Doyen-class attack transport
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The ''Doyen''-class attack transport was a class of two
attack transport Attack transport is a United States Navy ship classification for a variant of ocean-going troopship adapted to transporting invasion forces ashore. Unlike standard troopships – often drafted from the merchant fleet – that rely on ...
s that saw service with the
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in
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. Ships of the class were named after generals of the
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. Like all attack transports, the purpose of the ''Doyen'' class was to transport troops and their equipment to hostile shores in order to execute amphibious invasions. To perform this task, attack transports were equipped with a substantial number of integral landing craft, and heavily armed with
antiaircraft Anti-aircraft warfare, counter-air or air defence forces is the battlespace response to aerial warfare, defined by NATO as "all measures designed to nullify or reduce the effectiveness of hostile air action".AAP-6 It includes surface based, ...
weaponry to protect themselves and their vulnerable cargo of troops from air attack in the battle zone.


Background

There were only two ships of the ''Doyen'' class. They were based on the
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's P1 hull type, specifically the P1-S2-L2 type. Both were built by the
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of
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. Laid down as part of the Navy's 1940 fiscal program, they were each designed to carry a battalion of the Marine Expeditionary Force which was maintained on both coasts of the
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in peacetime. The
lead ship The lead ship, name ship, or class leader is the first of a series or class of ships all constructed according to the same general design. The term is applicable to naval ships and large civilian vessels. Large ships are very complex and may ...
, , was launched in July 1942 while her sister ship was not launched until the following November, but ''Feland'' was first to be commissioned, on May 22, 1943, about a month before ''Doyen''. Both ships were reclassified from transports (AP) to attack transports (APA) while still dockside, in February 1943.


Description

The ''Doyen''-class ships, at only 414 feet in length and with a displacement of 4,351 tons, were considerably smaller than most other classes of attack transport. However, it appears their troop carrying capacity was adequate, with ''Feland'' listed as able to carry 1,100 troops. No information is available on their cargo capacity. The ''Doyen''s were also slightly faster than most other classes of attack transport, listed as having a top speed of 19 knots compared to the 16–18 knots of other classes. Like most of the early classes of attack transport, their main armament was four
3"/50 caliber gun The 3"/50 caliber gun (spoken "three-inch fifty-caliber") in United States naval gun terminology indicates the gun fired a projectile in diameter, and the barrel was 50 calibers long (barrel length is 3 in × 50 = ). Different guns (identif ...
s, later classes would be fitted with either one or two 5" guns and considerably more
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weapons. The profile of the ships is somewhat unusual, as the aft funnel was shorter than the fore one. The two masts were also unusually close together amidships, mounted on the front and rear superstructure. The main deck was cut away at quarterdeck level and fitted with a special ramp aft for the launching of landing craft or the offloading of tanks and other heavy equipment.


In service

Both vessels served exclusively in the Pacific Theatre, often on the same missions. The two saw action together at Tarawa, Saipan, Guam, Luzon and Iwo Jima. ''Doyen'', however, saw additional action at
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in the
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and at
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and earned six
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s to ''Felands five. Both returned to the
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shortly before the end of the war for overhaul, after which they each made one more journey to the Pacific, ''Doyen'' on a ''Magic Carpet'' mission, and ''Feland'' on a cargo mission. Like most other attack transports, they were then decommissioned in March 1946 and laid up in the
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. ''Feland'' was eventually scrapped in 1964, but in 1959 ''Doyen'' received a new lease of life as TS ''Bay State'', a training ship with the
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. She was returned to the
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in January 1974 and resold.


References

*See the individual ship articles from DANFS Online fo
''Doyen'' APA-1
an

See also the relevant ship pages from the Navsource Onlin



{{Doyen class attack transport Auxiliary transport ship classes