member, so should you be!

Warship Wednesday, May 8, 2024: Surigao Torpedo Slinger and Overall Slugger

Here at LSOZI, we take off every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1833-1954 period and will profile a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places.- Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday, May 8, 2024: Surigao Torpedo Slinger and Overall Slugger

U.S. Navy photo, National Archives, identifier 80-G-K-3977

Above we see, 80 years ago today, a great original color shot of one of the trainable 21-inch quintuple MK 15 torpedo tube stands on the Fletcher-class destroyer USS Halford (DD-480), complete with helmets on top of the crew shield and a greyhound with a steel fish in his grill.

A Fletcher, equipped with two such mounts, could rocket out 10 24-foot torpedoes in a single salvo, each with up to an 823-pound HBX warhead.

USS Halford (DD-480) loading a torpedo tube after completing an overhaul of the torpedo, 8 May 1944. 80-G-256439

Just five months after the above images, Halford’s squadron, DesRon 56, would famously charge the onrushing Japanese battleline during the overnight Battle of Surigao Strait, leaving the 35,000-ton Fuso-class dreadnought Yamashiro with several holes poked in her hull.

The Fletchers

The Fletchers were the WWII equivalent of the Burke class, constructed in a massive 175-strong class from 11 builders that proved the backbone of the fleet for generations.

Coming after the interwar “treaty” destroyers such as the Benson- and Gleaves classes, they were good-sized (376 feet oal, 2,500 tons full load, 5×5″ guns, 10 torpedo tubes) and could have passed as unprotected cruisers in 1914.

Destroyer evolution, 1920-1944: USS HATFIELD (DD-231), USS MAHAN (DD-364), USS FLETCHER (DD-445). NH 109593

Powered by a quartet of oil-fired Babcock & Wilcox boilers and two Westinghouse or GE steam turbines, they had 60,000 shp on tap– half of what today’s Burkes have on a hull 25 percent as heavy– enabling them to reach 38 knots, a speed that is still fast for destroyers today.

USS John Rodgers (DD 574) at Charleston, 28 April 1943. A great example of the Fletcher class in their wartime configuration. Note the five 5″/38 mounts and twin sets of 5-pack torpedo tubes.

LCDR Fred Edwards, Destroyer Type Desk, Bureau of Ships, famously said of the class, “I always felt it was the Fletcher class that won the war . . .they were the heart and soul of the small-ship Navy.”

Meet Halford

Our subject is the only U.S. Navy warship named for Coxswain William Halford who, at age 30 when the sloop-of-war USS Saginaw ran aground near Midway on 29 October 1871, volunteered with three others to sail the ship’s 25-foot sail gig an amazing 1,500 miles to Honolulu for help, with Halford the only one to survive the brutal 31-day voyage.

Halford received a commendation for his bravery and served until 1910, when he retired after an impressive 41 years’ of service. Promoted to Lieutenant on the retired list, he returned to the Navy in 1917 and died 7 February 1919 at Oakland, California. The Saginaw’s gig is in the custody of the Naval History and Heritage Command and for years had been on display at Annapolis.

USS Halford (DD-480) was laid down six months before Pearl Harbor on 3 June 1941 at the Puget Sound Navy Yard in Bremerton, was launched on 29 October 1942 with the late LT Halford’s daughter, Eunice, as the sponsor, and commissioned 10 April 1943.

Of interest, Halford was one of only three destroyers (out of six originally planned) that were built with a floatplane catapult shoehorned in place of the standard 2nd set of torpedo tubes and Mount 53 (3rd) 5-inch gun mount. In effect, trading half of their torpedo tubes and a fifth of their main battery for a single floatplane. Her floatplane-carrying sisters were USS Stevens (DD-479) and USS Pringle (DD-477).

USS Halford (DD-480) off Port Jackson, Washington, 24 April 1943. 19-N-45399

USS Halford (DD-480) at anchor off the Puget Sound Navy Yard, Bremerton, Washington on 3 May 1943. She is equipped with an aircraft catapult in place of her after torpedo tubes and 5/38 Mount 53. NH 107411

USS Halford (DD-480), 14 July 1943, with an OS2U Kingfisher floatplane on her catapult. 80-G-276691

From July through September 1943, she would spend an extended shakedown period testing out the feasibility of her somewhat novel seaplane fit.

Halford’s embarked naval aviator was LT Bob Schiller, who had flown SOC-3 Seagull biplanes from (and almost went down with) the heavy cruiser USS Astoria (CA-34). Surviving the loss of his ship at the Battle of Savo Island, he eventually reached the west coast and, after 30 days leave, was ordered to Oregon to join Halford as her destroyer aviator.

As detailed by Schiller in a 2006 Naval History article. 

“The guys firing torpedoes would have preferred another set of torpedo tubes,” Schiller said. “The guys on the antiaircraft guns didn’t like it either. They had to give up one of the 5-inch guns to make room for the plane. The ship lost 20 percent of its firepower right there. The skipper [Lieutenant Commander Gustave N. Johansen] wasn’t in favor of the plane, either; he wanted a fighting destroyer.”

On a shakedown cruise to San Diego, the ship practiced aircraft launch and recovery. It was necessary to smooth the sea—turn sharply in a circle—to prepare a landing zone for the plane. The aircraft would taxi into the zone where Schiller gunned the engine just enough to push the nose up on a sled deployed from the destroyer. A crane then angled out over the plane and dropped a large hook to slide through an eyebolt on the top of the fuselage. “An experienced radioman-gunner [in the rear seat] could hook it himself,” Schiller said. “Otherwise, it was up to the pilot to engage the hook. You have to stand up on a seat that is pretty slippery and take your parachute off with nothing to hang onto. You’d have to stand up and catch that swinging hook. There was no real way to brace yourself except with your feet and sometimes you’d lose your balance and fall over the side to the amusement of those on the ship.” Occasionally, Schiller took shipmates and officers aloft, and on one flight he allowed a Hollywood cameraman to film the destroyer launching torpedoes. Most of the time Schiller, however, had nothing to do. “They flew the plane very, very rarely,” he said. “Every time we joined a new group, I would get to fly at least once. The captain or the admiral would want to see it fly. So, we would fly around for his curiosity.”

As noted by DANFS, all seemed to agree that it was a bad idea: “Because of tactical changes and our growing aircraft carrier strength Halford returned to Mare Island 27 October 1943 for alterations which replaced the catapult and scout plane.”

Likewise, her similarly-equipped sisters were rebuilt as well. 

By 6 December 1943, completed with a full set of five 5″/38 guns and 10 21-inch tubes, Halford set off for the West Pac, to get in the big show. Meanwhile, Bob Schiller converted to Wildcats and would soon join Composite Squadron VC-78 aboard the jeep carrier USS Saginaw Bay (CVE-82) for the duration.

War!

Escorting the 18,000-ton Maston liner turned troopship SS Lurline with Marine reinforcements to Guadalcanal just in time for Christmas 1943, Halford soon became flagship for VADM Theodore Stark “Ping” Wilkinson’s Green Islands Attack Force and was on hand for operations there in February 1944.

While on an anti-shipping patrol as part of DesRon 45 off the west coast of New Ireland a week after Green Island’s D-Day, on the early morning of 25 February Halford and her sister USS Bennett (DD-473) got in a surface gun battle with a Japanese convoy, reportedly sinking two coastal ships and damaging a patrol vessel. Halford pumped out 219 5-inch shells in just 20 minutes then was given the green light to turn around and plaster the beached patrol boat with another 42 rounds.

These were likely the twin 839-ton cargo ships Tatsukiko Maru and Tatsugiko Maru, listed as lost on this date off New Ireland.

Original Kodachrome of 20mm and 40mm anti-aircraft guns on USS Halford (DD-480), 80-G-K-1629.

Front view of Mount 51 and 52 of USS Halford (DD-480), c. 1943-45 National Archives, identifier 80-G-K-3980

USS Halford (foreground) and the destroyer Bennett (background) open fire on a wooden watchtower on the Shortland Islands south of Bougainville, in early 1944. Admiral Halsey later sent the “naughty boys” a message saying the installation was already known and did not pose a threat. 80-G-K-1638.

USS Halford (DD-480). LT Elvin Clinton Ogles (USNA 1938) shoots the sun from the ship’s bridge while W.T. Gautrau, QMC, takes notes. Late April 1944. Note pelorus in the background. Ogle was serving aboard the USS Patterson in Pearl Harbor when the Japanese attacked on Dec. 7, 1941, and remained aboard that hard-fighting tin can through the first amphibious landings on Guadalcanal and the night sea battle of Savo Island before becoming a Halford plankowner, eventually becoming her XO. He finished the war as the skipper of USS Gillespie (DD-609) then later commanded the destroyer USS Radford (DD-446) off Korea. Capt. Ogles retired in 1968 as skipper of the Naval Reserve Training Center, Seattle, and passed in 2006, aged 92. 80-G-253287

USS Halford (DD-480), LT Donald Dertien, ship’s gunnery officer, in the Mark 37 gun director, 8 May 1944. The Radar overhead is a Mark 4. Dertien enlisted in the Navy in 1940, and he was commissioned an ensign in 1941 after successfully completing the Navy’s “90-day wonder program” on the USS Arkansas (BB-33). He was stationed at Pearl Harbor and was aboard the USS Farragut (DD-348) when Pearl was attacked, then transferred to Halford in 1943 for the rest of the war. He retired as a captain in 1968 and passed away in 2015, aged 97. 80-G-256457

USS Halford (DD-480), with a torpedoman operating a Mark 27 torpedo director on the ship’s bridge, during weapons exercises in the South Pacific, 19 May 1944. Note the signal lamp in the right rear. 80-G-256430

USS Halford (DD-480) as an F6F Hellcat makes a low pass over the ship on 22 May 1944, outside Tulagi Harbor, in the Solomon Islands. Sister USS Bennett (DD-473) is astern. 80-G-253373

Shipping to the Marianas for Operation Forager: The Battle of Saipan, Halford was at sea for 75 days including bombardment of Tinian’s defenses, screening Task Force 58 for the Marianas Turkey Shoot, covering beach demolition units for the landings on Guam and Angaur Island.

Notably, on 10 July 1944, Halford, responding to a report from a pilot off USS Wasp, closed with and destroyed what was reported to be a beached submarine (possibly an Unkato supply container) on the sand bar at the mouth of the Umatac River on Guam’s Umatac Bay. She sent 386 rounds to the beach that day.

Then it was on to the Philippines. Attached to RADM Jesse Barrett “Oley” Oldendorf’s Task Group 77.2, the Fire Group of the Southern Attack Force, Halford was one of 28 destroyers screening Oldendorf’s massive force of six battleships and eight cruisers, intended to provide all the naval gunfire support that would be needed for the landings.

The thing is, on the night of 24-25 October, VADM Shoji Nishimura’s Southern Force, sailing to the Philippines from Brunei with the battleships Yamashiro and Fuso along with a mix of cruisers and destroyers, made an appearance.

With the benefit of radar and a screen of 39 massed PT-boats that went in on an early (but unsuccessful) torpedo attack on Nishimura’s force, the destroyers were tasked to make a torpedo run of their own. One of the nine tin cans of DesRon 56, Halford was split off with sisters USS Robinson (DD 563) and USS Bryant (DD 665), under Capt. Thomas Conley, for their run, while the squadron’s other six destroyers were to make their own runs in two other 3-ship sections. Lined up with the Japanese phantoms on the horizon by 0345, it was all over by 0359, each firing a half-salvo of five torpedoes.

Their target ended up being Yamashiro, with Nishimura aboard.

