Battle-class destroyer
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The Battle class were a class of destroyers of the British
Royal Navy The Royal Navy (RN) is the United Kingdom's naval warfare force. Although warships were used by English and Scottish kings from the early medieval period, the first major maritime engagements were fought in the Hundred Years' War against ...
(RN) and
Royal Australian Navy The Royal Australian Navy (RAN) is the principal naval force of the Australian Defence Force (ADF). The professional head of the RAN is Chief of Navy (CN) Vice Admiral Mark Hammond AM, RAN. CN is also jointly responsible to the Minister of ...
(RAN), named after naval or other battles fought by British or English forces. Built in three groups, the first group were ordered under the 1942 naval estimates. A modified second and third group, together with two ships of an extended design were planned for the 1943 and 1944 estimates. Most of these ships were cancelled when it became apparent that the war was being won and the ships would not be required, although two ships of the third group, ordered for the RAN, were not cancelled and were subsequently completed in Australia. Seven Battles were commissioned before the end of World War II, but only saw action, with the
British Pacific Fleet The British Pacific Fleet (BPF) was a Royal Navy formation that saw action against Japan during the Second World War. The fleet was composed of empire naval vessels. The BPF formally came into being on 22 November 1944 from the remaining ships o ...
.


"1942" or "Early Battle" class

The first years of World War II had shown that British destroyers were ill-equipped to deal with concentrated air attacks, and the
Royal Navy The Royal Navy (RN) is the United Kingdom's naval warfare force. Although warships were used by English and Scottish kings from the early medieval period, the first major maritime engagements were fought in the Hundred Years' War against ...
suffered heavy losses as a result. In 1941 urgent consideration of the problem led to a naval staff requirement for a new class of large fleet destroyer with High Angle (HA) twin guns and an HA control system. It was decided that this main armament would be set forward in a superfiring configuration for all guns to engage one target. Arcs of fire were increased by setting the bridge structure further aft than normal. The proposed anti-aircraft (AA) armament were eight 40/60 mm guns in twin mountings set atop the middle and after deck houses to give all around, overlapping arcs of fire. These were to be supplemented by 20 mm guns positioned variously around the ship. Eight
torpedo tube A torpedo tube is a cylindrical device for launching torpedoes. There are two main types of torpedo tube: underwater tubes fitted to submarines and some surface ships, and deck-mounted units (also referred to as torpedo launchers) installed aboa ...
s were to be carried in two quadruple mounts. A/S armament called for two depth charge rails and four depth charge throwers to be fitted. A new feature was the first use of stabilisers in a destroyer, allowing a steady platform for AA gunnery. With these parameters accepted, a sketch design was approved in the autumn of 1941 and orders for sixteen ships (two flotillas) were placed under the 1942 programme. Considerably larger than the standard fleet destroyer, these ships were seen as a replacement for the which had already suffered many losses. With a length of they were two feet longer than the Tribals and with a beam of were just over three feet wider. It was decided to abandon the usual alphabetical naming of destroyer flotillas and name these ships after famous land and sea battles, thus these ships became known as the 1942 Battle class.


Orders and construction

The first ten ships were ordered on 27 April 1942. These comprised ''Barfleur'', ''Trafalgar'' and ''St Kitts'' (with Swan Hunter, Wallsend); ''Armada'', ''Solebay'' and ''Saintes'' (with Hawthorn Leslie); ''Camperdown'' and ''Finisterre'' (with Fairfield, Govan); and ''Hogue'' and (with White, Cowes). The remaining six ships were ordered on 12 August 1942. These comprised ''Gabbard'' (with Swan Hunter); ''Gravelines'' and ''Sluys'' (with Cammell Laird); and ''Cadiz'', ''St James'' and ''Vigo'' (with Fairfield, Govan). The order for ''Hogue'' and ''Lagos'' was moved from Whites to Cammell Laird on the same date.


