Salisbury-class frigate
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The Type 61 ''Salisbury'' class was a class 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 early medieval period, the first major maritime engagements were fought in the Hundred Years' War against ...
aircraft direction (AD) frigate, built in the 1950s.Purvis, M.K., 'Post War RN Frigate and Guided Missile Destroyer Design 1944–1969', Transactions, Royal Institution of Naval Architects (RINA), 1974Marriott 1990 The purpose of the aircraft direction ships was to provide
radar picket A radar picket is a radar-equipped station, ship, submarine, aircraft, or vehicle used to increase the radar detection range around a nation or military (including naval) force to protect it from surprise attack, typically air attack, or from cr ...
duties at some distance from a carrier task force and offer interception guidance to aircraft operating in their area. The class was part of a multi-purpose frigate concept that also included the Type 41 ''Leopard''-class anti-aircraft ships and the cancelled Type 11 anti-submarine variant. Together, they were the first ships in the Royal Navy to use diesel propulsion. Improvements in conventional steam turbine power erased the range advantage of the diesel and led to future purchases of Type 61 and 41 being cancelled or converted to the new Type 12 frigate.


Design

The ''Salisbury'' class frigates were conceived as part of the 1944 project for common-hull diesel-powered 1700-ton anti-submarine (A/S), air-warfare (AW) and aircraft direction (AD) vessels. The first two prototypes were ordered in the late 1945 construction programme and were built as HMS ''Salisbury'' and a second diesel, HMS ''Leopard'' (T41) as a suitable A/S frigate or sloop prototype could not proceed at the time. By 1947 the legend (i.e: the complete plan of the RN warship, delivered to the shipyard to start building) of the Type 61 AD frigates and its sister Type 41 AW light destroyer were complete. The design of the new air defence frigates could proceed faster as the requirements were clearer and less complex and fuel-efficient diesel power was adequate for convoy escort picket ships. Destroyers could be converted for faster picket duties with carrier task forces. The design of new anti-submarine frigates was delayed due to the expectation that the
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would build submarines that were much faster underwater, based on the German Type XXI and
Type XXIII German Type XXIII submarines were the first so-called elektroboote ("electric boats") to become operational. They were small coastal submarines designed to operate in the shallow waters of the North Sea, Black Sea and Mediterranean Sea, where l ...
submarines, which operated at 12–16 knots underwater and
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(HP) powered submarines running at 22–25 knots submerged. This led the navy to revert to steam turbines and the slower evolution of the Type 12 variant. Steam turbines provided the quietness and speed desirable for anti-submarine applications. However the design of efficient powerful steam turbines for affordable common hulled anti-sub frigates with the range to escort Atlantic convoys and speed to screen carrier task forces took years and was never entirely achieved. Neither the ''Dido''-class cruisers nor the ''Daring''-class destroyers had the space required to combine the processing of radar and communications with dual-purpose
AA gun 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, ...
s. This integration was complicated, making the new diesel air warning and aircraft direction frigates an even higher priority. The legend of the lead Type 12 anti-submarine frigate was not drawn until 1950 as a steam version of the diesel Type 61. The original steam Type 11 frigate concept was abandoned in 1945 and was never designed. The Type 61 was the first of the new generation frigates laid down in 1951. Without the second Mk 6 4.5-inch gun turret of the Type 41, the Type 61 had 100 tons extra capacity for fuel and the longest range of the frigate variants, 5000 nm at 15 knotes compared with 4,500 nm for the Type 41 or the official 12k. The range of the steam powered Type 12 was only 2500-3000 nm at 14 knots It was seen as much more important than the related Type 41 (''Leopard''-class) frigates, but with reduced armament (one twin 4.5-inch mount instead of two) to make way for more aircraft direction equipment. The Type 61 carried the range Type 982 rake Air Warning radar and 277M search and height finder in addition to the radars on the Type 41 but the two additional systems added only 23 tons compared with the saving of 115 tons by excluding the second 4.5 turret. The Type 61 was later refitted with the high mounted (four-ton) antenna of the Type 965 (AKE-2) radar. The aircraft direction and air-warning frigates provided extra stations to the aircraft carriers to track incoming air attacks, and direct and communicate with defensive Royal Navy and land-based fighters. The AD cruisers were used in Operation Musketeer during the 1056 Suez Crisis;