Halford’s skipper, in the ship’s war diary, felt that at least two of his fish may have hit a target.

While it will never positively be known whose torpedoes hit Yamishiro that morning, it is known that she picked up at least two hits, if not four, from the destroyer attack, slowing her down enough that she was soon the sole target of Oldendorf’s battlewagons and cruisers and she vanished from radar by 0421, taking 1,626 officers and crew to the bottom, some 600 feet down.

VADM Shoji Nishimura’s flagship, the battleship Yamashiro (near center) comes under intense fire from U.S. Navy warships in John Hamilton’s depiction of the Battle of Surigao Strait. (NHHC)

Halford continued her duties in the Leyte Gulf for the rest of the year, covering landings, escorting cripples and slow convoys, and fighting off Japanese air attacks.

11 January 1945 saw Halford, in a fast column of Fletchers that included USS Bush, Stanly, Stembel, and Dashiell, slow to just 5 knots and then own San Fernando Bay, 40 miles north of Manila, where they leisurely destroyed three small Japanese Sugar Charlie or Sugar Fox cargo ships, a landing craft, and several beached barges, with the destroyers firing just over 1,500 5-inch shells (244 from Halford alone) in 34 minutes and an overhead combat air patrol reporting “no craft, left afloat…”

Halford’s war came to a pause when, on Valentine’s Day 1945, while patrolling Saipan amid a nighttime smoke screen, she rammed type EC2-S-C1 Liberty ship SS Terry E. Stephenson. Although there were no injuries, she suffered enough damage to her bow to have to pull out for Mare Island to have it carved off and rebuilt– knocking her out of the war over three months.

USS Walke (DD-723) Plan view, forward, taken at the Mare Island Navy Yard, California, 26 March 1945. USS Halford (DD-480) is at right, with her bow shortened as the result of a collision with the type EC2-S-C1 Liberty ship SS Terry E. Stephenson in Saipan harbor on 14 February 1945. 19-N-84484

USS Halford (DD-480) off Mare Island Navy Yard, fresh out of repair, 12 May 1945. Note the odd location of hull numbers on the bow. 19-N-84885

USS Halford (DD-480) at the Mare Island Navy Yard, 15 May 1945. Circles mark recent alterations. Note radars on 40mm guns, quintuple mount torpedo tubes, and the destroyer-minelayer in the floating dry dock. Also, note floater nets and electronic gear on stacks (electronic antennas on the stacks are for electronic countermeasures). 19-N-84891

Getting back to the West Pac in June, Halford drew quiet duty escorting transports from Eniwetok to Ulithi then, in August, as part of the Northern Pacific Fleet’s TF 44 (six jeep carriers and eight destroyers/escorts), made for Ominato on Northern Honshu where her task force occupied the Japanese naval base there on 12 September.

Returning to Alaska, Halford spent Navy Day 1945 in Juneau then was ordered back to Bremerton and then San Diego, for mothballs. She was decommissioned on 15 May.

Gleaves-class destroyer USS McCalla (DD-488) moored with other destroyers off San Diego circa 1945-1946. One of the other destroyers appears to be USS Halford (DD-480). Halford reached San Diego on 28 January 1946 and decommissioned there on 15 May. NH 89288

Halford earned 13 battle stars for her war, a remarkable achievement considering she only served with the fleet in combat for 15 months, suffering half a year lost in floatplane experiments and subsequent rebuild, and another three months in repair.

Reserve Fleet Ships at San Diego photographed around 1960. Identifiable ships from left to right include Fletcher class sisters USS Izard (DD-589), Halford (DD-480), Wiley (DD-597), Bryant (DD-665), and Haraden (DD-585). The vessel with the large aviation star on her bow is the 311-foot Barnegat-class small seaplane tender USS Suisun (AVP-53). NH 72676

Stricken 1 May 1968, Halford only left mothballs for a tow to the breakers, sold 2 April 1970 to National Metal & Steel then taken the short distance to Terminal Island, where she was dismantled.

Epilogue

Halford’s war diaries and plans are in the National Archives. 

Oral histories of Bob Schiller— the destroyer aviator– and Seaman Green Day are in the collection of the National Museum of the Pacific War.

Sadly, there has not been a second U.S. Navy ship to carry the name.

As for Halford’s Fletcher-class sisters, 24 were sunk or evaluated as constructive total losses during WWII. These ships were sent into harm’s way. 

The rest of her surviving sisters were widely discarded in the Cold War era by the Navy, who had long prior replaced them with more modern destroyers and Knox-class escorts. Those who had not been sent overseas as military aid were promptly sent to the breakers or disposed of in weapon tests. The class that had faced off with the last blossom of Japan’s wartime aviators helped prove the use of just about every anti-ship/tactical strike weapon used by NATO in the Cold War including Harpoon, Exocet, Sea Skua, Bullpup, Walleye, submarine-launched Tomahawk, and even at least one Sidewinder used in surface attack mode. In 1997, SEALS sank the ex-USS Stoddard (DD-566) via assorted combat-diver delivered ordnance. The final Fletcher in use around the globe, Mexico’s Cuitlahuacex-USS John Rodgers (DD 574), was laid up in 2001 and dismantled in 2011.

Today, four hard-charging Fletchers are on public display, three of which in the U.S– USS The Sullivans (DD-537) at Buffalo, USS Kidd (DD-661) at Baton Rouge, and USS Cassin Young (DD-793) at the Boston Navy Yard. Please try to visit them if possible. Kidd, the best preserved of the trio, was used extensively for the filming of the Tom Hanks film, Greyhound.


Ships are more than steel
and wood
And heart of burning coal,
For those who sail upon
them know
That some ships have a
soul.


If you liked this column, please consider joining the International Naval Research Organization (INRO), Publishers of Warship International

They are possibly one of the best sources of naval study, images, and fellowship you can find. http://www.warship.org/membership.htm

The International Naval Research Organization is a non-profit corporation dedicated to the encouragement of the study of naval vessels and their histories, principally in the era of iron and steel warships (about 1860 to date). Its purpose is to provide information and a means of contact for those interested in warships.

With more than 50 years of scholarship, Warship International, the written tome of the INRO has published hundreds of articles, most of which are unique in their sweep and subject.

PRINT still has its place. If you LOVE warships you should belong.

I’m a member, so should you be!

Warship Wednesday, May 1, 2024: A Wandering Dutchman

Here at LSOZI, we take off every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1833-1954 period and will profile a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places.- Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday, May 1, 2024: A Wandering Dutchman

Image via the Koninklijke Marine Fotoafdrukken in the Netherlands Institute of Military History (NIMH), photo number NIMH 2158_010350.

Above we see the Holland-class pantserdekschip (armored cruiser) Hr.Ms. Noordbrabant steaming out of Den Helder for her inaugural deployment to the Dutch East Indies, on 28 January 1901, leaving a crowd of well-wishers ashore. Note the scrollwork on her gleaming white bow and large naval ensign.

She would see much overseas work, including some early peacekeeping, and would endure until the inferno of the 1940 blitzkrieg of the Netherlands.

The Hollands

The Hollands were the Dutch answer to the Royal Navy’s Apollo-class second-class protected cruisers (3,600-ton, 19.75 kts, 6×6-inch, 6×4.7-inch) and the class leader was ordered in 1894.

The first flight of three cruisers (HollandZeeland, and Friesland) had a displacement of 3,840 tons while the second batch (of which Gelderland was the lead followed by Noord Brabant and Utrecht) went 4,100 tons as they held 12 Yarrow boilers as opposed to 8 in the original design and went just a couple feet longer, with maximum speed varying between 18 and 20 knots. To extend their range, they were fitted with an auxiliary sailing rig deemed fast enough to carry the ships at 7-8 knots. 

They carried a thin coating of Harvey nickel steel armor including two inches covering the decks and four in the conning tower while the guns had shields and the engine room glacis had a five-inch belt. 

They were handsome craft and could both show the Dutch flag in the Caribbean-protecting the Netherlands Antilles, the Pacific where Holland held the sprawling Netherlands East Indies, and of course in metropolitan waters in Europe.

Pantserdekschip Noord-Brabant period diagram

The main battery consisted of two 14.9 cm L/37 (5.86″/37 cal) Krupp No. 3 guns– which was essentially an export model of the German Navy’s extensively used 15 cm/40 (5.9″) SK L/40— arranged one fore and one aft behind 6-inch armored gun shields. The secondary battery consisted of a half-dozen 12 cm L/37 (4.72″/37 cal) Krupp No. 3 singles, typically with 1-inch gun shields. Tierciary anti-boat armament came in the form of six 75mm/37cal Krupp No.1 deck guns while an impressive array of a dozen 37mm Hotchkiss 1-pounders (including eight RF breechloaders and four Gatling guns) were ready for the light stuff.

For heavy anti-ship work, the Hollands carried a pair of submerged 17.7-inch torpedo tubes, bow and stern, although the below plans of Noordbrabant would seem to imply a set of amidships black powder charged torpedo guns just above the waterline– which may have been a tactical surprise as that feature isn’t listed in any of the period naval journals.

They were fetching ships, especially in their original all-white scheme.

Amsterdam, August-September 1898, the inauguration Hr.Ms. Queen Wilhelmina, showing new pantserdek ships Holland and Zeeland along with the torpedo boat Ardjoeno. Note the revolving Hotchkiss cannon on the bridge wings of Holland and the large searchlight atop her wheelhouse.

Meet Noordbrabant 

Our subject, named like the rest of her class for Dutch provinces, was laid down for the Dutch Navy on 31 August 1897 at the Koninklijke Maatschappij de Schelde, Flushing, launched 17 January 1899, and commissioned 1 March 1900, with a total construction cost of ƒ 3.045.607,00.

Noordbrabant seen in Den Helder circa 1900. NIMH 2158_010346

A great stern shot of Hr.Ms. Noordbrabant, showing off her aft 5.86″/37 mount. NIMH 2158_010356

Noordbrabant shortly after commissoning. Note her white hull and bow scroll. NIMH 2158_010342

HL 1182 Het stokersverblijf van de HMS Noordbrabant

HL 1182 Sergeanten adelborst aan boord van de HMS Noordbrabant

Pre-War Colonial Service

Noordbrabant was almost immediately sent aboard, her first “dance” being the Kiel regatta the summer she was commissioned, where she hosted the Kaiser himself.

In February 1901, she set off for a four-year deployment to the Dutch East Indies with sisters Gelderland and Utrecht.

Noordbrabant, showing framing set up for awning to be set for Far Eastern service. 2158_010345

(Lef to right) The Dutch East Indies squadron in profile showing the pantserdekschepen Hr.Ms. Noordbrabant, Hr.Ms. Gelderland, Hr.Ms. Utrecht, and Hr.Ms. Regentes along with the flottieljevaartuig (colonial gunboat) Hr.Ms. Nias in Sabang Bay on the island of Pulau, North Sumatra, circa 1902-1904. NIMH 2000-1385-041

It was during this extended deployment to the South Pacific that she called on Australia, Singapore, and Indochina then, on her return cruise back to the Netherlands for refit in 1905, would make calls at Perim, Port Said, Algiers, and Tangiers.

Pantserdekschip Hr.Ms. Noordbrabant is seen in a visit to Algiers, circa 1905. Note most of her awning frame has been taken down. NIMH 2158_010358

Her 1905-06 refit included removing her auxiliary sail rig and installing new generators for ventilation fans, shell lifts, and electric lights. Her armament was also homogenized, landing her two 5.86″/37s in favor of a full 10-gun battery of 4.72″/37 guns. Likewise, her 75mm/37cal and 37mm batteries were much reduced (from 6 and 12 to 2 and 4, respectively) and a 75mm mortar was installed for use in both lobbing star shells and in shore bombardment– though useful in her work in the Pacific.

