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Dido-class cruiser

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Argonaut in wartime camouflage, November 1943 just after repairs at the Philadelphia Navy Yard
Class overview
NameDido class
Operators
Preceded byArethusa class
Succeeded byFiji class
Subclasses
  • Dido
  • Bellona
Built1937–1943
In commission1940–1980s
Completed16
Lost5
Scrapped11
General characteristics (as built)
TypeLight cruiser
Displacement
Length512 ft (156.1 m) (o/a)
Beam50 ft 6 in (15.4 m)
Draught
  • Dido class: 16 ft 10 in (5.1 m) (deep load)
  • Bellona class: 17 ft 9 in (5.4 m) (deep load)
Installed power
Propulsion4 shafts; 4 steam turbines
Speed32.25 knots (59.73 km/h; 37.11 mph)
Range4,850 nmi (8,980 km; 5,580 mi) at 11 knots (20 km/h; 13 mph)
Complement
  • Dido class: 487
  • Bellona class: 530
Sensors and
processing systems
Armament

The Dido class consisted of sixteen light cruisers built for the Royal Navy during World War II. The first group of three ships were commissioned in 1940; the second group of six ships and third group of two were commissioned between 1941 and 1942. A fourth group, also described as the Improved Dido or Bellona class (five ships) were commissioned between 1943 and 1944. Most members of the class were given names drawn from classical history and legend. The groups differed in armament, and for the Bellonas, in function. The Dido class were designed to replace the C-class and D-class cruisers as small fleet cruisers and flotilla leaders for the destroyer screen.[1][2] As designed, they mounted five twin 5.25-inch high-angle gun turrets on the centreline providing dual-purpose anti-air and anti-surface capacity; the complex new turrets were unreliable when introduced, and somewhat unsatisfactory at a time when the UK faced a fight for survival. During the war, the original 1939-42 ships required extensive refit work to increase electrical generating capacity for additional wartime systems (notably radar and gun direction equipment) and in the final Bellona, HMS Diadem, fully-electric turrets. While some damage was experienced initially in extreme North Atlantic weather, changes to gun handling and drill partially mitigated the problems. The fitting of the three forward turrets in the double-superfiring A-B-C arrangement (although in Royal Navy classification, fifth turrets were called "Q", not "C") relied upon the heavy use of aluminium in the ships' superstructure, and the lack of aluminium after the evacuation of the British Army from France was one of the primary reasons for the first group only receiving four turrets, while the third group received four twin 4.5-inch mounts and no 5.25-inch guns at all.[3] The Bellonas were designed from the start with four radar-directed 5.25-inch gun turrets with full Remote Power Control and an expanded light anti-aircraft battery, substantially increasing their efficiency as AA platforms.

From the initial trials of the lead ship Bonaventure, the new light cruisers were considered a significant advancement and were surprisingly effective in later actions in the Mediterranean Sea, such as protecting convoys to Malta, seeing off far larger ships of the Italian Royal Navy.[3] The 5.25-inch (133 mm) gun was primarily an anti-surface weapon but designed to fire the heaviest shell suitable for manual loading for use in anti-aircraft defence, and accounted for around 23 aircraft and deterred far more[citation needed]. Both the Didos and Bellonas were dogged by roller path jams in the rail track upon which the turret gunhouses rotated. These issues regularly put turrets out of action from their initial sea trials until the last operational service of Euryalus and Cleopatra with the RN in 1953–54 [4][full citation needed], and were the bane of the three Bellonas operated postwar by the RNZN.[5][full citation needed]. The original Dido-class ships HMS Bonaventure, HMS Charybdis, HMS Hermione and HMS Naiad were lost in the war. The sole survivor, name ship HMS Dido, was put into reserve in 1947 and decommissioned ten years later. HMS Euryalus was the last of the original class to see service, being decommissioned in 1954 and scrapped in 1959.

