Guépard class destroyer


Guépard class destroyer
Class overview
Name: Guépard
Preceded by: Chacal
Succeeded by: Aigle
Completed: 6
General characteristics
Type: Destroyer
Displacement: 2436 tons standard, 3200 tons full load
Length: 130.2 m
Beam: 11.76 m
Draught: 4.03 m
Propulsion: Geared turbines, 4 boilers giving 64000 SHP
Speed: 35.5 knots
Range: 3450 nmi at 14.5 knots
Complement: 209 officers and men
Armament:

5x 138 mm (5.4in) 40 calibre guns
4 x 37 mm /50 DCA - 3.7 cm Mod 1933 AA guns
4 x 13.2 mm /76 DCA - 13.2 mm Mod 1929 AA guns

6 550 mm (21 in) torpedo tubes

The Guépard-class destroyers (contre-torpilleurs) of the French navy were laid down in 1927 and commissioned in 1930. They were similar to the previous Chacal class, with a larger hull and with a slightly improved speed and gun armament with 138mm guns of a new design. The first three ships bore 'animal' names like the Chacals, while the remaining three were given names starting with V, for two battles and a field-marshal The class saw action in World War II.

Ships

built by Arsenal de Lorient,
completed 10 October 1930.
She was sunk by German Junkers Ju 87 Stukas while taking part in the evacuation of Namsos, on 3 May 1940, off Trondheim. Out of 229 members on the crew, 136 were lost.[1] Survivors from the Bison were picked up by HMS Afridi, which was then sunk by the Stukas.
built by Arsenal de Lorient,
completed 13 August 1929,
scuttled 27 November 1942.
built by AT & Ch de France Dunkirk,
completed 21 January 1931,
scuttled 27 November 1942.
built by AT & Ch St Nazaire Panhoet,
completed 1 January 1930,
scuttled 27 November 1942.
built by AT & Ch de la Loire, St Nazaire,
completed 1 April 1930,
scuttled 27 November 1942.
built by AT & Ch de France Dunkirk,
completed 9 January 1931,
scuttled 27 November 1942.

The other five members of the class (Guépard, Lion, Valmy, Vauban and Verdun) were all scuttled on 27 November 1942 to prevent them falling into German hands. All were subsequently raised by the Italian navy, Lion and Valmy being repaired and commissioned as the Italian FR21 and FR24. Both were subsequently re-scuttled in September 1943 at La Spezia. Valmy was then raised once more and recommissioned into the Kriegsmarine before finally sinking in Genoa in 1945.

Notes

  1. ^ Charles Hocking (1990). Dictionary of Disasters at Sea During The Age of Steam. The London Stamp Exchange, London. ISBN 0 948130 687. p. 87

References