Baltimore-class cruiser
USS Baltimore (CA-68) | |
Class overview | |
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Name: | Baltimore class |
Operators: | United States Navy |
Preceded by: | Wichita class |
Succeeded by: | Oregon City class |
Cost: | US $40 million per ship [1] |
In commission: | 1943–71 |
Completed: | 14 |
Retired: | 14 |
Preserved: | 0 |
General characteristics | |
Type: | Heavy cruiser |
Displacement: |
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Length: | 673 ft 5 in (205.26 m) |
Beam: | 70 ft 10 in (21.59 m) |
Height: | 112 ft 10 in (34.39 m) (mast) |
Draft: | 26 ft 10 in (8.18 m) |
Propulsion: | Geared steam turbines with four screws |
Speed: | 33 knots (61 km/h; 38 mph) |
Complement: | 61 officers and 1,085 sailors |
Armament: |
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Armor: |
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The Baltimore-class cruiser (and the three ship Oregon City class sub-class) was a type of heavy cruiser in the United States Navy from the last years of World War II. Fast and heavily armed, ships like the Baltimore cruisers were mainly used by the Navy in World War II to protect the fast aircraft carriers in carrier battle groups. With their strong anti-aircraft armament, Baltimores could contribute especially in air defenses of these battle groups. Additionally, their 8-inch main guns and smaller medium guns were regularly used to bombard land targets in support of amphibious landings. After the war, only St Paul, Macon, Toledo, Columbus, Bremerton, Helena, Albany, and Rochester remained in service, while the rest were moved to the reserve fleet. All except Boston, Canberra, Chicago and Fall River were reactivated for the Korean War. By 1971, all ships remaining in the original design configuration were decommissioned, and started showing up in the scrap-sale lists. However, four Baltimore-class cruisers were refitted and converted into some of the first guided missile cruisers in the world, becoming two of the three Albany-class and two Boston-class cruisers. The last of these was decommissioned in 1980, with the Chicago lasting until 1991 in reserve. No example of the Baltimore class still exists.
History
Planning and construction
Immediately after the outbreak of World War II in September 1939, the US Navy initiated studies regarding a new class of heavy cruiser, which eventually led to the construction of the Baltimore class. With the start of the war, the limitations instituted by the Second London Naval Treaty, which had completely banned the construction of heavy cruisers, became obsolete. The Baltimore class was based partly on USS Wichita, a heavy cruiser from 1937, which represented the transition from inter-war to World War II designs. It was also based partly on the Cleveland class, a light cruiser that was then being built. In profile, the Baltimores looked very much like the Cleveland-class light cruisers, the obvious difference being that the larger Baltimores carried nine 8-inch (200 mm) guns in three triple turrets, compared to the 12 6-inch (150 mm) guns in four triple turrets of the Clevelands.
The construction of the first four ships of the Baltimore class began on July 1, 1940, and four more were ordered before the year was out. A second order, which consisted of 16 more ships, was approved on August 7, 1942. Despite the heavy losses in cruisers during the first 14 months of the Pacific War, the completion of the ships was delayed, because the Navy gave priority to the construction of the lighter Cleveland-class ships, as more of the lighter ships could be completed more quickly for deployment in carrier groups. With the construction of the first eight Baltimore-class ships moving slowly, the US Navy used the time to review the initial plans and improve them. The new, modified design was itself delayed, so that construction had begun on a further six ships—for a total of 14—using the original design before the revisions were completed. The final ten ships ordered were converted to the second design, known as the Oregon City class. Between 1943 and 1947, 17 ships of the Baltimore and Oregon City classes entered service. Construction of the eighteenth ship (Northampton) was suspended, to eventually be completed as a flagship/command ship in 1950. Five more were laid down, but cancelled and scrapped before launch, and one was never started before being cancelled.
The largest contractor for the construction of the Baltimore-class ships was Bethlehem Steel, which produced eight ships at the Fore River Shipyard in Quincy, Massachusetts. New York Shipbuilding in Camden, New Jersey, built four and the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard in Philadelphia completed two. The ships were named after cities in the United States, the only exception being USS Canberra, which was named in honor of HMAS Canberra (sunk at the battle of Savo Island), which had been named after Canberra, the Australian capital. The classification "CA" originally stood for "armored cruiser" but was later used for heavy cruisers.