After some calm duty in European waters, with occasional sorties into Scandinavian and Mediterranean waters, Noordbrabrant would again be sent to the Pacific for another tour in 1908 that would include calling at San Francisco in October 1909, as well as Hawaii.

While in the Bali Strait on gunnery exercises on 31 May 1910, she reefed on an uncharted rock and had two be lightened to be pulled off.

Hr.Ms. Noordbrabant hard aground on a reef in Bali Strait, with Hr.Ms. Hertog Hendrik and Hr.Ms. Holland standing by to assist.

Steaming to Soerabaja under her own power, once dry docked, it was found that she suffered a gash across two frames and required six months in repairs before taking to the sea once again.

Damage to the bow sustained by Noordbrabant during a trip to the Soenda Islands (Lombok, 1910), while in dry dock in Surabaya, Java. NIMH 2158_090652

Closer detail of the above. NIMH 2158_090653

Noordbrabant with dark stacks and extensive canvas awnings, in Surabaya with accommodation ship Koning der Nederlanden to the left corner. Her apparent list could be due to damage. NIMH 2158_010349

She returned home from her second Pacific tour in June 1913.

Peacekeeping

In November 1913, the freshly-refit Noordbrabant carried the Dutch military mission to the burgeoning state of Albania, which had been established in the aftermath of the Balkan Wars by the six Great Powers at the London Conference the previous June.

The mission, consisting of 13 Army field officers (joined by another 11 the following February), was to form the fresh new country’s police force, a tall order considering the region was awash with Greek, Bulgarian, Italian, Kosovar, and Mirdita irregulars, bandits of all stripes, and some 200 Ottoman troops of Essad Pasha’s gendarmerie who were in no hurry to leave.

Off the Balkans, 1913-1914, before the outbreak of the war. Royal Netherlands Army officers aboard Noord-Brabant including (left to right) Major Kroon, skipper Ktz Oudemans, Gen. De Veer, and Major Roelfsema. Note the 4.72″/37 deck gun, lacking its sheifd. NIMH AKL000310.

Major Lodewijk Willem Johan Karel Thomson, a regular Dutch Army officer with some 30 years of service behind him including winning the Order of William during the Aceh War in the Far East, was made commander of the new International Gendarmerie of the Principality of Albania, which had planned to grow to a 5,000 member force carefully cultivated by the Dutch.

The plan was doomed to fail, with a series of peasant revolts instigated by outside powers leading to a clash at Durres on 15 June 1914 that left Thomson dead, and many of his fellow officers (briefly) captured. The Gendarmerie was taken over by Austrian and German officers who arrived two weeks later and shortly afterward was disbanded.

Thomson was initially buried in Albania, with full military honors and a fez-clad honor guard of his International Gendarmerie on post.

Nederlandse militairen in Albanië. Thomsons graf. NIMH AKL000295

However, it was decided to repatriate his remains home, with the rest of the returning Dutch military mission. They were carried back by Noord-Brabant.

De kruiser Hr.Ms. Noord-Brabant vaart de sluizen van IJmuiden binnen, met aan boord het stoffelijk overschot van L.W.J.K. Thomson. 14 July 1914. Note the canvas covering on her bridge wings and her dark scheme. NIMH AKL000307

Noord-Brabant delivered the remains of Major Thomson to IJmuiden, Netherlands, on 14 July 1914, with his casket being carried by an honor guard of sailors.

Schilderij van de aankomst van het stoffelijk overschot van lkol L.W.J.K.Thomson met het Noord-Brabant te Amsterdam. NIMH AKL001364

Ultimately, Thomsom was re-buried with great public ceremony in Groningen and is seen as the first of a long line of Dutch peacekeepers killed overseas including no less than 28 who have perished on UN missions since 1949, primarily in Lebanon (UNIFIL), Mali (MINUSMA) and, ironically, the Balkans (UNPROFOR).

War!

A cautious neutral since 1830, the Netherlands spent the Great War walking a careful line. Although outwardly friendly to the Germans– Queen Wilhelmina’s husband was a German prince, Anthony Fokker set up a factory in Germany to produce what went on to become a legendary line of fighter planes, and the Kaiser would ultimately retire into exile in Holland in 1918– the country also had sympathy for their occupied neighbors in Belgium (there were over a million Belgian refugees in the Netherlands by Christmas 1914 along with 30,000 escaped Belgian soldiers) as well as close ties to France and Britain (the majority of the British 1st Royal Naval Brigade was interned in Holland).

To enforce their neutrality, on 31 July 1914, the Dutch government ordered full mobilization, putting both the Army and Navy on a war footing.

However, as classmates Friesland and Utrecht were decommissioned in 1913 before the conflict and had been scrapped already, the country had just four Hollands left on the navy list.

The four remaining Holland class cruisers in the 1914 Jane’s entry. The armament listed was the original circa 1900 fit, rather than what was refit in 1906

While something like 300 Dutch mariners and fishermen lost their lives offshore to both the Germans and the British, the Dutch navy did what it could to police their territorial waters against all comers while standing by to assist survivors of the conflict found in need.

One such incident involved Noordbrabant who, while on patrol in January 1916, encountered the foundering HM Submarine E17 a sandbank off Texel Island

As noted by RN Subs: 

E17, believing the Cruiser was belligerent submerged, but owing to the damage was forced to surface again. E1 signaled the unidentified cruiser for assistance and her crew was taken off and interned. E17 finally sank at 1140 on Thursday 6th January 1916.

Rescuing all of E17’s 31 officers and ratings, led by LCDR John Robert Guy Moncrieffe, RN, Noordbrabant landed them at Den Helder from which they were later moved to Groningen where other Royal Navy internees were held for the duration.

Pantserdekschip Hr.Ms. Noordbrabant seen in her Great War paint scheme, circa 1916-18. NIMH 2158_010354

Another from the same period. Note her recognition stripes on her stacks and a good detail of her No. 1. mount. 2158_010353

At Den Helder, with all of her boats away. NIMH 2158_005455

Doldrums

Post-war, Noordbrabant was decommissioned in 1920 and laid up. Meanwhile, sisters Holland, and Zeeland, were likewise decommissioned and disposed of, while only Gelderland was retained in service– as a gunnery training ship.

Disarmed, from 1922 to December 1925, Noordbrabant was loaned to the Departement van Justitie as a logementschip (accommodation ship) for wayward youth and orphaned boys.

Seen while she was an accommodation ship for the Dutch Justice Department. NIMH 2173-225-066

Returned to the Navy in January 1926, Noordbrabant was further modified and converted to a opleidingsschip (training ship) to be based at Vlissingen, where the old cruiser would become the first stop for new recruits (leerling-matroos= apprentice sailors) to learn seamanship, military bearing, and drill.

As such, most of the rates in the Dutch Navy for the next 15 years began their service on Noordbrabant’s decks.

She was given a topside makeover, with her empty gun mounts and superstructure covered by a deck house while her engine spaces– unneeded moving forward– were reduced to a single stack, used for venting cooking and heating exhausts. 

Pantserdekschip Hr.Ms. Noordbrabant as a opleidingsschip (training ship) in Vlissingen. Note the large skylights in deck house. NIMH 2158_010373

Note her extensive deckhouse, complete with skylights. NIMH 2158_010377

The opperdek (quarterdeck) of Noordbrabant while she was being used as an accommodation ship at Vlissingen. Note the horseshoe buoy, Marines complete with short swords, a stand of Mannlicher rifles, and Navy bugler. The skylights can be seen above. NIMH 2158_010391

Seen circa 1926-40 at Vlissingen with enlisted racing crews in summer whites. NIMH 2158_010376

She hosted Queen Wilhelmina on 17 April 1931 for the official opening of the Buitenhaven, Vlissingen’s outer port which is still in use today.

April 1931. Noordbrabant in Vlissingen with her glad rags flying. The crew cheers when HM Queen Wilhelmina disembarks after the visit. NIMH 2158_010372

Queen Wilhelmina inspected the crew of Noordbrabant in Vlissingen, in April 1931. Note the men on her yardarms and officers in full ceremonial dress including fore-and-aft bicorne hats, white gloves, and frock coats with braided epaulets. NIMH 2158_010370

Another of Queen Wilhemina leaving, escorted by VADM Laurentius Johannes Quant. Noordbrabant in the background. NIMH 2158_010369

Noordbrabant in dry dock dock at Hellevoetsluis, May-June 1931. NIMH 2158_010365

 

War! (again)

Rated a wachtschip (guard ship), with a small battery of light 75mm guns aboard, Noordbrabant made ready for her second world war in 1939 even though her engine room had been a cold iron watch for almost two decades and her machinery had been looted to keep Gelderland running.

It should come as no surprise that, when the Germans closed on Vlissingen in May 1940, the only thing left for the crew of Noordbrabant to do was to burn her in place.

A crispy Noordbrabant seen as a wachtschip (guard ship), in September 1940 after the ship was set on fire by her crew crew on 17 May. NIMH 2158_010380

Post-war, her hulk was sold for scrap.

As for her last sister, Gelderland, she was captured by the Germans, converted to a floating anti-aircraft battery, and sunk in Finnish waters by the Red Air Force in 1944. 

Epilogue

There are a few relics of our subject preserved.

Her cherished ship’s bell (scheepsklok) is in the Noord-brabant Provinciehuis at Hertogenbosch, alongside an information plaque.

The exquisitely detailed 83cm x l 190cm builder’s model from 1900 is in the collection of the Dutch Rijksmuseum.

Rijksmuseum NG-2000-13

She is also well remembered in maritime art.

The photo of a young Noordbrabant, steaming from Den Helder for the Far East in 1901, was turned into painting by maritime artist Flip Hammes in 1955.

NIMH 2158_010343

De Noord-Brabant als wachtschip rond 1938 te Vlissingen. Tekening: Ron van Maanen.

A 1950 Our Naval Committe postcard showing 10 Dutch warships lost between 10 and 15 May 1940 during the German attacks invasion including the kanoonneerboot Hr.Ms. Johan Maurits van Nassau flanked by the torpedoboot Hr.Ms. Z 3, the torpedobootjager (destroyer) Hr.Ms. Van Galen, mijnenlegger Hr.Ms. Hydra, mijnenvegers Hr.Ms. Pieter Florisz and Hr.Ms. Abraham van der Hulst, our Noord-Brabant in the bottom left with the kanonneerboot Hr.Ms. Friso alongside, as well as the kanonneerboot Hr.Ms. Brinio, and mijnenlegger Hr.Ms. Bulgia in the distance to the bottom right. NIMH 2158_090416

The Dutch Navy recycled her name in 1948 for a new 2,600-ton Holland class onderzeebootjager (destroyer) that would remain in service until 1974.

Hr.Ms. Noord-Brabant (D 810) July 1965 jumping waves NIMH 2009-014-147_004


Ships are more than steel
and wood
And heart of burning coal,
For those who sail upon
them know
That some ships have a
soul.


If you liked this column, please consider joining the International Naval Research Organization (INRO), Publishers of Warship International

They are possibly one of the best sources of naval study, images, and fellowship you can find. http://www.warship.org/membership.htm

The International Naval Research Organization is a non-profit corporation dedicated to the encouragement of the study of naval vessels and their histories, principally in the era of iron and steel warships (about 1860 to date). Its purpose is to provide information and a means of contact for those interested in warships.

With more than 50 years of scholarship, Warship International, the written tome of the INRO has published hundreds of articles, most of which are unique in their sweep and subject.