The Bellona class (as well as four rebuilt Didos) were mainly intended as picket ships for amphibious warfare operations in support of aircraft carriers of the Royal Navy and United States Navy in the Pacific. HMS Spartan was the only ship of the sub-class to be sunk, struck by a German Fritz X glide bomb while supporting the landings at Anzio. Two ships were to be modified to be command ships of aircraft carrier and cruiser groups, intended for action against planned German battlecruisers. Originally these were to be Scylla and Charybdis of the third group, but the 1943 loss of Charybdis saw Royalist of the fourth (Bellona) group selected instead; these were also known as the Modified Dido.

Postwar modernisation proposals were limited by the tight war emergency design. There was insufficient space and weight for the fire control and magazines of four or five modern twin 3-inch turrets, combined with the fact that the 5.25" shells had a much larger bursting charge than the smaller 4.5 inch guns in service postwar, making them more effective high-altitude AA weapons.[6] HMS Royalist was rebuilt for potential action alongside the battleship HMS Vanguard against the post-war Soviet Sverdlov-class cruisers and Stalingrad-class battlecruisers, and was loaned to the Royal New Zealand Navy (RNZN) from 1956 to 1966.

Armament

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Cleopatra lays smoke to shield a convoy as Euryalus elevates her forward 5.25 inch guns to shell the Italian fleet at the Second Battle of Sirte, 22 March 1942

The class were intended to be armed with ten 5.25-inch (133 mm) guns in five twin turrets, which were of the same circular design as the secondary armament in the King George V-class battleships. Due to a shortage of the guns caused by difficulties in manufacturing them, the first group were built with only four 5.25-inch gun turrets. Only HMS Dido had the fifth turret added later. The first group was also armed with a 4 in (102 mm) gun for firing star shells and two quadruple QF 2-pounder (40 mm) "pom-poms" for anti-aircraft defence.

The second group had all five twin 5.25-inch turrets and did not require the 4-inch gun. The third group's armament was changed due to the shortage of 5.25-inch guns and had eight QF 4.5-inch (113 mm) guns in four twin turrets instead. The 4.5-inch turret was better suited to the primary anti-aircraft role of the Dido class but the ammunition was considered too heavy for peacetime use. The forward (A and B) 4.5-inch turrets were mounted on the top of conjoint deckhouses. The superstructure extended forward with more crew accommodation and radar rooms which allowed the two cruisers to operate as flagships. The high rate of fire of the 4.5-inch turrets, together with simpler dual-purpose twin Director Control Tower (DCT),[a] meant that Scylla and Charybdis were arguably the only members of the Dido class that were true AA cruisers.[7] The 4-inch gun was also fitted and the 2-pounder armament was increased from eight to ten.

The Bellona subclass differed in appearance somewhat from their predecessors. They had eight 5.25-inch RP10 Mk II guns in four twin turrets and had greatly improved anti-aircraft armament, with twelve 2-pounder guns and twelve Oerlikon 20 mm cannon. The bridge of the Bellona class was lowered by one deck compared to the previous three groups. This reduced topweight and so full radar control could be fitted to the 5.25-inch turrets and the 2-pounder guns. These ships used the HACS high angle fire control system. The two funnels were more upright than the raked ones of the original Dido class.

Service

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In World War II, the Dido class saw much action, including the Battle of Cape Matapan, the Second Battle of Sirte, Operation Torch, Operation Overlord and the Battle of Okinawa, as well as many other duties in the Mediterranean and Pacific. The production of the 5.25 turrets during the war and the turrets reconstruction, with remote power for faster elevation and training and better fire control was slow, difficult and expensive and largely limited to the cruisers rebuilt after severe action damage in the United States, Argonaut, Cleopatra and Phoebe. It was never completed on several Dido that survived the war. Five ships were lost during the war: Bonaventure, Charybdis, Hermione, Naiad, and Spartan. Scylla was badly damaged by a naval mine and declared a constructive total loss. The post-war survivors continued in service; all were decommissioned by the 1960s. Bellona, Black Prince and Royalist were lent to the Royal New Zealand Navy post-World War II. In 1956, Diadem was sold to Pakistan and renamed Babur.