Modifications

The placing of orders did not stop design work but by this time plans were too far advanced for big changes to be considered, although some design changes were made to the armament. One change, incorporated with protection against air-attack in mind, was the decision to standardise on the 4.5-inch gun for the main armament rather than the low angle 4.7 inch that was the usual destroyer gun and only effective against surface targets. The four 4.5 inch guns, fitted in two Mk IV turrets, were capable of high angle fire against aircraft and were controlled from a Director Control Tower (DCT) fitted with radar. Another alteration made whilst building was the fitting of a 4-inch gun on a gundeck
abaft This glossary of nautical terms is an alphabetical listing of terms and expressions connected with ships, shipping, seamanship and navigation on water (mostly though not necessarily on the sea). Some remain current, while many date from the 17th t ...
the funnel. It was also decided that the twin 40/60 mm guns would be fitted on Hazemeyer Mark IV mountings fitted with Radar Type 282. These would be mounted side by side on the middle gundeck between the torpedo tubes and en-echelon atop the after deckhouse. Due to delays in completion, the plans for 20 mm guns were altered and eventually four single 40/60 mm guns in Mk VII mountings were fitted, one forward of the bridge structure behind 'B' gun, one on either bridge wing and one aft on the quarterdeck. Experience in the Pacific, against the Japanese, pointed to the limited usefulness of the 4 inch gun abaft the funnel and only the first ships completed, ''Barfleur'', ''Armada'', ''Trafalgar'', ''Camperdown'', ''Hogue'' and ''Lagos'' were fitted with the gun. In all other ships the gun was replaced by two single 40/60 mm Mk VII giving a total of 14 Bofors, the heaviest light AA armament of any British destroyer and heavier than that carried in many cruisers. In time, all the ships fitted with the 4 inch gun had them removed and replaced with the two single 40/60 mm Mk VII Bofors All ships were completed with a lattice foremast, instead of the pole mast shown in the original plans. This enabled the ships to carry the latest
radar Radar is a detection system that uses radio waves to determine the distance ('' ranging''), angle, and radial velocity of objects relative to the site. It can be used to detect aircraft, ships, spacecraft, guided missiles, motor vehicles, we ...
and various IFF transponders and receivers on the foremast. Typical radar fit when built was the "cheese" of Type 293 target indication at the masthead, Radar Type 291 air warning on the mainmast and the twin nacelles Radar Type 275 fire control on the Mk. VI director.