PRINT still has its place. If you LOVE warships you should belong.

I’m a member, so should you be!

Warship Wednesday, April 24, 2024: A Flower So Nice They Painted Her Thrice

Here at LSOZI, we take off every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1833-1954 period and will profile a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places.- Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday, April 24, 2024: A Flower So Nice They Painted Her Thrice

Imperial War Museum Collections FL 5516 (RCN)

Above we see a detailed image of the plucky little Flower-class corvette HMCS Snowberry (K166) of the Royal Canadian Navy underway during World War II. She is pictured in the above just after she left Charleston Navy Yard in South Carolina following a much-needed refit that saw her both refreshed and her fo’c’s’le extended to provide better handling of the stubby 925-ton escort while on North Atlantic convoy runs, her staple employment for the duration of the war.

The Flowers

A handy little sub-buster that could be cranked out in record time but was still very capable of escorting slow-moving merchantmen from the Americas to Europe during the Battle of the Atlantic, the Admiralty would order more than 300 Gladiolus/Flower-class corvettes from 1939 onward.

Essentially a stretched version of the Smith’s Dock’s 582 GRT, 160-foot steam-powered whaler design built in 1936 for the Southern Whaling & Sealing Co. Ltd (SWSC), they were single-screw vessels powered by a pair of cylindrical Scotch marine boilers feeding a single VTE engine that could, when turning at maximum RPMs, generate a theoretical 2,750 h.p., enough to push the little tub 16 ish knots while an economical load of 230 tons of fuel oil would get them 3,500nm at 12 knots, enough to make it across the Atlantic on the 2,700-mile Halifax to Liverpool route with some fuel left for maneuvering.

The Flowers were based on the SWSC’s Southern Pride, shown here in her pre-war whaler service. The vessel would be requisitioned by the RN (K 249) in 1940 and lost in 1944 off Freetown. 

Using the simpler boiler pattern and including enough space for a crew of 80 officers and men (later to swell to as much as 110), the dimensions shifted from a 160-foot whaler to a 205-foot corvette. With a correspondingly wide 33-foot beam, they had a stubby 1:6 length-beam ratio.

Armament was slight: a single 4″/45 BL Mk IX forward, a 40mm/39 2pdr QF Mk VIII pom-pom on a “bandstand” platform aft, a couple of depth charge throwers and two depth charge racks over the stern, with provision for up to 40 ash cans. They also had a perfectly adequate Type 123 or Type 128 sonar and (eventually) a Type 271 or Type 286 radar. Of course, there were extensive modifications to this and tweaks across the massive production line, but you get the idea. Late war fits included as many as 70 depth charges, a Hedgehog ASW device, and a half-dozen 20mm Oerlikons.

 

Drawing of a Flower Class Corvette showing the ship’s layout by John W. McKay – 1992. Source: “Corvettes of the Royal Canadian Navy 1939-1945” by Ken MacPherson and Marc Milner

Built to merchant (Lloyds) standards rather than to those of the Admiralty, they could be churned out rapidly at about any small coastwise commercial shipyard and several dozen shipyards participated in the program in the UK and Canada. Some 13 Canadian yards alone (Burrard, Canadian Vickers, Collingwood, Davie & Sons, Davie SB, Kingston SB, Marine Industries, Midland SY, Morton Eng. & D.D. Co, Port Arthur SB, Victoria Machinery, and Yarrows Esquimalt) made a whopping 122 Flowers during the conflict.

The average construction time was 6-8 months, a process often sped up by the fact that the armament and sensors would be installed post-delivery at a nearby naval yard, sometimes in stages, a problem that meant some Flowers had to deploy for months before they received all their gear.

No less than 111 Flowers were assigned to the RCN at one point or another, of which 7 were canceled while still under construction, 80 were built from the start for the Canadians, and 24 RN corvettes (many of which were built in Canadian yards) transferred on loan.

RCN corvette in drydock. Library and Archives Canada Photo, MIKAN No. 4950910

Three Flower class corvettes tied up at St. Johns.

Meet Snowberry

Our subject, laid down for the Royal Navy on 24 February 1940 at Davie Shipbuilding (now Chantier Davie Canada Inc. but still in business) at Lauzon, Quebec, was named, in line with the convention used for the rest of the Flowers, after Symphoricarpos albus-– the common snowberry. Launched just six months later, she was delivered to the RN and commissioned at Quebec City on 26 November 1940, the gestation period of HMS Snowberry (K166) lasted but eight months.

War Baby

Manned by a Canadian crew led by LT Roy Stanley Kelly, RCNR, Snowberry sailed for Halifax to pick up her armament and then, after crossing the Atlantic with her first convoy (HX.108) she finished her fitting out process at Greenock, Scotland. Following a stint with Western Approaches Command, she was loaned to the Royal Canadian Navy and commissioned as HMCS Snowberry on 15 May 1941 with the same pennant number. In June 1941, she sailed for Newfoundland and would get to arduous work there in convoy service.

This image depicts a Canadian corvette as it comes alongside a U.S. Coast Guard cutter in April 1943

In all, Snowberry took part in an impressive 74 convoys between 3 February 1941 (HX.108) and 15 April 1945, broken down into 15 in 1941, 19 in the hellish year that was 1942, 16 in 1943, just 11 in 1944, and a baker’s dozen in just the first four months of 1945.

Most of these (29) were dangerous HX or ON convoys from New York/Halifax to Liverpool and vice-versa but she did manage to venture into the Caribbean every now and then on TAW, GN, and AH convoys.

HMCS Snowberry (K166), Charleston, South Carolina, May 1943, NARA

HMCS Snowberry (K166), Charleston, South Carolina, May 1943, NARA

Her two most notable brushes with the Jerries included the sinking of the brand-new Type IXC/40 U-536 (Kptlt. Rolf Schauenburg), on 20 November 1943 in the North Atlantic northeast of the Azores in conjunction with her Canadian Flower sister HMCS Calgary (K231) and the British River-class frigate, HMS Nene.

Schauenburg, on only his second war patrol of 2. Flottille out of Lorient, survived along with 16 of his men to become POWs.

From the official report of the sinking of U-536.

1943 Devonport Dockyard, Nov 25, 1943, U-536 survivors brought in by crews of HMCS Snowberry, HMS Tweed, and HMCS Calgary. Note the Lanchester SMG

LOSERS IN THE ATLANTIC BATTLE. 25 NOVEMBER 1943, PLYMOUTH, DEVONPORT DOCKYARD. MORE U-BOAT PRISONERS; 17 OFFICERS AND MEN BEING LANDED BLINDFOLDED IN THE SOUTH-WEST PORT FROM A CONVOY ESCORT SHIP WHICH PICKED THEM UP AFTER THEIR SUBMARINE HAD BEEN SUNK. (A 20600) U-Boat prisoners arriving at Devonport blindfolded. Copyright: © IWM. Original Source: http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205153048

The second notable incident with the Germans was in the first use of glider bombs against Allied shipping, deployed by the famous II.Gruppe/KG 100.

As detailed by Uboat.net:

On the 25th of August 1943, the Canadian 5th Support Group (Cdr. Tweed), consisting of the British frigates HMS Nene, HMS Tweed, and the Canadian corvettes HMCS Calgary, HMCS Edmundston and HMCS Snowberry were deployed to relieve the 40th Escort Group. While this was in progress the ships were attacked at 1415 hrs by 14 Dornier Do-217s and 7 Ju-88s. with the new German weapon, the Henschel radio-guided glide bomb, (the “Hs293 A-1”) designed by the German Professor Herbert Wagner. The sloops HMS Landguard and HMS Bideford of the 40th Escort Group were the first of the Allied and R.N. ships to be attacked and damaged by them. This was the first time their being brought into action against Allied ships. Several sailors were injured on HMS Bideford and one sailor was killed, the light damage as the 650-pound warhead did not detonate.

Snowberry finished the war with the Portsmouth Command and was handed back to the RN at Rosyth on 8 Jun 1945.

However, the Brits were not keen to keep any of these converted whalers around and quickly disposed of them wholesale. Ex-Snowberry was sunk as a target vessel off Portsmouth in 1946, then her hulk was raised by a salvage company and broken up at Thornaby-on-Tees in 1947.

During WWII, Canadian vessels escorted over 181 million tons of cargo across the pond, sinking 27 German U-boats in the process (14 of which were bagged by RCN corvettes) as well as accounting for a further 42 Axis surface ships.

In return, the Canadians lost 24 ships of their own during the war, along with 1,800 men with hearts of steel. Of those 24 vessels, 10 were Flower class corvettes including HMCS Alberni, sunk by U-480; HMCS Charlottetown, sunk by U-517; HMCS Levis, sent to the bottom by German torpedoes in 1941; HMCS Louisburg, sunk by Italian aircraft off Oran; HMCS Shawinigan, sunk by U-1228; HMCS Trentonian, sunk by U-1004; along with HMCS Regina and HMCS Weyburn, lost to mines.

Epilogue

A crew site has been established for the diligent little corvette through the For Posterity Sake initiative.

Snowberry has been immortalized at least three times since the 1970s. The first was by renowned British maritime artist John Hamilton now in the collection of the Imperial War Museum.

The corvette HMCS Snowberry making way in a heavy sea by John Hamilton. She is shown starboard side on. IWM ART LD 7400

Another is from a Canadian artist. 

Snowberry Painted by Fread Thearle in 1988 Beaverbrook Collection of War Art. “Thearle’s painting depicts her crashing through heavy seas. Wind and weather constantly challenged Canada’s navy in its wartime roles during the Second World War. Large numbers of corvettes were produced during the war and used as convoy escorts. Their simple design made it possible to build them quickly in smaller shipyards, like the one at Lauzon, Québec, where the Snowberry was launched in 1940.” CWM 20060128-003

The German scale model company Revell in 2015 debuted a 1:144 version of Snowberry.

The kit included breathtaking box art by Danijel Frka.

Sadly, neither the Royal Navy nor RCN has seen fit to commission a second Snowberry.


Ships are more than steel
and wood
And heart of burning coal,
For those who sail upon
them know
That some ships have a
soul.


If you liked this column, please consider joining the International Naval Research Organization (INRO), Publishers of Warship International

They are possibly one of the best sources of naval study, images, and fellowship you can find. http://www.warship.org/membership.htm

The International Naval Research Organization is a non-profit corporation dedicated to the encouragement of the study of naval vessels and their histories, principally in the era of iron and steel warships (about 1860 to date). Its purpose is to provide information and a means of contact for those interested in warships.

With more than 50 years of scholarship, Warship International, the written tome of the INRO has published hundreds of articles, most of which are unique in their sweep and subject.

PRINT still has its place. If you LOVE warships you should belong.

I’m a member, so should you be!

Warship Wednesday (On a Thursday) April 18, 2024: Return for the Taxpayer

Here at LSOZI, we take off every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1833-1954 period and will profile a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places.- Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday (On a Thursday) April 18, 2024: Return for the Taxpayer

U.S. Navy photograph 80-G-289893, now in the collections of the National Archives.

Above we see the leader of her class of dreadnoughts, USS New York (Battleship No. 34), photographed clad in Measure 31a/8B camo, off Norfolk on 14 November 1944. Note rows of shielded 20mm Orelikons manning her rails, a stern quad 40mm Bofors, and large SG and SK radars on her foremast. 

Still echoing the fine lines of a Great War battlewagon– during which she served with the British Grand Fleet– New York had already done hard work in WWII off North Africa and in riding shotgun on convoys in case Kriegsmarine surface raiders appeared and is shown above just as she was preparing to leave for more fighting in the Pacific, in all steaming some 123,867 miles from 7 December 1941 to her homeward bound journey back to the East Coast from Pearl Harbor.