Ship modifications

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Didos

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Bonaventure completed with only four twin 5.25 in turrets because of shortages and received a 4-inch starshell gun in "X" position. She received a radar set before October 1940 but was otherwise unaltered. Naiad was completed with five turrets. She received five 20 mm in September 1941 and had Type 279 radar by this time. Phoebe completed with four turrets and was fitted with a 4-inch gun in "C" position forward of the bridge. The latter was 'landed' (removed) during her refit between November 1941 and April 1942 at New York City, along with the 0.5-inch machine guns and Type 279 radar, while a quadruple 2 pdr replaced the 4-inch gun and eleven 20 mm guns were fitted. Radars were now Type 281, 284 and 285. The "A" turret was temporarily removed at the end of 1942 after torpedo damage. During repairs in the first six months of 1943, all three quadruple 2 pdr mounts were landed, as were seven 20 mm, to be replaced by three quadruple 40 mm Bofors guns and six twin 20 mm. Radar Type 272 was also fitted. Her A turret was replaced in July 1943. Her light anti-aircraft weaponry in April 1944 was twelve 40 mm (3 × 4) and sixteen 20 mm (6 × dual, 4 × single).

Dido had four turrets and a 4-inch gun similar to Phoebe. The 4 in. and the machine guns were removed in the latter half of 1941 at Brooklyn Navy Yard, when the "Q" position 5.25 in. turret was shipped and five single 20 mm were fitted. In the early summer of 1943 three single 20 mm were exchanged for four twin 20 mm and the radar outfit was altered by the addition of Types 272, 282, 284 and 285. April 1944 lists show only eight 20 mm.

The cruisers Edinburgh, Hermione, and Euryalus, steaming in line abreast whilst they escort a convoy (not visible) as part of Operation Halberd to resupply Malta

Euryalus completed with her designed armament. In September 1941 the .5 inch machine guns were landed and five single 20 mm fitted. Two more were added by September 1942. By mid-1943 two single 20mm had been removed and four twin 20 mm shipped. The type 279 radar was replaced by types 272, 281, 282 and 285. In a long refit from October 1943 to July 1944, C turret was replaced by a quadruple 2 pdr and two twin 20 mm were fitted. Radar 271 and 272 were removed and types 279b, 277 and 293 fitted.

Hermione was also completed as a five-turret ship. She had the .5 in. MGs removed in October–November 1941 and received five 20 mm.

Sirius was completed with five turrets and five 20 mm. She had received two more 20 mm by mid-1943. One of these was landed at Massawa[b] at the end of 1943 and two 40 mm Bofors Mk III were fitted. She is listed as having only seven 20 mm as light AA in April 1944. By April 1945 she had two Mk III 40 mm fitted and had landed two single 20 mm.

Cleopatra was completed with two 2-pounders in 1942 in lieu of the .5 in machine guns but these were removed in the middle of the year and replaced by five 20 mm. A sixth 20 mm was added in mid-1943. During repairs between November 1943 and November 1944, Q turret was removed, as were two quadruple 2 pdr and five 20 mm. Three quadruple 40 mm Bofors and six twin 20 mm were fitted and there were four single 20mm. In 1951 the American-sourced quadruple Bofors and Oerlikons were replaced by three twin MK 5 Bofors and eight single Mk 7.

Argonaut was completed with four single 20 mm in lieu of the .5 in machine guns. She had Q turret removed during repairs in 1943/44, and lost the four single 20 mm. She received a quadruple 2 pdr in lieu of the 5.25 in, and had five twin 20 mm fitted. By April 1944 her light AA comprised three quadruple 2 pdr, six twin power-operated 20 mm and five singles. By the end of the war with Japan she had received five 40 mm Bofors and three single 40 mm Bofors Mk III.

Scylla was completed with four twin 4.5 in Mk III in UD MK III mountings because of a shortage of 5.25 in mountings. The forward superstructure was considerably modified to accommodate these and also to increase crew spaces. Her light AA on completion was eight single 20 mm. Six twin power-operated 20 mm were added at the end of 1943.