Service

Delays in completion of these ships was caused, as in other classes, by the late delivery of the Mk VI DCTs and fire control systems. ''Barfleur'' was launched first in November 1943 and was completed by
Swan Hunter Swan Hunter, formerly known as Swan Hunter & Wigham Richardson, is a shipbuilding design, engineering, and management company, based in Wallsend, Tyne and Wear, England. At its apex, the company represented the combined forces of three powe ...
in mid 1944 but by August her DCT had still not been delivered. ''Barfleur'' ran trials in September and was commissioned but had to return to the Tyne to await delivery and fitting of her director and fire control system. Other ships were similarly affected, ''Trafalgar'' spending many months laid up in the Tyne in 1944. It was intended that the first eight ships would form the 19th Destroyer Flotilla with the
British Pacific Fleet The British Pacific Fleet (BPF) was a Royal Navy formation that saw action against Japan during the Second World War. The fleet was composed of empire naval vessels. The BPF formally came into being on 22 November 1944 from the remaining ships o ...
in the Far East, but only ''Barfleur'' made it to the Pacific in time to take part in operations against Japan. ''Barfleur'' was in Tokyo Bay during the Japanese surrender ceremony on 3 September 1945 and after the war she was joined by ''Armada'', ''Trafalgar'', ''Hogue'', ''Lagos'' and ''Camperdown''. In 1947 all six ships returned home and went into reserve. The other two other ships destined for the 19th Flotilla, ''Solebay'' and ''Finisterre'' were retained in home waters, ''Finisterre'' became gunnery training ship for the Portsmouth Command and ''Solebay'' leader of the
5th Destroyer Flotilla The British 5th Destroyer Flotilla, or Fifth Destroyer Flotilla, was a naval formation of the Royal Navy The Royal Navy (RN) is the United Kingdom's naval warfare force. Although warships were used by English and Scottish kings from the ...
, Home Fleet, which consisted of six ships of the second flotilla, ''Cadiz'', ''Gabbard'', ''St. James'', ''St. Kitts'', (see below) and . The other two ships of the second flotilla ''Gravelines'' and ''Vigo'' going straight into reserve upon completion. The ships of the second flotilla saw a change in the light AA armament. The tri-axially stabilised Dutch "Hazemeyer" mountings with their Radar Type 282 were regarded as unreliable and were replaced by an Admiralty designed Stabilised Tachymetric Anti Aircraft Gun (STAAG) mount. The Hazemeyer's Radar Type 282 was metric and operated through a pair of
Yagi antenna Yagi may refer to: Places * Yagi, Kyoto, in Japan * Yagi (Kashihara), in Nara Prefecture, Japan * Yagi-nishiguchi Station, in Kashihara, Nara, Japan * Kami-Yagi Station, a JR-West Kabe Line station located in 3-chōme, Yagi, Asaminami-ku, Hiroshima ...
e and could therefore only supply target range. The British design used Radar Type 262 centimetric radar with a small spinning dish aerial, which gave range and bearing and was capable of "locking on" to a target and could train and elevate the guns as the target moved. The British design was more complicated than the Dutch design and weighed a massive each (compared with the Hazemeyer's ). This meant that only two mountings could be installed, to keep the top hamper within acceptable limits. These were fitted to the top of the after deckhouse. The middle gundeck, between the torpedo tubes, was left empty. The mountings proved even less reliable than the ones they replaced and led to three ships ''Saintes'', ''Camperdown'' and ''Trafalgar'' eventually having them replaced by Mk V "utility" mountings, each controlled by a Simple Tachymetric Director (STD) mounted on the top of the gun crew shelter. A further refinement saw the removal of the depth charge equipment and single 40/60 mm Bofors gun from the quarterdeck, to be replaced by a Squid ahead throwing depth charge mortar. The after deckhouse was extended to contain a mortar handling room. This eventually became standard for all of the 1942 Battles. A variation occurred when ''Saintes'' was completed with a 4.5 inch RP 41 Mark VI turret in the "B" gun position. Commissioned in September 1946 into the 5th Destroyer Flotilla ''Saintes'' spent most of the time in independent trials of the new gun. Upon completion of trials ''Saintes'' paid off and was refitted with the standard Battle class armament before being laid up. ''Saintes'' recommissioned in 1949 when, as D3 and with ''Armada'', ''Vigo'' and ''Gravelines'', they replaced and the V class as the 3rd Destroyer Flotilla, Mediterranean Fleet. ''Barfleur'' replaced ''Gravelines'' in the 3rd Flotilla but no major changes took place until 1953. The appearance of the ''Daring''s at this time spelled the demise of the 5th Destroyer Flotilla, and after the
Coronation Review A fleet review or naval review is an event where a gathering of ships from a particular navy is paraded and reviewed by an incumbent head of state and/or other official civilian and military dignitaries. A number of national navies continue to ...
all six ships went into reserve. Only two, ''Solebay'' and ''St. Kitts''. saw further service with the Royal Navy. In 1956 ''Saintes'' headed home for a major refit at Rosyth, her crew transferring to ''Armada''. ''Vigo'' also returning to home waters to replace ''Finisterre'' as gunnery training ship at Portsmouth. By late 1956 only four ships remained operational. ''Armada'', ''Barfleur'' and ''St. Kitts'' with the 3rd Destroyer Squadron (as they were now called) and ''Vigo'' as Portsmouth Command gunnery training ship. All the other ships were either in reserve or refitting. Most had the fire control system updated and new
ASDIC Sonar (sound navigation and ranging or sonic navigation and ranging) is a technique that uses sound propagation (usually underwater, as in submarine navigation) to navigate, measure distances ( ranging), communicate with or detect objects on ...