Service
Of the fourteen completed ships, twelve were launched before the Japanese capitulation on September 2, 1945, though only seven took part in the battles of the Pacific Theater and one in the European Theater. The other ships were still completing their testing in the final days of the war. By 1947, nine of the Baltimores had been decommissioned and placed in the reserve fleet, while seven (Helena, Toledo, Macon, Columbus, St Paul, Rochester, and Albany) remained in service. However, at the start of the 1950s, six were reactivated (Macon had been decommissioned for four short months: June–October 1950), making thirteen available for deployment in the Korean War. Six of these were used for escort missions and coastal bombardment in Korea, while the other seven reinforced fleets in other areas of the globe. Four ships remained out of service: the Fall River was never reactivated, the Boston and Canberra were refitted as Boston-class guided missile cruisers (CGs), and the Chicago was reactivated after being converted to an Albany-class CG.
After the Korean War; beginning in 1954 with Quincy, some of the Baltimores decommissioned for good. By 1969, six ships were still in commission; five (Boston, Canberra, Chicago, Columbus, Albany) as CGs, and only one unmodified ship, the Saint Paul, which remained active to serve in the Vietnam War, providing gunfire support. St Paul was the only member of the class to serve continuously from commissioning (serving 26 years) and was finally decommissioned in 1971. Boston and Canberra retired in 1970, Columbus (serving 29.5 years) in 1975, and finally Chicago in 1980. All fourteen of the original Baltimores were sold for scrap after being decommissioned, with Chicago being the final one broken up in 1991.
Damage and casualties
In World War II, only Canberra was damaged through enemy fire, when she was struck with a air-dropped torpedo on October 13, 1944, which killed 23 men in the engine room and left the ship immobilized. The ship was hit amidships and both boiler rooms were flooded with 3,000 tons of seawater. She was towed away by sister ship Boston, and as a result both ships missed the crucial Battle of Leyte Gulf. A year later, repairs were completed at the Boston Naval Shipyard and Canberra was assigned to the Atlantic Fleet. In June 1945, Pittsburgh had her entire bow ripped off in a typhoon, but there were no casualties. The ship struggled through 70-knot (130 km/h) winds to Guam, where provisional repairs were made before sailing to the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard for a full reconstruction. Pittsburgh's detached bow stayed afloat, and was later towed into Guam and scrapped.
During the Korean War, a fire in a forward turret on April 12, 1952 killed 30 men on St Paul. Then, in 1953, the same ship was hit by a coastal battery, though without injury to the crew. Helena in 1951 and Los Angeles in 1953 were also struck by coastal batteries without injuries during the war.
In June 1968, Boston, along with its escort, the Australian destroyer HMAS Hobart, were victims of friendly fire when planes of the US Air Force mistook them for enemy targets and fired on them with AIM-7 Sparrow missiles. Only Hobart was seriously damaged; although Boston was hit, the warhead of the missile failed to detonate.
Refittings (Albany and Boston classes)
By the latter half of the 1940s, the navy was planning warships equipped with missiles. In 1946 the battleship USS Mississippi and in 1948 the seaplane tender USS Norton Sound were converted to test this idea. Both were equipped, among other weapons, with RIM-2 Terrier missiles, which were also used after 1952 on the first series of operational missile cruisers. Two Baltimore-class cruisers were refitted in this first series, Boston and Canberra. These were the first operational guided missile cruisers in the world. They were designated the Boston class and returned to service in 1955 and 1956 respectively, reclassified as CAG-1 and CAG-2--"G" for "guided missile" and maintaining the "A" because they retained their heavy guns.
In the following years six light cruisers of the Cleveland class were equipped with guided missiles and in 1957 the first ship designed from the start to be a missile cruiser was completed (Long Beach). Ships also continued to be converted, so starting in 1958, two Baltimore-class cruisers, Chicago and Columbus, along with an Oregon City-class cruiser, (considered a sub-class of the Baltimore class) Albany, were converted to the new Albany class. These were launched in 1962 and 1964, respectively. Two more ships were planned to be refitted as Albanys, the Baltimore class Bremerton and the Oregon City-class Rochester but these conversions were cancelled on financial considerations. As opposed to the Boston-class refit, the Albany-class refit required a total reconstruction. Both entire weapons systems and the superstructure were removed and replaced with new ones; the cost of one refit was $175 million. Because no high-caliber guns were retained, the Albany class ships received the designation CG.