Commissioned on Tax Day some 110 years ago this week– 15 April 1914– for $14 million, the taxpayers got a great return for their investment.

Empire State and Lone Star

By 1911, the U.S. had ordered eight dreadnoughts in successively larger sizes in four different pairs ranging from the two-ship South Carolina class (16,000 tons, 8×12 inch guns, 18.5 knots, 12-inch armor belt), to the two-ship Delaware class (20,000 tons, 10×12 inch guns, 21 knots, 11-inch belt), the two ship Florida class (21,000 tons, 10×12 inch guns, 21 knots, 11 inch belt) and finally the two Wyoming class ships (26,000 tons, 12×12 inch guns, 20 knots, 11-inch belt).

With the lessons learned from these, the next pair, New York, and sistership USS Texas (BB-35),

Postcard showing ship information of the New York class battleships, which included USS New York (BB 34) and USS Texas (BB 35). PR-06-CN-454-C6-F6-31

The ship’s main battery would be 10 of the new 14″/45 Mark 1 guns, arranged in five two-gun turrets. It could fire a 1,400-pound Mark 8 AP shell to 22,000 yards. At point blank (6,000 yards) range, the Mark 8 was thought capable of penetrating 17.2 inches of side armor plate.

USS New York (BB-34) in her original configuration as seen from a kite balloon about 1300 feet above the ship, which was making 17 knots, giving a great overhead look at her armament. NH 45149

The secondary battery would be 21 5″/51s arranged one “stinger” aft, in casemates, and on deck. By tradition, one of these was manned by her Marine Detachment.

USS New York (Battleship #34), Marine Detachment loading the 5″/51 Gun, during World War I.

The class was also built, as most battleships of the era, with surface attack torpedo tubes for some reason. They had four 21-inch tubes installed- one on each side of the bow and one on each side of the stern– with co-located magazines able to carry a total of a dozen 1,500-pound Bliss-Leavitt Mark 3 torpedoes, rated to carry their 200-pound warhead to some 4,000 yards at 26 knots.

Almost as an afterthought, two 1-pounder 37mm guns were fitted, one atop each lattice mast, for AAA/counter-kite work. 

Jane’s Fighting Ship’s entry for the class, circa 1914.

Meet New York

Our subject is the fifth U.S. Navy ship to carry the moniker of the 11th State of the Union, with previous name carriers including a Revolutionary War gundalow, a 36-gun frigate burned by the Brits in 1814, a 74-gun ship-of-the-line that languished on the ways for 40 years, a screw sloop that shared a similar fate, and an armored cruiser who saw combat in the Spanish American War then was renamed (first Saratoga, then Rochester) to free up the name for new battlewagon.

“Bombardment of Matanzas” by the armored cruiser USS New York, the protected cruiser USS Cincinnati and monitor USS Puritan, April 27, 1898, by Henry Reuterdahl NH 71838-KN

The latter armored cruiser even gave up her 670-pound circa 1893 Meneely Bell Co. of Watervliet, NY, bell, which was rededicated and presented to the new New York in 1914.

Appropriately, while Texas was built at Newport News, our subject was ordered from the New York Navy Yard. The future USS New York was laid down (ironically now) on 11 September 1911 and launched on 30 October 1912, sponsored by Miss Elsie Calder, daughter of Congressman William M. Calder of Brooklyn.

She was commissioned on 15 April 1914 with her first skipper being Capt. Thomas Slidell Rodgers (USNA 1878), a veteran of the Spanish-American War.

USS New York (BB-34) the National Ensign is raised at the battleship’s stern during her commissioning ceremonies, on 15 April 1914, at the New York Navy Yard, Brooklyn, N.Y. with a view of the same event from a different angle showing her stern 5″/51 gun mount and sistership USS Texas (BB-35) in background, fitting out with scaffolding around her main mast. NH 83711 and NH 82137.

How about this for a dreadnought shot? USS New York (BB-34) loading stores at the Brooklyn Navy Yard on April 24, 1914. Note the brown hoist 15-ton locomotive crane at left and horse-drawn vehicles, including one from the Busch Bottling Co. George G. Bain Collection. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.

Shortly after bringing her into commission, Rodgers took on funds for the fleet and an oversized detachment of Marines and took New York south to the Gulf of Mexico, where the brand-new battleship served as the flagship for RADM Frank Friday Fletcher’s squadron blockading Veracruz, Mexico, a role she continued to hold through most of the summer.

USS New York (BB-34) underway at high speed, 29 May 1915. Photograph from the Bureau of Ships Collection in the U.S. National Archives. 19-N-13046

After the crisis abated, New York would sail for Hampton Roads and assume the mantle of flagship, First Division, Atlantic Fleet, which she would hold until March 1915. She would then spend the next two years in an annual cycle of winter gunnery and tactical training in Caribbean waters and summer cruising off the East Coast.

USS New York (BB-34). In Hampton Roads, Virginia, 10 December 1916. Note the rangefingers atop Turrets No. 2. and No. 4. NH 45138.

War!

When the Great War finally reached the long-slumbering American giant in April 1917, New York and her sisters began a feverish workup period to get war-ready. For what, it turned out, was to be tapped to augment the British fleet. As the newest U.S. battleships were oil burners, and New York– at the time, the flagship of Division Six, Atlantic Fleet– and her older sisters and cousins could still be fed on good Welsh coal, the call went through.

As detailed by DANFS:

The Navy Department, on 12 November 1917, selected the coal-burners New YorkFlorida (Battleship No. 30), Wyoming, and Delaware (Battleship No. 28) to form Battleship Division Nine as reinforcement for the British Grand Fleet. The battleships were to be commanded by Rear Adm. Hugh Rodman. The next day the flag for Division Six, Battleship Force was transferred from New York to Utah (Battleship No. 31) and the flag for the Commander of Division Nine, Battleship Force was broken in New York. The battleship arrived at Tompkinsville on 15 November and the next day, she shifted to the New York Navy Yard to be fitted out for distant service. She remained at the yard until the 22nd, when she departed for Lynnhaven Roads, Va., arriving on the 23rd.

At 3:00 p.m. on 25 November 1917, Battleship Division Nine sailed from Lynnhaven Roads with Manley (Destroyer No. 74) in escort. While Manley was to join the convoy escort and patrol forces based at Base No. 6, Queenstown [Cobh], Ireland, Division Nine was bound for the Royal Navy’s Grand Fleet anchorage at Scapa Flow, Orkney Islands, Scotland, to serve under the command of Adm. Sir David Beatty, RN. The weather on the voyage was bad from the start, but worsened during the night of 30 November-1 December. Delaware and Florida lost contact with New York and WyomingNew York took on over 250 tons of water in her chain locker and forward compartments and only the efforts of bailing lines for three days prevented the ship from foundering. Division Nine eventually re-consolidated at 7:00 a.m. on 7 December at Cape Wrath and continued on to Scapa Flow. With a hearty welcome from the crews of the ships of the Grand Fleet, the ships anchored at noon.

“Arrival of the American Fleet at Scapa Flow, 7 December 1917” Oil on canvas by Bernard F. Gribble, depicting the U.S. Navy’s Battleship Division Nine being greeted by British Admiral David Beatty and the crew of HMS Queen Elizabeth. Ships of the American column are (from front) USS New York (BB-34), USS Wyoming (BB-32), USS Florida (BB-30) and USS Delaware (BB-28). U.S. Navy Art Collection, Washington, D.C. NH 58841-KN

Under British command, Battleship Division Nine was re-designated as the Sixth Battle Squadron of the Grand Fleet.

USS New York (BB-34) in British waters, 1918. NH 45144

USS New York (BB-34) camouflaged with a false bow, in 1917-18, while serving in British waters. Note another American battlewagon in the background left. NH 45142

The Squadron sailed extensively on both workups with the British and convoy missions, with New York’s gun crews counting at least one encounter with a German U-boat.

When the Germans finally sortied out in strength, it was to surrender.

New York, with VADM William Snowden Sims and RADM Hugh Rodman aboard, assumed her position in column with the entirety of the Grand Fleet in the Firth of Forth on 21 November 1918, to accept the surrender of the High Seas Fleet.

Surrender of German High Seas Fleet, as seen from USS New York, 21 November 1918. Oil on canvas by Bernard F. Gribble, 1920. NH 58842-KN

Battleships of the Sixth Battle Squadron The squadron is shown anchored in a column in the left half of the photograph, at Brest, France, on 13 December 1918. NH 109382.

While seconded to the Royal Navy, New York played host repeatedly to visiting royals in British waters. This included Admiral Price Hirohito (yes, the future Emperor, on his only visit to an American warship), King George V, the young Prince of Wales (future King Edward VIII) King Albert of Belgium, the 8th Duke and Dutchess of Athol, and Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn.

She would also escort Wilson to France for the Versailles conferences.

USS New York (Battleship #34) escorted President Wilson to France in 1918. Note the AAA guns on platforms between the stacks. Naval History and Heritage Command, NH 48144

She was welcomed back home to New York City (where else) just in time for Christmas 1918.

USS New York (BB-34) off New York City for the Victory review on 27 December 1918. NH 45145

Soon after, a commemorative bronze tablet was installed on her quarterdeck.

NH 114261

Celebrating New York’s Great War service, her image, shown steaming from west to east, was used on the reverse of the $2 Federal Reserve Bank Note, of which $136,232,000 worth of bills were printed between 1918 and 1922.

Interbellum and reconstruction

After just a few months stateside, New York was ordered to transfer to the Pacific Fleet, stationed out of San Francisco, which would be her home

USS New York (BB-34) in the east chamber, Pedro Miguel lock, during the passage of the Pacific fleet through the Panama Canal, 26 July 1919. NH 75721

USS New York (BB 34), aerial view of the battleship as she transits the Panama Canal. Photograph released July 1919. Note the details of her masts and secondary armament. 80-G-461375.

USS New York (BB-34) entering Vancouver Harbor, B.C., on 5 August 1921. NH 89557

Sisters are back together again! USS New York (BB-34) and USS Texas (BB-35) Drydocked at the Norfolk Navy Yard, Virginia, during the mid-1920s. NH 45153

USS New York, in the foreground, followed by sister Texas (BB-35), and Wyoming (BB-32), proceeding at full speed across the Pacific firing their guns during annual battle maneuvers. Courtesy of the San Francisco Maritime Museum NH 69006

By August 1926, she was sent to Norfolk Navy Yard for an extensive 13-month modernization.

This reconstruction gutted the old coal-fired engineering suite, replacing 14 original Babcock boilers with 6 more efficient oil-fired boilers, which of course required her bunkerage to change from one medium to the other. This resulted in her two stacks becoming one single stack. Her beam stretched 10 feet with the addition of torpedo blisters on her sides. Meanwhile, her lattice masts were ditched, and replaced by enclosed pagoda-style houses on shorter tripod masts, which dropped her overall height (from keel) from 199 feet to 186 feet.

USS New York BB-34 in drydock during refit at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard, Portsmouth, Virginia. 10 April 1927.

When it came to armament, her four torpedo tubes were removed as was most of her secondary battery (culling it from 21 5″/51s to just 6 guns, all above decks). Her 14″/45s were upgraded with their chamber volumes enlarged to allow larger charges to give an increased muzzle velocity, switching from Mark 1/2/3 guns to Mark 8/9/10 standard. For AAA work, she picked up eight 3″/50 DP guns arrayed four to a side. She also picked up the capability to carry, launch, recover, and maintain as many as four observation planes.

When she rejoined the fleet in September 1927, her mother would not have recognized her.