fitted and those that still had the quarterdeck AA gun had it replaced by the Squid A/S mortar. In 1957, the Ch-class destroyers of the 1st Destroyer Squadron were replaced by the newly refitted ''Solebay'', ''Hogue'' and ''Lagos''. Prior to 1960, ''Hogue'' filmed for destroyer night attack scenes used in the film '' Sink the Bismarck!''. Initially serving with the Mediterranean Fleet, in 1959 the squadron deployed to the Far East, where ''Hogue''s career came to an abrupt end. While participating in a night-time exercise with other navies off Ceylon on 25 August, ''Hogue'' collided with the Indian light cruiser , which rammed ''Hogue'', crushing the destroyer's bow, killing a sailor and wounding three others. She was towed to
Singapore Singapore (), officially the Republic of Singapore, is a sovereign island country and city-state in maritime Southeast Asia. It lies about one degree of latitude () north of the equator, off the southern tip of the Malay Peninsula, bor ...
where she was laid up until scrapped in 1962. Upon the return home of the remaining ships in 1960 ''Hogue'' was replaced in the squadron by ''Finisterre''. In 1957 a newly refitted ''Camperdown'', which had been in reserve since returning from the Far East with the 19th Destroyer Flotilla ten years previously, was brought back into service to relieve ''St. Kitts'' in the 3rd Destroyer Squadron. The following year ''Saintes'' having finished her major refit at Rosyth resumed command of the 3rd Squadron, relieving ''Barfleur'' in the Mediterranean. Five years later ''St. Kitts'' was broken up at Sunderland; ''Barfleur'' was laid up for several years before being broken up at
Dalmuir Dalmuir (; gd, Dail Mhoire) is an area northwest of Glasgow, Scotland, on the western side of Clydebank, and part of West Dunbartonshire Council Area. The name is a lowland Scots derivation of the Gaelic meaning Big Field. The area was ori ...
in 1966. One other Battle was given a new lease of life. ''Trafalgar'' also laid up in 1947 was refitted and commissioned in 1958 as leader of the 7th Destroyer Squadron. She continued in service, alternating between the Home and Mediterranean Fleets until she finally paid off in 1963. In 1970 she arrived at Dalmuir to be broken up. ''Gravelines '' and ''St. James'' also commenced refit at Devonport in 1958 but these were stopped a few months later. Both ships were sent to the breakers in 1961. In 1957 ''Cadiz'' and ''Gabbard'' were sold to Pakistan and renamed ''Khaibar'' and ''Badr''. ''Khaibar'' was lost to a missile attack in the
Indo-Pakistani War of 1971 The Indo-Pakistani War of 1971 was a military confrontation between India and Pakistan that occurred during the Bangladesh Liberation War in East Pakistan from 3 December 1971 until the Pakistani capitulation in Dhaka on 16 Decem ...
. ''Sluys'' ended 13 years in the Devonport reserve when she was sold to
Iran Iran, officially the Islamic Republic of Iran, and also called Persia, is a country located in Western Asia. It is bordered by Iraq and Turkey to the west, by Azerbaijan and Armenia to the northwest, by the Caspian Sea and Turkmeni ...
in 1966. Renamed she completed a three-year refit at
Vosper Thornycroft VT Group is a privately held United States defense and services company, with its origins in a former British shipbuilding group, previously known as Vosper Thornycroft. The British part of VT Group was integrated into Babcock International in t ...
at Southampton. Her profile was radically altered. She was given a new, plated foremast to carry the parabolic aerial of a Plessey AWS 1 long range search radar. A fully enclosed bridge replaced the usual "open sundeck" above the forward superstructure. She retained her 4.5 inch main armament, but these were now controlled by a modern radar and fire control system. Her AA armament now consisted of four single 40/60 mm guns and a quadruple Sea Cat missile launcher on the after end of a new deckhouse which stretched from just aft of the funnel to the quarterdeck. She commissioned in 1970 as a training ship. During 1975/6 she was refitted at
Cape Town Cape Town ( af, Kaapstad; , xh, iKapa) is one of South Africa's three capital cities, serving as the seat of the Parliament of South Africa. It is the legislative capital of the country, the oldest city in the country, and the second largest ...
and fitted with surface-to-surface missile launchers. During a later refit carried out by the Russians, her main gunnery radar and control systems were again modernised, although she retained her original guns and the Sea Cat system was replaced by a modern Russian surface-to-air missile system. She was still in existence in the early 1990s although believed to be non-operational. In 1960 the 1st and 3rd Destroyer Squadrons were amalgamated to form a new 1st Destroyer Squadron. As a result, ''Lagos'' and ''Armada'' paid off into reserve, ''Armada'' being broken up at Inverkeithing in 1965 and ''Lagos'' at
Bo'ness Borrowstounness (commonly known as Bo'ness ( )) is a town and former burgh and seaport on the south bank of the Firth of Forth in the Central Lowlands of Scotland. Historically part of the county of West Lothian, it is a place within the Fal ...
in 1967. The new 1st Destroyer Squadron completed a very busy final two-year commission before finally paying off in May 1962. ''Solebay'' became Portsmouth harbour training ship until being scrapped at Troon in 1967. ''Finisterre'' remained in Chatham reserve until being broken up at Dalmuir in 1967. ''Camperdown'' was laid up in the Hamoaze at Devonport for many years until finally being sent to the breakers yard at Faslane in 1970. Now only ''Saintes'' remained. On paying off in 1962, a volunteer towing crew from her last commission took her to Rosyth, where she went into reserve. Here she was used as the training ship for Artificer Apprentices from who kept her engines and machinery in full working order. She was eventually replaced by the frigate in 1972 and she too headed for the breakers yard at Cairn Ryan, the last of the Royal Navy's 1942 Battle class destroyers.