Engineering and Equipment
Hull
Baltimore-class cruisers were 673 feet 7 inches (205.31 m) long and 70 feet 10 inches (21.59 m) wide. Since the hull was not altered in either the Albany or the Boston class, these numbers were the same for those ships as well, but the alterations differentiated them in all other categories.
Fully loaded, original Baltimores displaced 17,031 long tons (17,304 t) of water. Their draft was 23 feet 11 inches (7.29 m). At the bow, the top level of the hull lay 33 feet (10 m) above the water; at the stern, 25 feet (7.6 m). The funnels were 86 feet (26 m) high, and the highest point on the masts was at 112 feet (34 m). The superstructure occupied about a third of the ship's length and was divided into two deckhouses. The gap between these housed the two thin funnels. Two masts, one a bit forward and the other a bit aft of the funnels, accommodated the positioning electronics.
The vertical belt armor was 6 inches (152 mm) thick and the horizontal deck armor was up to 3 inches (76.2 mm) thick. The turrets were also heavily armored, between 3–6 in (76–152 mm) thick, while the command tower had the thickest armor, at 8 inches (203 mm).
The Boston class had a draft about 20 inches (510 mm) deeper in the water, and displaced about 500 long tons (510 t) more water than their former sister ships. Because the Bostons were only partially refitted, the forward third of the ship remained virtually untouched. The first serious change was the combination of what were two funnels on the Balitmores to just one, thicker funnel, which still stood in the gap between the two deckhouses. Because the missiles required more guiding electronic systems, the forward mast was replaced with a four-legged lattice mast with an enlarged platform. The most conspicuous change was of course the addition of the missile-launching apparatus and its magazine of missiles, which took up the entire back half of the ship and replaced the guns which had been there.
The three Albanys were completely rebuilt from the deck level up, to the point that they bear very little resemblance to their former sister ships. The deckhouse now took up nearly two thirds of the ship's length and was two decks high for almost the entire length. Above that lay the box-shaped bridge which was one of the most recognizable markers of the class. The two masts and funnels were combined into the so-called "macks - a portmanteau word combining "mast" and "stack" (smokestack) - where the electronics platforms were attached to the tops of the funnels rather than attached to masts rising all the way from the deck. The highest points on the forward mack was more than 130 feet (40 m) above the water line. Such heights could only be achieved with the use of aluminum alloys, which were used to a great extent in the construction of the superstructures. Despite, this the fully loaded displacement of the Albanys grew to more than 17,500 long tons (17,800 t).
Propulsion
The Baltimore cruisers were propelled with steam power. Each ship had four shafts, each with a propeller. The shafts were turned by four steam turbines, the steam produced by four boilers, which at full speed reached pressures of up to 615 pounds per square inch (4,240 kPa). The Baltimores each had two engine rooms and two funnels, though this was changed in the Bostons, which only had one funnel for all four turbines, as noted above. The high speed was around 33 knots (61 km/h) and the performance of the engine was around 120,000 horsepower (89 MW).
The original Baltimores could carry up to 2,250 long tons (2,290 t) of fuel, putting the maximum range at a cruising speed of 15 knots (28 km/h) at about 10,000 nautical miles (19,000 km). The increased displacement of the modified Boston and Albany classes meant their range was reduced to about 9000 and 7,000 miles (11,000 km) respectively, despite increases in fuel capacity to 2600 and 2500 tons.
Armament
The main armament of the Baltimore class consisted of three turrets, each with three Mark 15 8"/55 caliber guns (Mark 12 in Baltimore). Two of these were located forward and one aft. The range of these guns was 17.3 miles (27.8 km). The secondary armament was twelve 5"/38 caliber guns in six twin mounts. Two mounts were located on each side of the superstructure and two were behind the main batteries fore and aft. These guns could be used against aircraft, ships, and for shore bombardment. Their range for surface targets was 10 miles (16 km) and they could reach airplanes at altitudes of up to 6 miles (9.7 km). In addition, the ships had numerous light anti-aircraft weapons: 12 quadruple mounts of Bofors 40 mm guns (or 11 quadruple mounts and 2 twin mounts on ships with only one rear aircraft crane) as well as 20-28 Oerlikon 20 mm cannon, depending on when a given ship was commissioned. After WW2 the 20mm anti-aircraft guns were removed without replacement, due to limited effectiveness against kamikaze attacks, and because it was expected they would be completely ineffective against postwar aircraft. The 40mm Bofors were replaced with 3"/50 caliber guns in the 1950s.