USS New York anchored in Hampton Roads on October 17, 1929. Note the single stack and rearranged masts, now with houses. NH 64509

Jane’s Fighting Ship’s entry for the class, circa 1931.

USS New York (BB 34), port bow, while anchored, February 12, 1930. Photographed by U.S. Naval Air Station, Coco Solo, Canal Zone. 80-CF-14-2043-1

She was a favorite of the fleet, a showboat, and was often at the head of formations during this period.

USS New York (BB-34) leads USS Nevada (BB-36) and USS Oklahoma (BB-37) during maneuvers, in 1932. The carrier USS Langley (CV-1) is partially visible in the distance. NH 48138

USS New York (BB-34) leading the formation for fleet review in New York on 31 May 1934. Note how wide she is post torpedo blisters. This added 3,000 tons to her displacement and gave her and Texas a tendency to roll in heavy seas. NH 712

USS New York (BB-34) At fleet review in New York, 31 May 1934. Note the assortment of Curtiss floatplanes on her catapult. NH 638

New York attended the Coronation ceremonial naval review at Spithead in 1937 for King George VI, continuing her long link to the British royals.

Battleship USS New York, Spithead Coronation Fleet Review, May 20th, 1937. IWM

More improvements would come. In 1937, she picked up two quad 5-ton 1.1-inch/75 caliber “Chicago Piano” AAA guns– thought state of the art at the time and were just entering service.

1.1 AA gun, the Chicago Piano

In December 1938, New York became the first American warship to carry a working surface search radar set. The experimental Brewster 200 megacycle XAF set, designed by the Naval Research Laboratory, ran just 15 kW of energy but its giant 17 sq. ft. rotating “flying bedspring” duplexer antenna proved capable of tracking an aircraft out to 100 nm and a ship at 15. By 1940, the XAF was modified to become the more well-known RCA-made CXAM, and the rest is history.

USS New York (BB-34). View of the ship’s forward superstructure, with the antenna of the XAF radar atop her pilot house, circa late 1938 or early 1939. Note the battleship’s foremast, with its gunfire control facilities; her armored conning tower; and the rangefinder atop her Number Two gun turret. NH 77350

She was going to need it.

Battleships of the New York-class, USS New York and USS Texas, in New York City during the New York World’s Fair, 3 May 1939.

War (again)

After the grueling Neutrality Patrol following the outbreak of World War II in September 1939, New York spent the beginning of the war escorting convoys between the U.S. and Iceland, which the Americans had occupied.

Occupation of Iceland, July 1941. Seen from the Quarterdeck of USS New York (BB-34), Atlantic Fleet Ships steam out of Reykjavik Harbor, Iceland at the time of the initial U.S. occupation in early July 1941. The next ship astern is USS Arkansas (BB-33), followed by USS Brooklyn (CL-40) and USS Nashville (CL-43). Note 3″/50 gun on alert at left, and quick-release life ring at right. 80-G-K-5919

Her AAA suite would balloon throughout the conflict to 10 quad 40mm Bofors mounts (40 guns) and another 46 20mm Oerlikons. She also saw her crew almost double, from her designed 1,069-man watch bill to one that grew to over 1,700 by 1944.

Early in the war, her Curtiss SOC Seagulls were replaced by iconic OS2U Kingfishers, which had a longer range and greater payload. She would put them to effective use.

Three Vought OS2U scout planes take off in Casco Bay, Maine, on 3 May 1943. Photographed from USS New York (BB-34) floatplanes seaplanes

USS New York (BB 34), placing 3rd OS2U on the catapult. Photographed May 1943. 80-G-82708

Once the U.S. got into the war post-Pearl Harbor, New York was one of the few battleships left in the Atlantic. She was assigned to escort two further convoys to Iceland (16 Feb- 18 March 1942, and 30 April- 10 May 1942) as well as two to Scotland (in June and August 1942), alternating with Atlantic patrol duty looking out for the Bismarck– with both New York and Texas coming very close to the German boogeyman and her consort, Prinz Eugene. 

By November 1942, New York was tapped to help provide coverage to the Torch Landings in North Africa. There, off Safi, she fired 60 of her big 14-inch shells– the first time in anger– supporting the U.S. Army’s 47th Infantry Regiment ashore. During the campaign, she was straddled by French coastal artillery and, at Fedala, narrowly avoided German torpedoes.

Battleship USS New York (BB-34) Norfolk Naval Yard 11 August 1942 escort carrier USS Charger (ACV-30) just before leaving for Torch landings

USS New York (BB-34) off North Africa on 10 November 1942, just after the Battle of Casablanca. 80-G-31582

Once Torch was wrapped up, New York was used for two subsequent convoy runs (December 1942 and March-April 1943) between the U.S. and North Africa.

Across her six convoys (two each to Iceland, Scotland, and Casablanca), none of the ships under her watchful eye were lost or damaged by enemy action.

What a magnificent photo! USS New York (BB-34) pitching into heavy seas while en route from Casablanca on convoy escort duty, in March 1943. The view looks forward from her foremast. Note her twin 14″/45 gun turrets and water flowing over the main deck. 80-G-65893

USS New York (BB-34) in Casablanca Harbor, 1943. Photo from the LIFE Magazine archives, taken by J.R. Eyerman. Note that her radar and antennas have been airbrushed out

In March 1943, the Sultan of Morocco visited her.

Then came more than a year stateside, used for training.

She would serve as a floating Main Battery (14″/45, which was still used by sister Texas as well as Nevada and Pennsylvania while California, Tennessee, Idaho, and New Mexico had only slightly different 14″/50s) and Destroyer Escort Gunnery (3″/50, 40mm Bofors, 1.1/75 Chicago Piano, and 20mm Oerlikon) School from June 1943 to July 1944, steaming circles in Chesapeake Bay, and then, in the late summer of 1944, would be used for a trio of midshipmen training cruises to the Caribbean.

USS New York (BB-34) off the U.S. east coast, circa 1943, while a gunnery training ship. The only slightly older USS Wyoming would spend her entire WWII career in the Chesapeake on this duty. 80-G-411691

During this quiet period, New York trained approximately 750 officers and 11,000 recruits of the U.S. Navy, Coast Guard, and allied forces as well as 1,800 Annapolis midshipmen.

Missing the landings in Italy and France, it was decided to shift the old girl to the Pacific in preparation for the last amphibious operations in the drive to the Japanese home islands. Leaving New York in November 1944– the lead photo of this post– she would arrive at San Pedro, California via ‘The Ditch” by 6 December.

USS New York (BB-34) photographed in 1944-45, while painted in camouflage Measure 31A, Design 8b. Note her extensive radar suite and annetaa array– which by this time of the war included SG, SK, and FC (Mk 3) radars as well as two Mk 19 radars– has not been airbrushed out. NH 63525

En route to Iwo Jima, she had an engineering casualty, with a blade on her port screw dropping that limited her maximum speed to just 13 knots and cramped her ability to maneuver. Nonetheless, New York still arrived in time for the pre-invasion bombardment of Iwo on 16 February and closed to within 1,500 yards of the invasion beaches to deliver rounds on target. She fired 1,037 14-inch shells in the campaign in addition to another 5,300 smaller caliber rounds (not counting AAA fire).

USS New York (BB-34) bombarding Japanese defenses on Iwo Jima, on 16 February 1945. She has just fired the left-hand 14″/45 gun of the Number Four turret. The view looks aft, on the starboard side. 80-G-308952

Able to get her busted screw repaired at Manus once the Iwo Jima landings ended, New York was in the gunline off Okinawa in late March, again in time to get in on the pre-invasion bombardment, providing NGFS to the U.S. Tenth Army and the Marine III Amphibious Corps throughout the month-long campaign, firing more than 4,000 14-inch shells alone.

Her aviation unit while off Okinawa was also amazingly active, with her three Kingfishers not only correcting fire from New York and 11 other ships on the gunline to support the Devils and Joes ashore, but they also fired 30,000 rounds of .30-06 in strafing runs on exposed Japanese targets– an unsung mission for Navy floatplanes.

Her closest brush with the Divine Wind came on 14 April 1945 off Okinawa when a Japanese plane came in amidships and crashed into a Kingfisher on the catapult. Incredibly, the Old Lady shrugged off the impact with only superficial damage– the bulk of the Japanese aircraft continued to come to rest in the ocean some 50 yards off New York’s starboard side–
and the ship listed just two personnel with minor casualties.

The Kingfisher damaged after being clipped by a kamikaze on 17 April 1945. The aircraft was later craned off ashore. NH 66187

Once the Okinawa operations stabilized, New York retired to Pearl to swap out her well-used 14″/45s for new ones in preparation for the upcoming invasion of Japan proper, Operation Olympic. She was there when VJ Day came, and those new guns weren’t needed.

She held to a quote attributed to Admiral Mahan, that, “Historically, good men on old ships are better than poor men on new ships,” with the words written on a sign on her quarterdeck.

Despite her extensive campaigning– from the Torch landings and screening convoys to bringing the pain in Iwo Jima and Okinawa– New York only earned three battle stars for her WWII service.

She made two fast trips shuttling personnel between the West Coast and Hawaii, then set sail for New York City on 29 September to celebrate Navy Day there along the “surrender ship” USS Missouri (BB-63) and the famed carrier USS Enterprise (CV-6).

USS New York (BB-34) arrives at New York from the Pacific, circa 19 October 1945. She was featured in Navy Day celebrations there later in the month. 80-G-K-6553

Same as above, 80-G-K-6554

Of the 13 old battlewagons on the Navy List going into WWII, New York was one of only three that was never seriously damaged or sunk, despite the French coastal artillery, German torpedoes, and Japanese suicide planes.

During her career, she boasted that she had schooled the most flag officers– future commodores and admirals– than any other ship, a figure that stood at more than 60 by 1945. One thing is for sure is the fact that, of her 26 skippers, at least 10 went on to wear admiral’s stars.

Atomic Ending

Post-war, the Navy had three entire classes of ultra-modern fast battleships giving them eight of the best such ships in the world (Washington, North Carolina, South Dakota, Indiana, Massachusetts, Iowa, New Jersey, Missouri, and Wisconsin) as well as eight legacy dreadnoughts that had undergone extensive modernization/rebuilds post Pearl Harbor (the 16″/45 carrying Colorado, Maryland, and West Virginia along with the 14″/50-armed California, Tennessee, Idaho, and New Mexico). Besides these 15 battlewagons, arguably the toughest battle line ever to put to sea, the Navy also had two more Iowas under construction (Kentucky and Illinois) and a trio of 27,000-ton Alaska-class battle cruisers (classified as “Large Cruisers” by the Navy).

This meant the service, which crashed into WWII with a dire battleship shortage, ended with a massive surplus.

As such, the older battleships that had not undergone as drastic a wartime modernization as the Pearl Harbor ships– USS Mississippi, USS Pennsylvania, USS Nevada, USS Arkansas, USS Wyoming, USS Texas, and our New York— were quickly nominated for either disposal or limited use as experimental ships or targets and rapidly left the Naval List.

The eldest, Wyoming, was decommissioned in August 1947 and sold for scrap by that October, preceded by her sister, Arkansas, which was sunk on 25 July 1946 as part of the Operation Crossroads nuclear tests at Bikini Atoll.

This left New York as the oldest American battleship still afloat. She would not hold this title for long.

Like Arkansas, Nevada, and Pennsylvania, she had been used in the Crossroads tests.

USS New York BB-34 before Test Able during Operation Crossroads at Bikini Atoll – 1946. Note the Curtiss SC Seahawk floatplanes on deck and skyward-pointing 3″/50s. Most of her 20mm and 40mm mounts appear to have been deleted. LIFE Bob Landry

New York was just off the old Japanese battleship Nagato (to the right of the “X’) for the Able airdrop test.