Charybdis was also completed with four twin 4.5 inch and had, in addition, a single 4 in Mk V forward of X mounting. Her light AA at completion was four single 20 mm and two single 2 pdr. The 4 inch starshell gun and two of the single 2 pdr were removed and replaced by two twin and two single 20 mm, probably in 1943.

Bellonas

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Bellona of the Bellona subclass

Spartan received no alterations as far as is known.

Royalist was converted to an escort carrier squadron flagship immediately on completion, when an extra two twin 20 mm were fitted as well as four single 20 mm. She was the only ship to receive an extensive postwar modernisation ordered for service in the RN but was later loaned to New Zealand. Plans were drawn up to fully modernise the four improved Didos with either four twin 3-inch L70 guns or 4.5-inch Mark 6 gun turrets. However that would have required building new broad-beamed Didos because the magazines of the Royalist type could hold only enough 3 -inch ammunition for 3 minutes 20 seconds of continuous firing.[6] The refit of Royalist was shortened and Diadem's was abandoned because the new steam turbines needed were unaffordable. Royalist′s reconstruction, like that of Newfoundland, incorporated much of the RN's late 1940s and early 1950s view of a desirable cruiser. Royalist′s 5.25-inch armament was given some of the improvements of the final 5.25 inch mounts built for the battleship Vanguard but not the extra space or power ramming. Also added was a secondary armament of three STAAG automatic twin 40mm guns, new Type 293 and 960M radar and Type 275 (two sets) DP fire control for the 5.25 guns, and a lattice mast. [c]

Bellona had four single 20 mm added by April 1944 and received an extra eight single 20 mm by April 1945. When she was loaned to the RNZN after the war, the twin Oerlikons were replaced by six single 40mm in the RNZN's own electric powered mount. Bellona was never fitted with six standard tachymetric directors which were requested by the RNZN for controlling the Bofors. The quadruple pom pom mounts were mothballed by RNZN for manning reasons but the single Oerlikons were maintained on Bellona.

Black Prince and Diadem also received eight single 20 mm, and had a further two twin 20 mm by early 1945.

Post-war development

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Post war in the expanded 1951 programme of the Korean War Emergency a broad beam Bellona class armed with four twin 4.5-inch guns[6] was considered as a cruiser option along with the 1951 Minotaur class[8]

Black Prince was loaned to the RNZN after the war and was operational briefly in 1947 before part of her crew mutinied and were discharged. After refit in 1952, with eight single electric powered 40mm Bofors and six single 20 mm Oerlikon, it was operated till 1955, during which it visited the 1953 Fleet Review at Spithead. Diadem (renamed after Babur, the founder of the Mughal dynasty) was sold to Pakistan in 1956 after a modest refit with Type 293 and Type 281 radar and standardised twin 40mm twin and single light AA guns. Babur became a cadet training ship in 1962 but was brought into use and her 5.25-inch guns were fired in the limited naval activities during the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965.