Four ships, Toledo, Macon, Helena, and Los Angeles, were also each equipped with three nuclear cruise missiles of the SSM-N-8 Regulus type between 1956 and 1958. Ultimately, though, the deployment of such missiles on surface ships remained an experiment, which was only undertaken until the 1960s. The successor UGM-27 Polaris was carried only by nuclear submarines. In the late 1950s, plans were made to fit Polaris to missile conversions of these cruisers, but the only missile cruiser conversion ever so equipped was the Italian cruiser Giuseppe Garibaldi, (four tubes), and the missiles were never actually shipped.
Electronics
Initially, the Baltimores were equipped with SG radar systems for surface targets and SK systems for airborne targets. The range of these systems for surface targets, depending on the size of the target was between 15 and 22 nautical miles (28 and 41 km). The SK could detect bombers at medium altitudes from 100 nautical miles (190 km). The radar systems were replaced in the Korean war with the more effective SPS-6 (built by Westinghouse Electric or later with the SPS-12 (from the Radio Corporation of America combined with a SPS-8 as a height-finder. With these systems the detection range for bombers was increased to 145 miles (233 km). The ships in active service longer received further upgrades in their final years: the SPS-6 was replaced with the SPS-37 (also from Westinghouse) and the SPS-12 was replaced with the SPS-10 from Raytheon. With this equipment planes could be detected at over 250 miles (400 km) away.
The Baltimore class was equipped from the start with electronic fire control systems to determine the fire-parameters by which targets over the horizon could be hit. The main guns were controlled by a Mark 34 fire control system connected to an MK 8 radar. The anti-aircraft guns were guided by Mk 37 systems with Mk-4 radar. Later, the fire control radars were replaced along with the main radar systems. The fire control systems remained the same except that the new 3 in guns were fitted upgraded to Mk 56 with Mk 35 radars.
Aircraft
The onboard flight systems of the Baltimore-class cruisers during World War II consisted of two aircraft catapults on the side edges of the aft deck. Between the catapults was a sliding hatchway which was the roof of an onboard hangar. Directly under the hatch was an aircraft elevator. The hangar had room to accommodate up to four aircraft at one time, one to port forward of the elevator, one to port abeam the elevator, one starboard abeam, and one on the elevator itself. The first four ships of the class had two cranes each, while the later models had only one.
At full speed, Vought OS2U Kingfisher could be launched from these catapults and later Curtiss SC-1 Seahawk as well. These planes were used for reconnaissance, anti-submarine, and rescue missions. The planes were seaplanes, and after their missions would land in the water near the cruiser and be lifted back up into the ship by the crane or cranes in the rear and reset upon their catapults. In the 1950s, the catapults and the accompanying capacity to launch airplanes were removed, though the cranes were left and the hangars used to house helicopters, ship's boats or the workings of the Regulus missile system.
Macon in 1948, had a slightly elevated helipad installed instead of the catapults. Because of the helipad, the available firing angles for the main guns were sharply narrowed and the experiment was therefore quickly abandoned and not attempted on any other ships of the class. The ships of the Albany class did have an area on the deck for helicopters to land, but no platform.
Later designs
The hull of the Baltimore class was used for the development of a number of other classes. The Oregon City-class cruisers differed only slightly from Baltimores, because they were originally planned as Baltimore-class cruisers but were constructed based on modified plans. Though nine ships were planned, only three were completed. The main differences between the two classes is the reduction to a single-trunked funnel, a redesigned forward superstructure that was placed 40 feet (12 m) further aft, primarily to decrease top-heaviness and increase the arcs of fire for the guns. A somewhat enlarged design resulted in the Des Moines-class cruiser. While the basic deck layout was unchanged, this class carried the first fully automated high-caliber guns on a warship, though none was constructed in time to take part in World War II.
The plans for the Saipan-class light aircraft carrier were adapted from the drafts of the Baltimore hull design, and, for example the layout of the engines was transferred as well. The hulls of these ships were, however, significantly widened. The Saipan-class ships were completed in 1947 and 1948, but by the mid-1950s, they proved too small for the planes of the jet age and were converted for use as communication and command ships.
Crew
The size of the crew of a Baltimore-class cruiser varied by era and by tactical situation. Different sources also differ about the numbers. Naturally, the crew sizes were larger during wartime and furthermore, some cruisers—including all three of the modified Albany class were used as flagships and therefore housed an admiral and his staff.