"1943" or "Later Battle" class

Even after the orders for the earlier, 1942 Battle class had been placed much discussion was still taking place within the naval staff about the final design. There was much debate about the type and disposition of the main armament. In some quarters it was felt that the two main turrets should be distributed one forward and one aft. Many reasons were given for this, but the most logical seems to have been preventing a single hit from disabling both guns. An argument was put forward in some quarters that these ships were underarmed for their size, and there was a call for a third turret to be mounted aft. Admiral Andrew Cunningham, whilst taking passage in the 1942 Battle-class ship , was rather unflattering in his description of these ships saying that they were "too large" and "had every damned weapon and gadget except guns". Modern naval architects feel this is unfair as the role of destroyers had changed since the admiral commanded a destroyer at the battle of Jutland.Brown, 2000 The original role of the destroyers was torpedo attack on enemy ships, but their role in the late 1940s was to protect the fleet (and themselves) from aircraft and submarines. The Battle class were probably better at this task than any other Second World War British destroyer. A further criticism, not just of the Battle-class design, but of British destroyers generally, was of the main machinery layout. Until 1936 all destroyers were laid out with three boiler rooms, as the naval staff considered this the minimum requirement for battle damage survivability. In 1936 the head of the destroyer section of the Constructors Department came up with a radical new design for the J class. This included a new system of longitudinal framing to both ease construction and increase the integral strength of the ships. It also called for a two-boiler layout with both boilers fitted back to back, allowing them to vent up a single large funnel. This decreased the ships silhouette and gave improved firing arcs for the anti-aircraft armament. This layout and hull design proved very effective and made for good-looking ships. The J-class design was used in all following destroyer designs until the advent of the and classes. However, the boiler-room layout was a continuing source of criticism, as a single well-placed hit could cripple a ship completely. In order to find a solution to these criticisms, it was originally planned that 32 ships (four flotillas) of an improved design would be built under the 1943 and 1944 Naval Estimates and that there would be changes in both armament and layout in the later ships. It was expected that the 4.5-in RP41 BD Mk VI turret, tested by ''Saintes'' from 1946/48, would be available to arm the later ships. Ultimately 26 ships were ordered. These formed two distinct groups, plus two ships of an expanded design. The first 16 ships (two flotillas) were ordered in early 1943. They were based on a slightly widened version of the 1942 ships. They were to be fitted with the American Type 37 DCT which was now becoming available and which would be equipped with the British Radar Type 275 fire control set and Medium Range System (MRS) 9
fire control system A fire-control system (FCS) is a number of components working together, usually a gun data computer, a director, and radar, which is designed to assist a ranged weapon system to target, track, and hit a target. It performs the same task as a h ...
. In an attempt to counter the criticisms that the ships were underarmed for their size, and were incapable of engaging a target right aft, a single 4.5 inch gun on a standard Mk V mounting would be positioned on the original 4 inch gun deck abaft the funnel. In the event, these guns failed to provide a solution as they were restricted to firing on either beam because the midship positioning meant their arc of fire was fouled by the ships fore and aft superstructure. The ships' AA armament was reduced to eight 40/60 mm Bofors, two twin STAAG Mk. II mountings on top of the after deckhouse, one twin Mk. V on the middle deckhouse controlled by an STD mounted on top of the gun crew shelter, and a single mounting Mk. VII on either bridge wing. All ships would be fitted with a Squid Anti-submarine mortar on the quarterdeck and ten 21-inch torpedo tubes in two quintuple mountings. The last flotilla of eight ships and two ships of an expanded design were ordered under the 1944 estimates. The first eight ships were to be fitted with two twin 4.5-inch guns forward in the new RP41 Mk VI turrets. These turrets offered improved ammunition handling and a faster rate of fire due to their semi-automatic breech action and it was thought that this was sufficient to preclude the fitting of the single gun amidships. The bridge structure was raised as earlier trials in ''Saintes'' had noted that the higher profile of the Mk VI turret obstructed visibility forward. The AA armament was increased in these ships as the weight saved by dispensing with the single 4.5-inch gun amidships meant that a third twin STAAG could be fitted together with five single 40/60 mm guns giving a total of eleven light AA guns. The two extended ships were intended to bury all criticisms of the design once and for all. The hull dimensions were increased. adding in length and to the beam. This allowed for a third twin 4.5-in Mk VI turret to be mounted aft. The main reason for the increase in length, however, was the planned change in the mechanical layout of these ships. Since the inception of the J class the boilers had been concentrated together, an arrangement which allowed a reduced hull length, however plans drawn up for the smaller Weapon class showed that this reduction was, in fact, minimal, so a decision was made to employ a unit arrangement for the propulsion machinery in these ships, based on the same lines as proposed for the Weapon class.


Orders and construction

Twenty-four ships (plus two of an enlarged/extended design) were included in the 1943 Programme. Six were ordered on 10 March 1943, with names commemorating land, as well as sea, battles: ''Agincourt'' and ''Alamein'' (from Hawthorn Leslie); ''Aisne'' and ''Albuera'' (from Vickers, Tyne); and ''Barrosa'' and ''Matapan'' (from John Brown, Clydebank). Fifteen ships were ordered on 24 March 1943:''Corunna'', ''Oudenarde'' and ''River Plate'' (from Swan Hunter); ''Dunkirk'', (original) ''Malplaquet'' and ''St Lucia'' (from Stephen); ''Belle Isle'' and ''Omdurman'' (from Fairfield); ''Jutland'', ''Mons'' and ''Poictiers'' (from Hawthorn Leslie; ''Poictiers'' is the spelling used for ''Poitiers'' at the time of the battle); and ''Namur'', ''Navarino'', ''San Domingo'' and ''Somme'' (from Cammell Laird). Five ships were ordered on 5 June 1943: ''Talavera'' and ''Trincomalee'' (from John Brown); ''Waterloo'' and ''Ypres'' (from Fairfield); and ''Vimiera'' (from Cammell Laird). The last two were the extended design and would eventually be built as the ''Daring'' Class.