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ground attack and
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and Vickers Valiant bomber aircraft struck land air bases and other targets. Directing carrier-based air interception and strike operations was far more important than the "little cat" Type 41s or "big cat",
Tiger-class cruiser The ''Tiger'' class were a class of three British warships of the 20th century and the last all-gun cruisers of the Royal Navy. Construction of three cruisers (under the names ''Blake'', ''Defence'' and ''Bellerophon'') began during World Wa ...
's guns. In the mid-1950s, the Royal Navy was largely operating small light fleet carriers and first-generation jets which could takeoff from slow-moving carriers. In 1960, a second flotilla of four extra Type 61 AD frigates was planned. However by 1961–62 the big carrier HMS ''Ark Royal''s problems were debugged, the reconstructed small carriers HMS ''Victorious and HMS ''Hermes'' came into effective service with second-generation
de Havilland Sea Vixen The de Havilland DH.110 Sea Vixen is a British twin-engine, twin boom-tailed, two-seat, carrier-based fleet air-defence fighter flown by the Royal Navy's Fleet Air Arm during the 1950s through to the early 1970s. The Sea Vixen was designed by ...
s and
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aircraft and the navy's best carrier - HMS ''Eagle'' - was being reconstructed. Only the four Battle-class AD conversions were suitable as fast carrier pickets, as the Type 61's diesel power plant lacked the speed for operations with fast carrier groups. In 1962, orders for extra Type 61s were cancelled, long after the second flotilla of Type 41s was abandoned in 1955–1957, and a 2,000-ton 'East Coast convoy' Type 42 frigate (a 25 knot derivative of the T41/61 diesel hull with 3/N5 4-inch automatic Vickers guns with 2/4 MR3 DCT and 40mm the T42 (1955) was a pocket RN diesel version of Chile's Vickers-built Almirante-class destroyers) was cancelled with the
1957 Defence White Paper The 1957 White Paper on Defence (Cmnd. 124) was a British white paper issued in March 1957 setting forth the perceived future of the British military. It had profound effects on all aspects of the defence industry but probably the most affected w ...
. The role of the Type 61 was as a seaworthy air-ocean surveillance ship and air-control ship to escort slow task forces, such as amphibious warfare task forces. In the 1960s the T61 were still seen as important units and their modernisation was much more substantial than that of the Type 41. The election of another Labour Government in 1974 threatened to bring the Type 61 service life to a premature end and the two frigates still deployed East of Suez in January 1976, ''Chichester'' was struck and ''Llandaff'' was sold to
Bangladesh Bangladesh (}, ), officially the People's Republic of Bangladesh, is a country in South Asia. It is the eighth-most populous country in the world, with a population exceeding 165 million people in an area of . Bangladesh is among the mos ...
by the end of 1976. The
Seacat missile Seacat was a British short-range surface-to-air missile system intended to replace the ubiquitous Bofors 40 mm gun aboard warships of all sizes. It was the world's first operational shipboard point-defence missile system, and was designed so th ...
-fitted Type 61s had a life extension in 1976, due to the
Cod War The Cod Wars ( is, Þorskastríðin; also known as , ; german: Kabeljaukriege) were a series of 20th-century confrontations between the United Kingdom (with aid from West Germany) and Iceland about fishing rights in the North Atlantic. Each o ...