And was the closest surviving battleship to the underwater “Baker” shot.

USS Achomawi (ATF-140) Spraying USS New York with Salt Water Post Baker. 374-ANT-18-CR-2416-010

Somehow enduring both bombs, New York, Nevada, and Pennsylvania were towed to Kwajalein for decontamination (where Pennsylvania was later scuttled), then to Pearl Harbor and studied by radiological experts there for the next 15 months.

In the meantime, on 29 August 1946, the empty New York was quietly decommissioned.

USS New York (BB-34) entering Pearl Harbor after being towed from Kwajalein, on 14 March 1947. Note Floating drydock (ABSD) sections in the background. 80-G-371904

The experts satisfied they had garnered everything they needed to know from the mildly radioactive old battleship, it was decided to tow her out and allow the fleet a proper SINKEX in the deep sea off Oahu. It took them all day to send the leviathan to the bottom. Similarly, Nevada was towed out for the same fate a few weeks later.

ex-USS New York (BB-34) is towed from Pearl Harbor to be sunk as a target, on 6 July 1948. USS Conserver (ARS-39), at left, is the main towing ship, assisted by two harbor tugs on New York’s port side. 80-G-498120

ex-USS New York (BB-34) was sunk as a target off Hawaii on 8 July 1948. 80-G-498140

Same as above, 80-G-498138

Same as above, 80-G-455669

ex-USS New York (BB-34) capsizes while being used as a target off Hawaii on 8 July 1948. 80-G-498141-A

Epilogue

While New York currently rests some 15,000 feet down, she has lots of relics ashore.

Her Chelsea chronometer, removed by a member of her crew before the Bikini tests, is now in the NHHC’s collection. As noted by the donor:

“By the time I left the ship, it was full of goats, rabbits, guinea pigs, and assorted other small animals that were to be on the ship at the time of the explosion. They were expected to survive as the New York was considerably more than a mile from the explosion. As I left the ship, I decided that I would save the clock we had in our quarters and put it in my bag. The New York survived the explosion- as was intended- as did all the animals- to the delight of the traditional navy. However, within one month all of the animals were dead.”

Her XAF-1 radar, the first installed on a U.S. Navy warship, has been in the collection of the National Museum of the U.S. Navy since the 1960s.

XAF Radar Antenna, 1960s. Being delivered to the Washington Navy Yard for display. Note the U.S. Navy tug alongside a small thin barge carrying the radar antenna. The tug appears to be USS Wahtah (YTB-140). This radar was the first shipboard radar to be installed onboard a U.S. Navy ship, USS New York (BB-34). NMUSN-1019.

Meanwhile, the antenna, which was delivered to the Washington Navy Yard by boat and is currently on display in the National Electronics Museum, Linthicum, Maryland after being displayed outdoors until the late 1980s.

The National Archives has her plans, deck logs, and war history preserved.

Her amazing 229-page WWII cruise book, from which many of the above images are obtained, is digitized online via the Bangor Public Library. It contains the best epitaph to the “Old Lady of the Fleet”:

Her sister Texas, of course, was preserved just after the war and is currently undergoing a dry dock availability to keep her in use as a museum ship for generations to come.

Out of the water! USS Texas at Gulf Copper 31 Aug 2022 Photo by Sam Rossiello Battleship Texas Foundation. Note the paravane skeg at the foot of the bow, her 1920s torpedo bulge love handles, and the stabilizer skeg on the latter.

Since BB-34 slipped beneath the waves in 1948, the Navy has since recycled her name twice, kind of.

USS New York City (SSN-696), an early Flight I Los Angeles-class hunter-killer, was commissioned in 1979 and retired (early) in 1997.

The seventh USS New York (LPD-21), a San Antonio-class amphibious transport dock built at Ingalls and commissioned in November 2009, is the current holder of the name. At 684 feet overall, she is larger and faster (“in excess of 22 knots”) than our battleship although she hits the scales at a paltry 25,000 tons– including 7.5 tons of steel salvaged from the World Trade Center.

 


Ships are more than steel
and wood
And heart of burning coal,
For those who sail upon
them know
That some ships have a
soul.


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Welcome, Hannah!

80 years ago today:

A great shot of the brand new Essex-class fleet carrier USS Hancock (CV-19) underway in Boston harbor on 15 April 1944, the day of her commissioning from the Fore River Shipyard at Quincy, Massachusetts. The paint scheme is Measure 32, Design 3A; note the small hull number on the Dull Black bow area.

Official US Navy photograph from the collections of the Naval History and Heritage Command (NH&HC), # NH 91546.

As noted of this image by Wolfgang Hechler at Navsource:

Hancock was the only “long bow” Essex to wear Design 3A. Since all the Pattern Design Sheets had been prepared for “short bow” Essexes, there were several noticeable differences in the bow area for Intrepid (CV-11), Hornet (CV-12), and Franklin (CV-13)—compare, for example, to this photo of Intrepid. Two 40-mm quad AA mounts were fitted on the extended forecastle of the “long hull” ships. Hancock had two more 40-mm mounts on the fantail but none on the starboard side, amidships. There were four deck-edge masts.

Just six months after the above image was snapped, the new carrier had completed shakedowns and air group quals then joined the Pacific Third Fleet in time for the brutal Philippines Campaign in October 1944.

Hannah earned four battle stars in her short but hectic WWII service. Reconstructed twice during the Cold War (SCB-27C then later SCB-125), she was dubbed an attack carrier (CVA-19) and went on to complete nine deployments to Vietnam– eight with Carrier Air Wing 21 (CVG/CVW-21), and one with CVW-5.

She would earn 13 Vietnam battle stars along with five Navy Unit Commendations and was present for the endgame in April 1975 when Saigon fell, saving 2,500 souls.

USS HANCOCK (CVA-19) With men of VA-55 and crew members information of “44-74” in honor of the ship’s thirty years of service. Photo taken 3 January 1974 by PH1 Cook. NH 84727

Of her sisters, the wooden-decked Hancock outlived all in the fleet except the training carrier USS Lexington and 1950s latecomer USS Oriskany. Even with that, the newer (and steel-decked!) Oriskany was laid up just eight months after Hannah.

Decommissioned for the last time on 30 January 1976 and struck from the Navy list the following day, Hannah was sold for scrap that same September.

Warship Wednesday, April 10, 2024: Mongolia by way of Massachusetts

Here at LSOZI, we take off every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1833-1954 period and will profile a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places.- Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday, April 10, 2024: Mongolia by way of Massachusetts

Photo by Geo. H. Russell. Library of Congress, Box PAN US Military-Army No.92 (E size). Control number 2007664426

Above we see, 105 years ago today (10 April 1919), the well-armed troopship USS Mongolia (ID 1615) arriving at Boston with the returning hometown boys of the 26th “Yankee” Division aboard.

Don’t let her passenger liner appearance fool you, she was a fighter and had the honor of the first surface engagement between U.S. Naval personnel and sailors of the Kaiserliche Marine.

The Beautiful Twins of the Pacific Mail Steamship Co.

Founded in 1848 originally to service the Panama Route across the isthmus during the California Gold Rush, the Pacific Mail Steamship Company had flown its red, white, and blue house flag from more than 60 passenger steamers before the 19th Century was out.

While the majority of these were smallish (2,000-3,000 ton) coastwise vessels, by the late 1890s the company had ordered four progressively larger liners– SS China (10,200 tons), SS Nile (11,000 tons), SS Korea (18,000 tons), and SS Siberia (18,500 tons)– to build its reputation and expand its reach across the Pacific, kicking off its Trans-Pacific service.

By 1901, it moved to pick up two new liners– SS Mongolia and SS Manchuria— that would be its crown jewels.

The sister ships, ordered from the nascent New York Shipbuilding Co in Camden, were huge for their era at 615 feet oal with a registered gross tonnage of 13,363 tons. They could carry 1,712 passengers in four different classes, with speeds sustained at 16 knots, intended for cruises from San Francisco to ports in China and Japan, with a midway stop in Hawaii. The service was later extended to Hong Kong and Manila.

At the time, they were the largest passenger vessels constructed in America, with class leader Mongolia delivered in February 1904. 

“Speed and Comfort” Pacific Mail Steamship Co. poster with artwork by Fred Pansing, showing Mongolia and citing the names of her fellow Trans-Pacific line vessels. LOC LC-DIG-ppmsca-58680

S.S. Mongolia at Manila, Philippine Islands, in 1913. U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command Photograph. NH 45962

By August 1915, with a downturn in Pacific sailings, both Mongolia and sister Manchuria, along with the smaller Korea and Siberia, were sold to the Baltimore-based Atlantic Transport Line and soon began working from the East Coast.

As a war was going on in the Atlantic (ATL had already lost several of its ships to government requisition and U-boats), Mongolia made nine wartime crossings while the U.S. was neutral, carrying munitions and foodstuffs to a hungry England.

In this role, she had “American S. S. Mongolia” painted in large white letters along the sides of her hull flanked by American flags.

S.S. Mongolia, painted with neutrality markings, circa 1915-1917. 165-WW-274A-004

War!

On March 13, 1917– still three weeks away from the U.S. declaration of war– Secretary of the Navy Josephus “Cup of Joe” Daniels issued regs governing the conduct of armed American merchant vessels, on which Navy personnel designated as Armed Guards manned the guns. The Bureau of Ordnance would follow up on the directive and issue guidance to the fleet for the removal of 20 5-inch/51-caliber, 20 6-inch/40-caliber, 4 5-inch/50-caliber, and 26 3-inch/50-caliber guns from storage and warships in reserve for use on merchantmen.

Talk about armed neutrality!

The first to be armed would be the passenger liners Manchuria, Mongolia, and St. Louis, along with the steamships New York, Philadelphia, Kroonland, Aztec, and St. Paul.

Just two days after the SECNAV’s orders, the New York Navy Yard completed the installation of deck guns aboard Manchuria, St. Louis, Aztec, and New York, and on the 16th of March, Manchuria— outfitted with two 4-inch guns forward, one 6-inch gun aft, two 1-pounders, and two Lewis guns– left NYC to become the first American armed merchantman to sail for the European war zone.

Mongolia would receive three 6″/40 Mark 4s, two forward and one over her stern, and later add two additional mounts, giving her a total of five of these large guns– the rough equivalent of a light cruiser. Her initial Armed Guard, consisting of one officer (Massachusetts-born LT Bruce Richardson Ware, Jr., USNA ’07) and 22 enlisted (a size that would later double), likewise carried sidearms and had a locker of rifles and a pair of Lewis guns at their disposal as well.

S.S. Mongolia. One of the ship’s forward six-inch guns, taken while Mongolia was at sea in April 1917. These guns were manned by Armed Guard crews supplied by the U.S. Navy. NH 41973

Mongolia, 1917. Note 6″/40 on stern. 165-WW-335D-021

Mongolia would make history on the early morning of 19 April– the Anniversary of the Battle of Lexington– when, at 0522, the Armed Guard aboard her engaged and drove off a U-boat with their stern 6-inch gun—No. 263, nicknamed “Teddy Roosevelt”—while some 7 miles southeast of Beachy Head in the English Channel. She fired on the submarine, wrecking the periscope and conning tower, and forced it to submerge. These are considered the first shots by the U.S. Navy against Germany in the Atlantic.