Service

Although all of the ships were laid down between late 1943 and mid 1945 they, like previous members of the class, were plagued by delays in the provision of equipment. As a result, few had been launched by the end of hostilities and it became obvious that not all of them would be required. As a result, in September 1945, the Admiralty ordered work stopped on sixteen of the ships. As a result, seven ships, ''Mons'', ''Omdurman'', ''Somme'', ''River Plate'', ''St. Lucia'', ''San Domingo'' and ''Waterloo'', were broken up on the slipway. A further five, ''Belle Isle'', ''Navarino'', ''Poictiers'', ''Talavera'' and ''Trincomalee'' were scrapped immediately upon launching. The uncompleted hulls of four ships, ''Albuera'', ''Jutland'', ''Namur'' and ''Oudenarde'' were laid up with the possibility that they could be completed at a later date. This policy was adopted with other classes of ship, notably cruisers and carriers, some of which were completed up to fourteen years after the end of the war. Although consideration was given to completing these vessels in 1950, it was never done and they were all scrapped between 1957 and 1961. The two extended ships, ''Vimiera'' and ''Ypres'' were not scrapped at this time but eventually became a part of the ''Daring'' class, programme authorised in 1946. The original order was for sixteen ships, but construction was a long drawn out affair and eventually the Admiralty cancelled eight of the ships. At this time ''Vimiera'', which had been renamed ''Danae'' was scrapped but ''Ypres'' was finally commissioned into the Royal Navy as . This left a flotilla of eight ships, ''Agincourt'', , ''Alamein'', ''Barrosa'', ''Corruna'', ''Dunkirk'', ''Jutland'' (ex-''Malplaquet'') and ''Matapan'' to be completed for service in the Royal Navy and, as with other ships built after the end of hostilities, work proceeded at a very slow pace. The first ship ''Agincourt'' was laid down in December 1943 but not completed until the end of June 1947. ''Alamein'', laid down less than three months behind her sister ship, was not completed until May 1948. It was originally intended that all eight ships would form the
4th Destroyer Flotilla The British 4th Destroyer Flotilla , or Fourth Destroyer Flotilla, was a naval formation of the Royal Navy from August 1909 to July 1951. History In 1907 the Home Fleet had a large formation of destroyers called the Home Fleet Flotilla of destr ...
, but by 1947 the post-war manning crisis had reached its peak and so ''Alamein'', ''Barrosa'', ''Corunna'' and ''Matapan'' went into reserve. This left only ''Agincourt'', ''Aisne'', ''Jutland'' (the original ''Malplaquet'' which had been renamed ''Jutland'' after launching) and ''Dunkirk'' in service. 1948, however, saw all but ''Matapan'' back in service with the Home Fleet, but just over a year later another reduction took place. In 1950 a decision was made to pay off several destroyers in the Home and Mediterranean Fleets and replace them with s. ''Dunkirk'', ''Barrosa'' and ''Alamein'' paid off into reserve and ''Aisne'' and ''Jutland'' were temporarily laid up for nearly a year. In 1951 the 4th Destroyer Squadron was back in business. Consisting of ''Agincourt'', ''Aisne'', ''Jutland'' and ''Corunna'' and converted to General Service Commissions the squadron deployed between the Home and Mediterranean Fleets for the next few years. In 1953 ''Barrosa'' replaced ''Jutland'' and in 1957 ''Aisne'' was replaced by ''Alamein''. In March 1959 there was a collision in the Bay of Biscay between ''Barrosa'' and ''Corunna''. The following month the 4th Squadron was disbanded. ''Alamein'' went into reserve and was broken up at Blyth in 1964. ''Agincourt'', ''Aisne'', ''Barrosa'' and ''Corunna'' were placed in dockyard hands for conversion to radar pickets. In 1958 ''Jutland'' and ''Dunkirk'' recommissioned as part of the 7th Destroyer Squadron. Led by the 1942 Battle ''Trafalgar'', the squadron completed two General Service Home / Mediterranean Fleet deployments before ''Jutland'' paid off into reserve in 1961. She was broken up at Blyth in 1965. ''Dunkirk'' did a further two-year General Service deployment with the squadron before paying off in 1963. She was broken up at Faslane in 1965.