confrontations with Iceland. HMS ''Jaguar'' (a Type 41) and ''Lincoln'' were refitted as specialised rammers with a reinforced bow to present a higher-level threat to Icelandic gunboats. The stronger UK/RN stand led to settlement of the Third Cod war before ''Lincoln'' finished its trials. With the expanded 200 mile offshore zones, partly stemming from the Cod Wars, ''Lincoln'' remained in commission to late 1977 on deep water patrol. The possibility of a new generation of diesel-electric anti-submarine
Type 23 frigate The Type 23 frigate or Duke class is a class of frigates built for the United Kingdom's Royal Navy. The ships are named after British Dukes, thus leading to the class being commonly known as the Duke class. The first Type 23, , was commission ...
s resulted in ''Lincoln'' being refitted in 1978 to
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operational frigate standard, to test certain hull characteristics and silencing of diesel electric engines relative to passive sonar operation. The primary aircraft direction equipment fitted to the Type 61s was initially the Type 960 radar for aircraft warning and Type 982M radar for a degree of 3D cover and better air control over land. The Type 960 radar was replaced by Type 965P at refit for ''Salisbury'' (1961–1962), ''Chichester'' (1963–1964), ''Llandaff'' (1964–1966) and ''Lincoln'' (1966–1968) and The Type 965 (AKE-2), had a large "double bedstead" antenna, while the Type 982M radar had a smaller "hayrake" antenna. The Seacat missile system was fitted to ''Lincoln'' in a long refit from 1966 to 1968 and in ''Salisbury'' from 1967 to 1970. It was the same GWS 20 optically guided system being refitted at the time to the ''Rothesay''-class frigates. ''Llandaff'' continued to carry the twin MK 5
40 mm Bofors Bofors 40 mm gun is a name or designation given to two models of 40 mm calibre anti-aircraft guns designed and developed by the Swedish company Bofors: *Bofors 40 mm L/60 gun - developed in the 1930s, widely used in World War II and into the 1990s ...
until sold to Bangladesh. In the late 1960s ''Lincoln'', ''Salisbury'', ''Llandaff'' and the aircraft carriers ''Ark Royal'' and ''Bulwark'' were all refitted with the new Type 986 radar using the 982 antenna, as a partial substitute for the 984 3D radar capability lost with the phaseout of the strike carriers. The Type 986 radar was intended to partially replace one of the roles of 984, giving more accurate, short-range definition of closing air targets to . It was only a partial replacement, as it lacked the 984 system's ability to rank and prioritize large numbers of targets for interrogation and air interception. The 965 twin array radar was limited and obsolete by the 1970s. In 1973, HMS ''Chichester'' was downgraded to
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guardship with a reduced gun armament of twin 4.5-inch; one 40 mm and two 20 mm and the air surveillance radars were removed. HMS ''Lincoln'' was seriously damaged in the second Cod War. In 1974, the new Labour Government made a policy decision that only anti-submarine frigates would be operational in the frigate fleet from then on. For the rest of the decade, ''Salisbury'' and ''Lincoln'' alternated between the standby squadron and lengthy re-activations under a number of pretexts. HMS ''Salisbury'', under the first frigate command of
Hugo White Admiral Sir Hugo Moresby White, (22 October 1939 – 1 June 2014) was a senior officer of the Royal Navy and subsequently Governor of Gibraltar. Early life White was born at Torquay, Devon, son of Hugh Fortescue Moresby White (1891-1979), C ...
(later Admiral of the Fleet), was extensively involved in the third Cod War, holding the line against Icelandic gunboats within of multinational fishing fleets, colliding seven times with the Iceland gunboats ''Tyr'' and ''Aegir'' in March and April 1976.Independent. London 10 June 2014 Following serious damage in the Cod War, HMS ''Lincoln'' was repaired and returned to service until the end of the decade. After refits, it returned to the status of an operational RN frigate declared to NATO.


Construction programme

Three further ships of the class were planned. Two of these, intended as HMS ''Exeter'' and ''Gloucester'', were cancelled under the 1957 Defence Review, while a third, HMS ''Coventry'', was suspended. It was hoped to order ''Coventry'' in 1961, but in the end it was decided to order the planned hull as a that became .


Footnotes


References

* Purvis, M.K., "Post War RN Frigate and Guided Missile Destroyer Design 1944–1969", ''Transactions'', Royal Institution of Naval Architects (RINA), 1974 * * *


External links


HMS Lincoln
{{DEFAULTSORT:Salisbury Class Frigate Frigate classes Ship classes of the Royal Navy