HNoMS Laugen (1918-1950)

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Frøya
Career Norwegian State and Navy Flag
Ordered:
Laid down:
Launched: 1918
Commissioned:
Fate: Decommisioned in 1950
General characteristics
Displacement: 351 tons
Dimensions: 42 m x 8.5 m x 2.3 m
Armament: 2x 76 mm (3 inch) guns
120 mines
Propulsion: 340 hp ( Kw), 9.9 knop ( km/h, mph)
Crew: 35 or 39 (sources disagree)

The minelayer HNoMS Laugen was built for the Royal Norwegian Navy during World War I, as the lead ship of a two ship class. Her sister ship was Glommen.

A rather small vessel, she and her sister ship were kept in service until the German invasion in 1940. Laugen surrendered to the Germans on 14 April 1940, and like her sister ship was rebuilt as a floating anti aircraft battery. She was returned to the Norwegian Navy in 1945 and decommissioned in 1950.

Laugen was built at Akers Mekaniske Verksted in Oslo. She was named after the river Lågen in southern Norway.

[edit] References


Norwegian minelayers
Glommen class: Glommen, Laugen
Frøya
Olav Tryggvason
Vale (N53)
Gor class: Brage, Gor, Uller, Tyr
Formerly US Navy Auk class

Minelayers of the Royal Norwegian Navy