HMS Balfour, an example of the Buckley class. |
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Class overview | |
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Builders: | Boston Navy Yard Mare Island Navy Yard Bethlehem-Hingham |
Operators: | Royal Navy |
Subclasses: | Buckley class Evarts class |
In service: | 1943 - 1956 |
Completed: | 78 |
Lost: | 7 |
General characteristics | |
Displacement: | 1,140 long tons (1,158 t) (Evarts) 1,400 long tons (1,422 t) (Buckley) |
Length: | 289 ft 6 in (88.24 m) (Evarts) 306 ft (93 m) (Buckley) |
Beam: | 35 ft (11 m) (Evarts) 36 ft 9 in (11.20 m)(Buckley) |
Draft: | 9 ft (2.7 m) |
Propulsion: | See text |
Speed: | 20 knots (37 km/h; 23 mph) (Evarts) 24 knots (44 km/h; 28 mph) (Buckley) |
Range: | 5,000 nautical miles (9,300 km; 5,800 mi) at 15 knots (28 km/h; 17 mph) (Evarts) 5,500 nautical miles (10,200 km; 6,300 mi) at 15 knots (28 km/h; 17 mph) (Buckley) |
Complement: | 156 (Evarts) 186 (Buckley) |
Sensors and processing systems: |
SA & SL type radars Type 144 series Asdic MF Direction Finding antenna HF Direction Finding Type FH 4 antenna |
Armament: | 3 × 3 in (76 mm) /50 Mk.22 guns 1 × twin Bofors 40 mm mount Mk.I 7-16 × 20 mm Oerlikon guns Mark 10 Hedgehog A/S projector Depth charges QF 2 pounder naval gun |
The Captain class were 78 frigates of the Royal Navy, constructed in the United States, launched in 1942–1943 and delivered to the United Kingdom under the provisions of Lend-Lease. They served in World War II as convoy escorts, anti-submarine warfare vessels and coastal forces control frigates. They were drawn from two classes of destroyer escort; 32 from the Evarts class and 46 from the Buckley class.
Post-war nearly all the surviving Captain class ships were returned to the US Navy as quickly as possible to reduce the amount payable under the provisions of the Lend-Lease agreement.
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In June 1941 His Majesty's Government asked the United States to design, build and supply an escort vessel that was suitable for anti-submarine warfare in deep open ocean situations.[1] The requested particulars were a length of 300 feet (90 m), a speed of 20 knots (37 km/h), a dual purpose main armament and an open bridge.[2] The United States Navy had been looking into the feasibility of such a vessel since 1939 and Captain E. L. Cochrane of the Bureau of Shipping - who during his visit to the United Kingdom in 1940 looked at Royal Navy corvettes and Hunt class destroyers - had come up with a design for such a vessel.[3] This design had anticipated a need for large numbers of vessels of this type, and had sought to remove the major bottleneck of production for vessels of this type: reduction gearing required for the steam turbine machinery of destroyers.[2] Production of reduction gears could not be easily increased, as the precision machinery required for their construction alone took over a year to produce.[2] Therefore, a readily-available and proven layout of diesel-electric machinery, also used on submarines, was adopted. When the United Kingdom made their request, Admiral Stark (USN) decided to put these plans into motion and recommended that the British order be approved.[4] Gibbs and Cox, the marine architects charged with creating working plans, had to make several alterations to the method of production and to Captain Cochrane's original design, most notably dropping another production bottleneck[2] - the five inch /38 caliber gun - and replacing it with the three inch /50 caliber gun, which allowed a third gun to be added in a superfiring position ("B") forward.[2] The result was a vessel that could be produced at half the cost of a fleet destroyer.[4]