Aircraft Direction Conversion

As early as 1944 it had been suggested that the 1943 Battle class could be fitted with a long range early warning radar fitted to a mast amidships, albeit at the expense of some of the torpedo tubes and AA armament. The idea was not taken up at the time but in the early post war years a need was identified for a Fast Air Detection Escort (FADE). These ships would accompany the fleet and detect, identify and track potential targets and direct friendly aircraft to engage them, a role known as Aircraft Direction (A/D). A new frigate, the Type 61, was designed to carry out this role, however, it became clear that with a top speed of only these ships would not be able to keep up with a carrier group. Consideration was therefore given to converting existing ships to carry out this role with carrier groups. The latest long range radar available at that time was the Type 965. The Radar Type 965 came with two aerial configurations, the AKE-1, known as "the bedstead", and the AKE-2, known as "the double bedstead". The AKE-1 weighed in at almost two tons and the AKE-2 at a massive four tons. It soon became clear that only a large ship, like a "Battle" class destroyer would be able to carry such a load. In 1955 a decision was made to convert four Battle class ships to Fast Air Detection Escorts, although the work was not started until 1959. The four ships chosen for conversion were ''Agincourt'', ''Aisne'', ''Barrosa'' and ''Corunna''. On completion of the conversions only the hull, engines, funnel, forward superstructure and main armament remained of the original ships. A huge new lattice foremast was fitted immediately abaft the bridge. The base of this mast straddled the entire width of the ship and was surmounted by a large 4 ton Type 965 AKE-2 double bedstead aerial, with a Type 293Q mounted on a platform below. All torpedo tubes and light AA armament were removed and a large deckhouse containing generators and radar offices was built abaft the funnel. A new lattice mainmast carried a Radar Type 277Q height finder and an array of ESM and DF aerials. The after deckhouse was extended and a GWS 21 Sea Cat SAM system was mounted on top. The ships retained the Squid A/S mortar on the quarterdeck. The conversions of '' Corunna'' at
Rosyth Dockyard Rosyth Dockyard is a large naval dockyard on the Firth of Forth at Rosyth, Fife, Scotland, owned by Babcock Marine, which formerly undertook refitting of Royal Navy surface vessels and submarines. Before its privatisation in the 1990s it was ...
and ''Aisne'' at
Chatham Dockyard Chatham Dockyard was a Royal Navy Dockyard located on the River Medway in Kent. Established in Chatham in the mid-16th century, the dockyard subsequently expanded into neighbouring Gillingham (at its most extensive, in the early 20th century ...
were completed in 1962 and both ships joined the 7th Destroyer Squadron in the Mediterranean. On completion of her refit at
Portsmouth Portsmouth ( ) is a port and city in the ceremonial county of Hampshire in southern England. The city of Portsmouth has been a unitary authority since 1 April 1997 and is administered by Portsmouth City Council. Portsmouth is the most dens ...
, ''Agincourt'' joined the 5th DS in home waters. ''Corunna'', however, ended up further afield. On completion of her refit at Devonport she joined the 8th Destroyer Squadron in the Far East. These arrangements were short lived as, in 1963, the Admiralty reorganised the frigate and destroyer squadrons into escort squadrons. Each escort squadron comprised a mix of ships of varying type in order to provide an increased capability within each group. ''Corunna'' transferred to the 21st Escort Group which included a deployment to the
Far East The ''Far East'' was a European term to refer to the geographical regions that includes East and Southeast Asia as well as the Russian Far East to a lesser extent. South Asia is sometimes also included for economic and cultural reasons. The ter ...
from September 1964 to August 1965. On returning home she began a refit at Rosyth in September 1965 and on completion in 1967 went into operational reserve at Portsmouth where she remained until put on the disposal list in 1972. In 1974 she was towed from Portsmouth to Sunderland for breaking but was then towed to Blyth and broken up in 1975. ''Aisne'' transferred to the 23rd Escort Group and after a short spell joined 30th Escort Group in January 1964 and served in the Mediterranean from April to September 1964 and in the Far East from September to December 1964 and from July to December 1965. She recommissioned in January 1966 and served in the Far East from August 1966 to April 1967. In December 1967 she was sent to the
West Indies The West Indies is a subregion of North America, surrounded by the North Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean Sea that includes 13 independent island countries and 18 dependencies and other territories in three major archipelagos: the Greate ...
, returning in March 1968. She paid off in August of that year and was broken up at
Inverkeithing Inverkeithing ( ; gd, Inbhir Chèitinn) is a port town and parish, in Fife, Scotland, on the Firth of Forth. A town of ancient origin, Inverkeithing was given royal burgh status during the reign of Malcolm IV in the 12th century. It was an imp ...
in 1970. ''Agincourt'' spent four and a half years rotating between Home and Mediterranean waters, first as part of the 5th DS and then, after the reorganisation into Escort Squadrons, with 23ES and 27ES. Reduced to reserve at Portsmouth in October 1966 she was put on the disposal list in 1972. She was broken up at Sunderland in 1974. ''Barrosa'' transferred to the 24ES and, apart from two spells at home between July 1966 and August 1967 and July to September 1968, spent all of her life as a radar picket serving in the Far East. She paid off into reserve at Devonport in December 1968. In 1971 she joined her sister ships at Portsmouth and was put on the disposal list in 1972. She was used as a stores hulk at Portsmouth until being towed to Blyth to be broken up in 1978. The short life of these ships after their conversion was due to changes in defence policy made by the Labour Government which came to power in 1964. The decision to run down the carrier fleet, together with the withdrawal of British forces from the Far East, reduced the need for fast air direction ships. Moreover, the general purpose frigates then being built, such as the Leander class, were fitted with Type 965 radar and modern operations rooms, so they could replace the converted 'Battles' in most circumstances. ;Armament summary * 2 × twin 4.5 in guns QF Mark III on mount BD Mk. IV * 1 × quad Sea Cat GWS-20 Surface-to-air missile system * 2 × 20 mm Oerlikon guns * 1 × Squid A/S mortar