S.S. Mongolia. Two officers on board the ship soon after her 19 April 1917 action with a German submarine. They are identified in the original photo captions as Lieutenant Charles F. (or Bruce R.) Ware, USN, and First Officer Waldo E. Wollaston (or Mollaston). Note the right-hand officer’s high boots, communications gear, and .45 caliber M1911 pistol; binoculars worn by both; and non-U.S. Navy insignia on the left-hand officer’s cap. NH 52704

USS Mongolia. The ship’s after six-inch gun, with several shells, circa 1918. This gun was nicknamed Teddy, after former President Theodore Roosevelt. The original image is printed on postcard (AZO) stock. Donation of Dr. Mark Kulikowski, 2009. NH 106599

S.S. Mongolia. The ship’s after six-inch gun and its crew, April 1917. The two officers at right are identified, in the original photo caption, as Lieutenant Ware and Captain Emory Rice of the U.S. Naval Reserve Force. Note shells on deck, painted with letters: T-E-X-A-S and T-E-D-D-Y. NH 781

The news was electric and widely reported on both sides of the Atlantic, eventually passing into the post-war record.

The engagement was the subject of an art piece by Joseph Christian Leyendecker, used widely in reference to the Mongolia vs U-boat fight, with the gunners, in Leyendecker fashion, shirtless.

As noted by press accounts of interviews given by the ship’s skipper, Capt. Emery Rice:

“It was twenty-two after five o’clock in the morning of the 19th that we sighted the submarine. The officer commanding the gunners was with me on the bridge where, in fact, we had been the most time throughout the voyage.” Captain Rice continues, “There was a haze over the sea at the time. We had just taken a sounding for we were getting near shallow water, and we were looking at the lead when the first mate cried: “My God, there’s a submarine off the port bow!”

“The submarine was close to us, too close in fact for her purpose, and the boat was submerging again in order to maneuver into a better position for torpedoing was where we sighted her.” Rice continues “We saw the periscope go down and the swirl of the water. I quickly ordered the man at the wheel to put her to starboard and we swung the nose of the ship toward the spot where the submarine had been.”

“We were going at full speed ahead and two minutes after we first sighted the U-boat it emerged again about 1,000 yards off. Its intention probably had been to catch us broadside, but when it appeared he had the stern gun trained full on it. The gun crew commander, Lieutenant Ware gave the command “1,000 yards, Scale 50” and the big gun boomed. Gunner’s Mate James A. Goodwin was on the gun at the time, and he actually fired the shell that hit the U-boat. We saw the periscope shatter and tumble end over end across the water and the submarine disappeared. I can’t speak too highly of the cool manner in which the lieutenant handled his crew of gunners. It was a fine exhibition of the efficiency of American Naval men.” The whole encounter lasted only about two minutes. Lt. Ware gave the order to fire, and Gunner’s mate Goodwin pulled the lanyard firing the first shot, which missed. Reloading quickly, the gun crew fired again, and this time they were right on target hitting the conning tower of the U-boat. This shell exploded and hit the area of the conning tower. Quickly in a foamy froth of bubbles, the German slipped beneath the sea. America had just inflicted its first blood at sea against Germany, and it was over as quickly as it had started.

Captain Rice continues, “I assure you we did not stop after the incident, but steamed away at full speed, for it was not improbable that there was another submarine about. The one I got undoubtedly had been lying on the bottom at the spot waiting for the ship and came up when it heard our propellers. I immediately sent a wireless stating that a submarine had been seen.” Rice ended his statement with this “That’s about all the story except this. The gunners had named the guns on board the Mongolia and the one which got the submarine was called “Teddy” after Theodore Roosevelt; so Teddy fired the first gun of the war after all.” Captain Rice stated that Teddy Roosevelt was from Allison, Massachusetts, and that the encounter with the submarine occurred on the date when Massachusetts was celebrating the anniversary of the Battle of Lexington.

Ware’s version was less verbose:

We were just leaving New York Harbor when word reached us that Congress had declared war. On the way over we had daily gun practice and some ill luck with our 6-inch fixed ammunition. By the time we reached the submarine zone, our two bow guns had damaged bores and were not firing true. It was at dawn on the morning of the 19th of April, the anniversary of the Battle of Lexington, that we sighted the U-boat coming at us off the bow. Realizing that our forward guns were unreliable, we swung the Mongolia hard to starboard. The submarine, delighted to see us offering a broadside target for its torpedo, also swung around, coming into the range of our port guns. Our first shot caught the sub square on the conning tower beneath the periscope. There was a splash and when the water cleared away, there was no more submarine.

Post-war analysis doesn’t show a U-boat lost in these waters at the time Mongolia reported the incident, but it is posed by some that the boat involved may have been S.M. UB 40, an extremely successful member of the Flandern Flotilla, which reported taking gunfire in the same area without significant damage around this time.

Both Ware and Rice (who was sheep-dipped as a USNRF officer) were soon issued the Navy Cross.

While widely celebrated, the Armed Guards of Mongolia received what was possibly more press coverage due to an accident that occurred on a later voyage the following month.

On 20 May 1918, while just a few hours out of New York, while conducting target practice with the famed Teddy, an accident occurred that left a group of Red Cross nurses crossing over to France, who were observing the crew at work, with two dead and a third injured.

As noted by the SECNAV’s office at the time:

When about 100 miles to sea, in accordance with the usual procedure, guns were fired to test mounts, ammunition, and to practice the navy crew in their use. The guns were of the 6-inch caliber for which the shell and powder are loaded separately into the gun. The powder charge is contained in a brass case and there held in place by a pasteboard wad, distance pieces, and a brass mouth cup that fits closely, thus making a moisture-tight joint in order that the powder may always give the velocity and pressure intended. When the gun is fired this brass cup is propelled some distance, sometimes whole and sometimes in pieces, but always in front of the gun. Several nurses who were watching the firing were sitting on the promenade deck some 175 feet abaft and 10 feet above the gun. On the third shot the brass mouth cup struck the water peculiarly, boomeranged directly back to the ship, struck the stanchion near where the nurses were sitting and broke. Its pieces instantly killed Mrs. Edith Ayres and Miss Helen Burnett Wood, of Chicago

“Miss Helen B. Wood, the Chicago Red Cross nurse who was instantly killed in a gun accident while the gun crew of the armed American liner Mongolia was at target practice at sea,” followed by an ARC photo of Miss Edith Ayres. Signal Corps 165-WW-55B-84 via NARA/LOC LC-A6195- 4962

For what it is worth, later Congressional hearings into the incident charged that the fuzes involved were of “inferior workmanship” and that the Navy had not inspected them before accepting them from the Raleigh Iron Works, which was in the midst of rushed war work. In the hearings, the makers of the fuzes rebutted the charge, and the whole thing was written off as a terrible, but freak, accident.

Mongolia and her guard, then under one LT Philip Seymour, would, on 1 June 1917, engage another U-boat in a surface action. As noted in Seymour’s Navy Cross citation, the “enemy submarine fired a torpedo at that vessel, which, through quick maneuvering, missed the ship. Four shots were fired at the periscope when the submarine disappeared.”

On 9 April 1918, SECNAV Daniels announced that seven Army-run War Department transports and store ships—Finland (ID-4543), Pastores (ID-4540/AF-16), Tenadores, Henry R. Mallory (ID-1280), Lenape (ID-2700), Mongolia (ID-1615), and Manchuria (ID-1633)—were to be taken over by the Navy.

This led USS Mongolia to be commissioned in the Navy on 8 May 1918, with CDR E. McDowell in command. She went on to make 13 cross-Atlantic voyages from the U.S. to France, transporting over 33,000 troops, before decommissioning on 11 September 1919 for return to her owner. Likewise, her sistership Manchuria had bested that number, carrying 39,000 troops in 13 round trips to Europe (nine of them after the Armistice).

World War I Troop Transport Convoy at Sea, 1918. The most distant ship, in the left center, is the USS Mongolia (ID # 1615). The nearer ship, misidentified on the original print as USS Mercury (ID # 3012), is USS Madawaska (ID # 3011). Note the small destroyer ahead of the forward ship. Photographed by V.J.M. Donation of Charles R. Haberlein Jr., 2008. NH 106288

USS Mongolia (ID # 1615) at the New York Navy Yard, 28 June 1918, after being painted in pattern camouflage. NH 50252

USS Mongolia (ID # 1651) In port, while painted in dazzle camouflage, circa 1918. Donation of Dr. Mark Kulikowski, 2008. NH 105722

Nurses of Mobile Hospital #39, onboard Mongolia. A.T.S. Base Section #1. St. Nazaire Jan. 20. 1919 111-SC-46348

Homeward-bound troops taking their afternoon walk. St. Nazaire, Jan. 20 1919 111-SC-46349

USS Mongolia. Brest, 1919 111-SC-158226_001

102nd Artillery 26th Division loading on the Mongolia. Brest 3.31.19 111-SC-158223_001

103rd Artillery, 26th Division loading on the S. S. Mongolia. Brest, Finistere, France 3.31.19 111-SC-158225_001

LC-DIG-ggbain-23572

With troops aboard. Note her 6″/40. LC-DIG-ggbain-28781

Officers and men of Mongolia

Camouflaged U.S. Navy transport in harbor with barge and a passenger ferry alongside, circa 1918 or very early 1919. This ship is probably the USS Mongolia (ID # 1615). Donation of Charles R. Haberlein Jr., 2009. NH 106646

Returning to Trade

Post Versailles, Mongolia and Manchuria were operated by the rebooted New York‑Hamburg steamship line, making regular trips to Weimar-era Germany.

SS Mongolia at the St. Pauli Landing Stage, Hamburg, Germany, while in commercial service after World War I. Donation of Captain Stephen S. Roberts, USNR (Retired), 2008. NH 105919

Re-acquired by the Panama Pacific Lines in 1925, within a few years she was under the flag of the Dollar Steam Ship Lines, then in 1938, under the ownership of the American President Lines, was renamed SS President Fillmore.

Mongolia in Gaillard Cut March 17, 1926 185-G-1094

During the first days of WWII, she was sold to Wallam & Co. on 2 February 1940 and would sail for Cia Transatlantica Centroamericana under the Panamanian flag named (wait for it) SS Panamanian, and would carry commercial cargo through the conflict, managing to avoid further U-boat activity.

After suffering a fire at Freemantle’s North Quay while carrying a 10,000-ton cargo of flour in January 1945, she was scrapped at Shanghai in 1946.

As for her sister Manchuria, she had a similar interbellum history but, as the American-flagged President Line’s SS President Johnson, was requisitioned by the War Shipping Administration in 1941 and carried troops throughout the Pacific during WWII. 

Sold post-war to a Panamanian firm, she continued sailing as SS Santa Cruz, typically carrying European war refugees to South America, and was scrapped in 1952.

Epilogue

Mongolia’s naval plans are in the National Archives, as are her USS and USAT deck logs.

One of her 6″40s, No. 155, is preserved at Gosport Park, in Portsmouth, Virginia.

Speaking of Mongolia’s Armed Guard, Ware, its Navy Cross-wearing commander, went on to become an instructor at the Naval Academy then, after passing through the Naval War College program and later the Army War College, would become the XO of the transport USS Gold Star in the 1920s and then filled the same billet on the dreadnought USS West Virginia— during which the battlewagon was first in gunnery in the fleet. He also published extensively.

Retiring from the Navy as a captain in 1935, he passed in San Diego and is buried at Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery.

Mongolia is well remembered in the period of maritime art and postcards. 

S.S. Mongolia artwork, printed on a postal card issued by the Jewish Welfare Board to Soldiers and Sailors of the U.S. Army & Navy, during World War I. NH 45961


Ships are more than steel
and wood
And heart of burning coal,
For those who sail upon
them know
That some ships have a
soul.


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