On August 15, 1941 President Franklin D. Roosevelt authorised the construction of 50 of the new Evarts-class design as BDE 1 - 50 (British Destroyer Escort)[2] as part of the 1799 program (a plan to supply 1799 ships to the Royal Navy),[5] The turbo-electric powered Buckley class were not part of the first order and were authorised later by Public Law 440 effective February 6, 1942.[6] The Royal Navy placed orders in November 1941 with four ship yards: Boston Navy Yard, Mare Island Navy Yard, Philadelphia Naval Shipyard and Puget Sound Navy Yard.[4] When the United States entered the war, they too adopted the BDE design.[4] The BDE designation was retained by the first six destroyer escorts (BDE 1, 2, 3, 4, 12 and 46) transferred to the United Kingdom. Of the initial 50 ordered, these were the only ones the Royal Navy received; the rest were reclassified as destroyer escort (DE) on January 25, 1943 and taken over by the United States Navy.[4] By the end of World War II the Royal Navy had received 32 Evarts and 46 Buckleys[4] from Boston Navy Yard, Mare Island Navy Yard and Bethlehem-Hingham.[2]
The Royal Navy classified these ships as frigates, as they lacked the torpedo tubes necessary to be classified as destroyers.[7] For those used to Admiralty-designed ships the Captains were unfamiliar: they had no break forward of the forecastle and a graceful shear to deck-line from the forecastle to midship, and the Evarts had daringly rakish cowls on top of the funnels.[8] Those that served on these ships came to view these features as being very handsome. [8] Some of the differences from British designed vessels that would have been most noticeable to the crews were the provision of bunks rather than hammocks,[9] and the use of welds rather than rivets in the design.[10]
On first arrival in the United Kingdom the first port of call for most of the Captains was Pollock Dock, Belfast where the ships were modified in order to match Admiralty requirements.[11] In all there was 109 items in the alterations and additions list for the Evarts and 94 for the Buckleys.[11]
Some of the main design difference between the Royal Navy frigates and the US Navy destroyer escorts were that the Buckley class did not have the forward torpedo tubes fitted[8] (the Evarts class was not designed to carry torpedo tubes[12]) and the ice cream makers, the iced water fountains, the dishwashers were removed, the "cafeteria" messing system discontinued and the replacing of the primitive American two-seat "thunder trough" toilets (which did not offer even so much as a simple canvas screen to spare blushes) with an enclosed water closet.[11]
Further alterations were:
HMS Dacres, HMS Kingsmill and HMS Lawford were converted to headquarters ships for use during Operation Neptune. These ships had their aft three inch (76 mm) gun and all the depth charge gear removed and the superstructure extended to provide accommodation for extra Staff Officers; two deckhouses were built for the additional radios needed and a small main mast was added to support the many extra aerials. Four more Oerlikons were fitted bringing the total to 16, and a number of radar sets fitted (Type 271 centimetric target identification and Type 291 air warning, and the associated Types 242 and 253 IFF sets).[2][21] The complement was now 141, with a headquarters staff of 64.[2]
The Evarts class had diesel-electric machinery, based on an arrangement used for submarines.[2] There were two shafts. Four Winton 278A 16-cylinder engines, with a combined rating of 7,040 bhp (5,250 kW), driving General Electric Company (GE) generators (4,800 kW) supplied power to two GE electric motors, with an output of 6,000 shp (4,500 kW), for 20 knots (37 km/h). It had been intended to provide a further set of this machinery, for an output of 12,000 shp (8,900 kW) to make the design speed of 24 knots (44 km/h), but hull production greatly outstripped that of the machinery, therefore only one set of machinery was used per ship.[2]
To make the designed speed, the Buckleys had turbo-electric machinery.[2] Two Foster-Wheeler[22] Express "D"-type water-tube boilers supplied steam to GE 13,500 shp (10,070 kW) steam turbines and generators (9,200 kW). Electric motors for 12,000 shp (8,900 kW)[22] drove the two shafts each fitted with a three-bladed propeller of solid manganese-bronze that was 8.5 feet (2.6 m) in diameter.[23]
This all electric drive-train was considered particularly innovative at the time (although the Catherine class minesweepers had a similar arrangement).