HMS ''Matapan''

Laid up on completion of her trials in 1947, having carried out only 150 hours steaming, the need to replace ''Verulam'' as Sonar Trials Ship for the Admiralty Underwater Weapons Establishment at Portland saw the conversion and eventual commissioning of ''Matapan''. In 1971 ''Matapan'' was towed to Portsmouth to begin her conversion to sonar trials ship. She was stripped of all armament and the forecastle deck was extended right to the stern to provide increased space to accommodate scientists and trials equipment, plus a large Sick Bay. She was fitted with a second funnel for the exhausting of fumes from the extra generators required to power the sonar equipment. A plated foremast carried radar and communications aerials, and a new fully enclosed bridge was fitted. A new after deckhouse, which ran from the after funnel to the quarterdeck was fitted with a helicopter landing deck on the top. Her refit took two years but she finally commissioned in 1973. After 24 years in the Devonport reserve ''Matapan'' had finally found a role in the navy of the seventies. Her trials period lasted for five years, with a major deployment to the United States in 1976, working with US Navy submarines, much of the work of this vessel remains classified. She paid off at Portsmouth in 1977 and was broken up at Blyth in 1978.


"1944" or "Australian Battle" class

The original building programme for the 1943 ships included provision for the later ships, the third flotilla, to be armed with the new 4.5-inch Mark VI turret. Although these ships were cancelled by the Admiralty two ships of this type had been ordered by the
Royal Australian Navy The Royal Australian Navy (RAN) is the principal naval force of the Australian Defence Force (ADF). The professional head of the RAN is Chief of Navy (CN) Vice Admiral Mark Hammond AM, RAN. CN is also jointly responsible to the Minister of ...
(RAN) in Australia in 1945. Neither of these ships were cancelled and both ships were laid down in 1946, although, like the building programme in Britain, progress was slow. The first of the two ships, , was not completed by HMA Dockyard at Williamstown until 1950, and sister ship , built at Cockatoo Island Dockyard in Sydney, was not completed until the following year. The only difference between these ships and those planned for the Royal Navy was a distinctive funnel cowl fitted to both ships. ''Tobruk'' remained in service until 1960 when she was placed in reserve after being damaged in a friendly-fire accident. ''Anzac'' had her STAAG mountings removed at about this time and continued in service as a training ship. She was further modified for this role in 1966 when 'B' turret was removed and replaced by a deckhouse. Another deckhouse was built aft. She was laid up in 1974. Both ships were broken up in 1975. ;Armament summary *2 × twin QF 4.5 inch /45 (113 mm) Mark V guns in 2 twin mountings UD Mark VI *3 × twin 40 mm Bofors mounts "STAAG" Mk. II *6-7 × single 40 mm Bofors mount Mk. VII *2 × quintuple tubes for 21 in torpedoes Mk. IX *1 × Squid A/S mortar


Ships in class


See also

* List of ship classes of the Second World War


References


Publications

* * * * D.K. Brown, ''Nelson to Vanguard'', Chatham Publishing (2000) * ''Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1947–1995'' * G. Moore, ''The 'Battle' Class destroyers'' in Warship 2002–2003, Conway's Maritime Press * M. Critchley, ''British Warships Since 1945'', Part 3, Destroyers * L. Marriott, ''Royal Navy Destroyers Since 1945'' {{Authority control Destroyer classes Ship classes of the Royal Navy Ship classes of the Islamic Republic of Iran Navy