Ships in class

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Construction data, Dido group
Name Pennant Builder Laid down Launched Commissioned Fate
Dido 37 Cammell Laird, Birkenhead 26 October 1937 18 July 1939 30 September 1940 Broken up at Barrow-in-Furness, 1957
Argonaut 61 21 November 1939 6 September 1941 8 August 1942 Broken up at Newport, 1955
Charybdis 88 9 November 1939 17 September 1940 3 December 1941 Sunk at Battle of Sept-Îles, 23 October 1943
Phoebe 43 Fairfield, Govan 2 September 1937 25 March 1939 27 September 1940 Broken up at Blyth, 1956
Hermione 74 Alexander Stephen and Sons, Glasgow 6 October 1937 18 May 1939 25 March 1941 Torpedoed by the German submarine U-205, 16 June 1942
Bonaventure 31 Scotts, Greenock 30 August 1937 19 April 1939 24 May 1940 Torpedoed by the Italian submarine Ambra, 31 March 1941
Scylla 98 19 April 1939 24 July 1940 12 June 1942 Broken up at Barrow-in-Furness, 1950
Naiad 93 Hawthorn Leslie, Hebburn 26 August 1937 3 February 1939 24 July 1940 Torpedoed by the German submarine U-565, 11 March 1942
Cleopatra 33 5 January 1939 27 March 1940 5 December 1941 Broken up at Newport, 1958
Sirius 82 Portsmouth Dockyard, Portsmouth 6 April 1938 18 September 1940 6 May 1942 Broken up at Blyth, 1956
Euryalus 42 Chatham Dockyard 21 October 1937 6 June 1939 30 June 1941 Broken up at Blyth, 1959
Construction data, Bellona group
Name Pennant Builder Laid down Launched Commissioned Fate
Bellona 63 Fairfield, Govan 30 November 1939 29 September 1942 29 October 1943 Broken up at Barrow-in-Furness, 1959
Royalist 89 Scotts, Greenock 21 March 1940 30 May 1942 10 September 1943 Broken up at Osaka, 1968
Diadem 84 Hawthorn Leslie, Hebburn 15 December 1939 26 August 1942 6 January 1944 Transferred to Pakistan, 1956. Renamed Babur. Scrap in 1985.
Black Prince 81 Harland and Wolff, Belfast 2 November 1939 27 August 1942 20 November 1943 Broken up at Osaka, 1962
Spartan 95 Vickers-Armstrongs, Barrow-in-Furness 21 December 1939 27 August 1942 10 August 1943 Sunk by aircraft, 29 January 1944

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Red DCT for A & B and Blue for X & Y turrets
  2. ^ in Italian East Africa captured during the East African campaign
  3. ^ Royalist was loaned to the RNZN in 1956, in exchange for Bellona

Citations

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  1. ^ Friedman, N. (July 2012). "Judging the Good from the Bad". US Navy History. Vol. 26, no. 4. USNI.
  2. ^ Friedman, Norman (2010). British Cruisers: Two World Wars and After. Seaforth Publishing. pp. 186–192.
  3. ^ a b Raven & Roberts, p. 275
  4. ^ D. Brown. Reconstructing the RN 2012
  5. ^ NZ Archives/ RNZN Dido cruiser files, Captain Reports, Logs, Proceedings, Rule books turret safety and magazines and key control. Dido class Black Prince and Bellona. Archives. Wellington
  6. ^ a b c Murfin, p. 139
  7. ^ R. Hughes. Through the Waters. A gunnery officer on HMS Scylla 1942–3. W . Kimber. London (1956) p 25-29
  8. ^ B.Watson. The changing face of the world's Navies 1945 to present. Arms & armour. London (1991) p. 79

References

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  • Brown, D. K. & Moore, George (2003). Rebuilding the Royal Navy: Warship Design Since 1945. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-59114-705-0.
  • Campbell, John (1985). Naval Weapons of World War Two. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-459-4.
  • Campbell, N.J.M. (1980). "Great Britain". In Chesneau, Roger (ed.). Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1922–1946. New York: Mayflower Books. pp. 2–85. ISBN 0-8317-0303-2.
  • Friedman, Norman (2010). British Cruisers: Two World Wars and After. Barnsley, UK: Seaforth Publishing. ISBN 978-1-59114-078-8.
  • Lenton, H. T. (1998). British & Empire Warships of the Second World War. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-048-7.
  • Murfin, David (2010). "Damnable Folly? Small Cruiser Designs for the Royal Navy Between the Wars". In Jordan, John (ed.). Warship 2011. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-84486-133-0.
  • Raven, Alan; Lenton, H. T. (1973). Dido Class Cruisers. Ensign. Vol. 3. n.p.: Bivouac Books. ISBN 0-85680-003-1.
  • Raven, Alan & Roberts, John (1980). British Cruisers of World War Two. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-922-7.
  • Rohwer, Jürgen (2005). Chronology of the War at Sea 1939–1945: The Naval History of World War Two (Third Revised ed.). Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-59114-119-2.
  • Whitley, M. J. (1995). Cruisers of World War Two: An International Encyclopedia. London: Cassell. ISBN 1-86019-874-0.
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