The Captains had a crew of either 156 (Evarts)[22] and 186 (Buckley)[22] officers and ratings. The bulk of the ratings were Hostilities Only and all had to be trained from scratch in which ever branch of the Navy they had chosen to serve. After about six weeks square bashing and getting physically fit, they moved onto the job training.[24] Many of the senior non-commissioned officers were pre-war regular service who had been promoted.[24]
Engineering personnel were faced with the added complication of power plants not normally found in the Royal Navy. Initially, they were trained alongside US Navy personnel at purpose-built facilities in the General Electric Company factories at Cleveland and Syracuse, being awarded a certificates at the end of their training;[25] later, training was provided in the United Kingdom.[26]
Ship's companies were shipped over to the USA by them taking passage from the Clyde or Liverpool to New York on liners such as the RMS Queen Mary.[27] On arriving in New York, the crews were initially assigned to HMS Saker[27] until they were reassigned to a Captain class frigate. Later, some of the Captains were ferried across the Atlantic by crews of the Royal Canadian Navy coming to the United Kingdom to collect River class frigates ordered by the Canadians.[27]
It was the intention of the Admiralty that these ships were to named after Captains that served with Vice-Admiral Horatio Nelson at the Battle of Trafalgar but as building continued, it became necessary to delve back further into history for names of Admirals and Captains of reputation.[28]
66 of the 78 frigates bear names that had not previously been allocated earlier Royal Navy ships. Lawford, Louis, Manners, Moorsom, Mounsey, Narborough, Pasley and Seymour had been previously used for destroyers during World War I.[28] Rupert was the fifth of that name since 1666.[28] Torrington was the fourth of that name since 1654.[28] Holmes had been used once before in 1671[28] and Fitzroy had previously been used for a survey vessel in 1919.[28]
HMS Retalick (K555) sliding down the slipway in the early morning on October 9, 1943 at Bethlehem-Hingham shipyard.]] |
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General characteristics | |
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Class and type: | Evarts-class |
Type: | frigate |
Displacement: | 1,140 long tons (1,158 t) |
Length: | 289.5 ft (88.2 m) |
Beam: | 35 ft (11 m) |
Draft: | 9 ft (2.7 m) |
Propulsion: | Diesel-electric machinery |
Speed: | 20 knots (37 km/h; 23 mph) |
Range: | 5,000 nautical miles (9,300 km; 5,800 mi) at 15 knots (28 km/h; 17 mph) |
Complement: | 156 |
Sensors and processing systems: |
SA & SL type radars Type 144 series Asdic MF Direction Finding antenna HF Direction Finding Type FH 4 antenna |
Armament: | 3 × 3 in (76 mm) /50 Mk.22 guns 1 × twin Bofors 40 mm mount Mk.I 7-16 × 20 mm Oerlikon guns Mark 10 Hedgehog A/S projector Depth charges QF 2 pounder naval gun |
Name | Pennant | U.S. Hull No. |
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Bayntun | K310 | (B)DE-1 |
Bazely | K311 | (B)DE-2 |
Berry | K312 | (B)DE-3 |
Blackwood | K313 | (B)DE-4 |
Burges | K347 | (B)DE-12 |
Capel | K470 | DE-266 |
Cooke | K471 | DE-267 |
Dacres | K472 | DE-268 |
Domett | K473 | DE-269 |
Drury | K316 | (B)DE-46 |
Foley | K474 | DE-270 |
Gardiner | K478 | DE-274 |
Garlies | K475 | DE-271 |
Goodall | K479 | DE-275 |
Goodson | K480 | DE-276 |
Gore | K481 | DE-277 |
Gould | K476 | DE-272 |
Grindall | K477 | DE-273 |
Hoste | K566 | DE-521 |
Inglis | K570 | DE-525 |
Inman | K571 | DE-526 |
Keats | K482 | DE-278 |
Kempthorne | K483 | DE-279 |
Kingsmill | K484 | DE-280 |
Lawford | K514 | DE-516 |
Lawson | K516 | DE-518 |
Loring | K565 | DE-520 |
Louis | K515 | DE-517 |
Manners | K568 | DE-523 |
Moorsom | K567 | DE-522 |
Mounsey | K569 | DE-524 |
Pasley | K564 | DE-519 |
Buckley class ships had turbo-electric machinery.
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Following standard Royal Navy protocols, all of the Captains had large pennant numbers painted on the sides and stern of the hull,[29] usually in blue, red or black.[30] The escort groups to which most of the Captains were assigned had their own individual insignia, where these distinctive and colourful designs were painted on the side of the ship's funnel,[19] and if the ship was home to the escort group senior officer it would also have a coloured band painted around the top of the funnel (usually in blue or red).[19] The ship's waterline was always in black.[30]
A total of five different camouflage schemes were employed on the Captains.[19]
The Captains were primarily used to provide an anti-submarine cover to the convoys they escorted, however a small number of ships were converted to act as coastal forces control frigates and as headquarters ships during Operation Neptune.