At launch, during and shortly after the war, the crews consisted of around 60 officers and about 1000 rank and file crewmen. When an admiral's staff was aboard during wartime, this number could swell to 80 officers and 1500 crewmen. On the Bostons, the standard crew, even in peacetime and without an admiral's staff, was 80 officers and around 1650 crewmen. Because the Albany class was equipped almost exclusively for guided-missiles, it required fewer crew than the Bostons, and was roughly comparable numerically to the basic Baltimore.
Compared to today's crew sizes, these numbers seem high. The modern Ticonderoga-class cruiser is manned by about 400. These differences are mostly due to the much less manpower intensive nature of modern weapon systems.
Ships in class
Ship Name | Hull No. | Builder | Laid down | Launched | Commissioned | Decommissioned | Recommissioned | Decommissioned | Fate |
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Baltimore | CA-68 | Bethlehem Steel Corporation, Fore River Shipyard | 26 May 1941 | 28 July 1942 | 15 April 1943 | 8 July 1946 | 28 November 1951 | 31 May 1956 | Broken up at Portland, Oregon, 1972 |
Boston | CA-69 CAG-1 |
30 June 1941 | 26 August 1942 | 30 June 1943 | 29 October 1946 | 1 November 1955 | 5 May 1970 | Converted to Boston-class guided missile cruiser 1952 | |
Canberra (ex-Pittsburgh) |
CA-70 CAG-2 |
3 September 1941 | 19 April 1943 | 14 October 1943 | 7 March 1947 | 15 June 1956 | 2 February 1970 | Converted to Boston-class guided missile cruiser 1952 | |
Quincy (ex-St. Paul) |
CA-71 | 9 October 1941 | 23 June 1943 | 15 December 1943 | 19 October 1946 | 31 January 1952 | 2 July 1954 | Broken up at Portland, Oregon, 1974 | |
Pittsburgh (ex-Albany) |
CA-72 | 3 February 1943 | 22 February 1944 | 10 October 1944 | 7 March 1947 | 25 September 1951 | 28 August 1956 | Broken up at Portland, Oregon, 1974 | |
Saint Paul (ex-Rochester) |
CA-73 | 3 February 1943 | 16 September 1944 | 17 February 1945 | 30 April 1971 | Broken up at Terminal Island, California, 1980 | |||
Columbus | CA-74 CG-12 |
28 June 1943 | 30 November 1944 | 8 June 1945 | 8 May 1959 | 1 December 1962 | 31 January 1975 | Converted to Albany-class guided missile cruiser 1959 | |
Helena | CA-75 | 9 September 1943 | 28 April 1945 | 4 September 1945 | 29 June 1963 | Broken up at Richmond, California, 1975 | |||
Bremerton | CA-130 CG-13 |
New York Shipbuilding Corporation, Camden, New Jersey | 1 February 1943 | 2 July 1944 | 29 April 1945 | 9 April 1948 | 23 November 1951 | 29 July 1960 | Conversion to Albany-class guided missile cruiser cancelled Broken up at Portland, Oregon, 1974 |
Fall River | CA-131 | 12 April 1943 | 13 August 1944 | 1 July 1945 | 31 October 1947 | Broken up at Portland, Oregon, 1972 | |||
Macon | CA-132 | 14 June 1943 | 15 October 1944 | 26 August 1945 | 12 April 1950 | 16 October 1950 | 10 March 1961 | Broken up at Port Newark, New Jersey, 1973 | |
Toledo | CA-133 | 13 September 1943 | 6 May 1945 | 27 October 1946 | 21 May 1960 | Broken up at Terminal Island, California, 1974 | |||
Los Angeles | CA-135 | Philadelphia Naval Shipyard | 28 July 1943 | 20 August 1944 | 22 July 1945 | 9 April 1948 | 27 January 1951 | 15 November 1963 | Broken up at San Pedro, California, 1975 |
Chicago | CA-136 CG-11 |
28 July 1943 | 20 August 1944 | 10 January 1945 | 6 June 1947 | 2 May 1964 | 1 March 1980 | Converted to Albany-class guided missile cruiser 1959 |
References
- ↑ "American Cruiser of World War 2 - A pictorial encyclopedia by Steve Ewing
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Baltimore class cruiser. |
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