Collectively, the Captains gained battle honours for service in Arctic (Russian Convoys), Atlantic, Biscay, English Channel, Normandy (D-Day on 6 June 1944 and subsequent related operations), North Foreland and Walcheren.[31]
Date | Submarine | Position Sunk | Ships | Fate of Submarine Crew |
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October 17, 1943 | U-841 | HMS Byard | 27 lost and 27 survivors | |
November 21, 1943 | U-538 | HMS Foley | 55, all hands Lost | |
November 23, 1943 | U-648 | HMS Bazely, HMS Blackwood, HMS Drury | 50, all hands Lost | |
November 25, 1943 | U-600 | HMS Bazely, HMS Blackwood | 54, all hands Lost | |
January 8, 1944 | U-757 | HMS Bayntun | 49, all hands Lost | |
February 26, 1944 | U-91 | HMS Affleck, HMS Gore, HMS Gould | 36 lost and 16 survivors | |
March 1, 1944 | U-358 | HMS Affleck, HMS Gore, HMS Gould, HMS Garlies | 50 lost and one survivor | |
March 16, 1944 | U-392 | HMS Affleck | 52, all hands lost | |
May 6, 1944 | U-765 | HMS Bickerton, HMS Bligh, HMS Aylmer | 37 lost and 11 survivors | |
June 25, 1944 | U-269 | HMS Bickerton | 13 lost and 39 survivors | |
June 29. 1944 | U-988 | HMS Duckworth, HMS Cooke, HMS Domett, HMS Essington | 50, all hands lost | |
July 18, 1944 | U-672 | HMS Balfour | 52 survivors | |
July 21, 1944 | U-212 | HMS Curzon, HMS Ekins | 49 all hands Lost | |
July 26, 1944 | U-214 | HMS Cooke | 48, all hands lost | |
August 5, 1944 | U-671 | HMS Stayner | 47 lost and five survivors | |
August 14, 1944 | U-618 | HMS Duckworth, HMS Essington | 61, all hands lost | |
August 24, 1944 | U-445 | HMS Louis | 52, all hands lost | |
January 26, 1945 | U-1051 | HMS Aylmer, HMS Bentinck, HMS Calder, HMS Manners | 47. all hands lost | |
January 27, 1945 | U-1172 | HMS Tyler, HMS Keats, HMS Bligh | 52, all hands lost | |
February 3, 1945 | U-1279 | HMS Bayntun, HMS Braithwaite | 48, all hands lost | |
February 14, 1945 | U-989 | HMS Bayntun, HMS Braithwaite | 47, all hands lost | |
February 17, 1945 | U-1278 | HMS Bayntun | 48, all hands lost | |
February 27, 1945 | U-1208 | HMS Duckworth, HMS Rowley | 49, all hands lost | |
March 26, 1945 | U-399 | HMS Duckworth | 46 lost and one survivor | |
March 27, 1945 | U-722 | HMS Fitzroy, HMS Redmill, HMS Byron | 44, all hands lost | |
March 27, 1945 | U-905 | HMS Conn | 45, all hands lost | |
March 29, 1945 | U-1169 | HMS Duckworth, HMS Rowley | 49, all hands lost | |
March 30, 1945 | U-965 | HMS Conn, HMS Rupert, HMS Deane | 51, all hands lost | |
April 8, 1945 | U-1001 | HMS Fitzroy, HMS Byron | 45, all hands lost | |
April 8, 1945 | U-774 | HMS Bentinck, HMS Calder | 44, all hands lost | |
April 15, 1945 | U-1063 | HMS Cranstoun, HMS Burges | 29 lost and 17 survivors | |
April 15, 1945 | U-285 | HMS Grindall, HMS Keats | 44, all hands lost | |
April 21, 1945 | U-636 | HMS Bentinck, HMS Bazely, HMS Drury | 42, all hands lost | |
April 29, 1945 | U-286 | HMS Cotton | 51, all hands lost |
In addition, Captain class frigates which operated with Coastal Forces, (Motor Torpedo Boats, Motor Gun Boats and US Navy PT boats) sank at least two two-man submarines,[34] and were involved in the destruction of at least 26 E-Boats,[35] one KFK patrol vessel (coastal escort vessels constructed to a fishing-vessel design),[36] two minesweepers,[36] and the shooting down of a Junkers Ju 88 aeroplane.[37]
Date | Ship | Incident | Casualties |
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March 1, 1944[38] | HMS Gould | Torpedoed and sunk by U-358 south-west of Ireland in position .[39] | Loss of 123 hands.[39] |
June 8, 1944[40] | HMS Lawford | Hit by a Glide bomb launched from a German aeroplane in her hull, port side midships, which blew out the bottom of the ship which quickly sank, off J1 Sector of Gold Beach on D-Day+2.[41] | Loss of 26 hands.[42] |
June 11, 1944[43] | HMS Halstead | Torpedoed by an E-boat in mid channel off Normandy which blew off her bow section, she was written off as Constructive Total Loss.[43] | Loss of 27 hands.[43] |
June 15, 1944[44] | HMS Blackwood | Torpedoed by U-764, the forward part of ship was blown off, the hulk sank at 04.10Hrs the next morning.[45] | Loss of 60 hands.[44] |
June 26, 1944[46] | HMS Goodson | Torpedoed by U-984 approximately 38 nautical miles (70 km) south of Portland Bill in position badly damaged towed back to port and assessed as a Constructive Total Loss.[47] | No fatalities.[48] |
August 22, 1944[49] | HMS Bickerton | Torpedoed by U-354 during Operation Goodwood in the Barents Sea, in position seriously damaged and ship abandoned, sunk by own forces.[50] | Loss of 39 hands. [51] |
November 1, 1944[52] | HMS Whitaker | Torpedoed by U-483 off Malin Head, near Loch Swilly, Ireland; she seriously damaged, and towed back to Belfast.[52] Declared a Constructive Total Loss. | Loss of 92 hands.[52] |
November 2, 1944[53] | HMS Mounsey | Torpedoed by U-295 outside the Kola Inlet[54] but managed to limp back to Polyarnoe where she was patched up by the Russians and managed to get back to Belfast before Christmas for permanent repairs.[53] | Loss of 10 hands.[53] |
December 6, 1944[55] | HMS Bullen | Torpedoed midships and sunk off Cape Wrath[55] by U-775 in position .[56] | Loss of 55 hands.[57] |
December 25, 1944[58] | HMS Dakins | Hit a ground mine off the Belgium coast, she was towed into Antwerp where she was declared Constructive Total Loss.[58] | No fatalities.[58] |
December 26, 1944[59] | HMS Capel | Torpedoed by one of two torpedoes fired by U-486, she sank having had her bows blown off.[60] This happened north-north-east of Cherbourg, in position .[61] | Loss of 76 hands.[61] |
December 26, 1944[59] | HMS Affleck | Torpedoed by one of two torpedoes fired by U-486, which seriously damaged her stern. She was towed back to port and assessed as a Constructive Total Loss.[60] This happened off Cherbourg.[62] | Loss of 9 hands.[63] |
January 26, 1945[64] | HMS Manners | Torpedoed by U-1051[65] off the Isle of Man.[66] She was towed back to Barrow-in-Furness and declared a Constructive Total Loss.[65] | Loss of 43 hands.[65] |
April 15, 1945[67] | HMS Ekins | Hit two ground mines in the Scheldt Estuary, towed back to port and put into dry dock, when water was pumped out she broke her back and was written off as Constructive Total Loss.[68] | No fatalities[69] |
April 27, 1945[70] | HMS Redmill | Torpedoed by U-1105 25 nautical miles (46 km) west of Silgo Bay, Ireland[70] in position [71] towed in to Belfast with serious damage. Written off as a Constructive Total Loss.[70] | Loss of 24 hands.[70] |
April 29, 1945[72] | HMS Goodall | Torpedoed by U-286 outside the Kola Inlet .[73] HMS Goodall was the last ship of the Royal Navy sunk in the European theatre of World War Two.[72] | Loss of 98 hands.[72] |
At the end of World War II most of the surviving Captains were returned to the US Navy as quickly as possible to reduce the amount payable under the provisions of the Lend-Lease agreement. The last of the Captains returned was HMS Hotham, which in the post-war period served as a floating power station in Singapore until early 1948 when she sailed for Portsmouth, becoming the base for a Royal Navy Engineering research team which was experimenting with gas turbine engines.[74] Hotham was returned on April 25, 1952 and simultaneously transferred back to the United Kingdom under the Mutual Defence Assistance Program.[75] The partially-stripped vessel was later returned to United States custody in February 1956.[75]
On April 17, 2005 a memorial to the Captains, those that served, and those killed in action in them was dedicated at the National Memorial Arboretum near Alrewas, Staffordshire.
Introduction to the Order of Service from the memorial dedication April 17, 2005Today we come in thanksgiving for all who served on Captain Class Frigates in the Royal Navy in the Second World War.
We remember all those who were shore-based, especially the Wrens who gave valuable support to those who served at sea, and who are represented here today.
In particular we give thanks to those who made the supreme sacrifice on behalf of us all.
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This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.