Casa Grande-class dock landing ship 1944 class of British/American dock landing ships
Class overview
Name Casa Grande class
Builders
Operators
Preceded by Ashland -class dock landing ship
Succeeded by Thomaston -class dock landing ship
Planned 19
Completed 17
Cancelled 2
Retired 17
General characteristics
Type Dock landing ship
Displacement
4,032 tons (light)
7,930 tons (seagoing)
Length
454 ft (138 m) at waterline
457 ft 9 in (139.52 m) oa
Beam 72 ft 2 in (22.00 m)
Draught 15 ft 10 in (4.83 m)
Propulsion
2-shaft turbines, 2 boilers
7,000 shp (LSD13-21 and 25-27)
9,000 shp (LSD22-24)
Speed 15.6 knots (18.0 mph; 28.9 km/h)
Range 7,400 nmi (13,700 km) at 15 kn (28 km/h)
Boats & landing craft carried
One of the following arrangements:
3 × LCT Mark V or VI or
2 × LCT Mark III or IV or
14 × LCM Mark III or
41 × LVT or
47 × DUKWs
Capacity 1,500 tons of cargo (if not carrying boats)
Complement 17 officers and 237 men
Armament
1 × 5"/38 guns
12 × 40 mm Bofors guns (2 × 2), (2 × 4)
16 × 20mm guns
The Casa Grande class was a class of dock landing ships used by the Royal Navy and the United States Navy during the Second World War . Nineteen ships were planned, but two, USS Fort Snelling and USS Point Defiance were cancelled before being completed.
Design
The 'Landing Ship Dock' or LSD developed from a British staff requirement for a type of self-propelled drydock to transport beaching craft over long distances, that would in turn deliver trucks and supplies onto the beach.[ 1] A flooding deck aft capable of holding either two of the larger British Landing craft tanks (LCTs) or three of the new US LCTs was included in the designs.[ 1] With the option of fitting extra decks, large numbers of vehicles could be transported, and loaded into landing craft via ramps. Despite an initial specification for a speed of 17 knots (20 mph; 31 km/h), the LSDs were capable of only 15.6 knots (18.0 mph; 28.9 km/h).[ 1]
Service
The British initially ordered seven of the class from US dockyards, numbered LSD-9 to 15.[ 1] Only four were delivered, numbers 9 to 12, while 13 to 15 were retained by the US Navy, which ordered another twelve to the design, but only built ten.[ 1] [ 2] In total thirteen of the ships served with the US Navy, while four ships served with the Royal Navy.[ 1]
Ships
United States Navy
Ship name
Hull number
Builder
Laid down
Launched
Commissioned
Decommissioned
Fate
Casa Grande
LSD-13
Newport News Shipbuilding , Newport News, Virginia
11 November 1943
11 April 1944
5 June 1944
6 October 1969
Sold for scrap, 6 April 1992
Rushmore
LSD-14
31 December 1943
10 May 1944
3 July 1944
30 September 1970
Sunk as a target, 16 April 1993
Shadwell
LSD-15
17 January 1944
24 May 1944
24 July 1944
9 March 1970
Scrapped, 2017
Cabildo
LSD-16
24 July 1944
22 December 1944
15 March 1945
31 March 1970
Sunk as a target, September 1985
Catamount
LSD-17
7 August 1944
27 January 1945
9 April 1945
31 March 1970
Sold for scrap, 4 December 1975
Colonial
LSD-18
1 August 1944
28 February 1945
15 May 1945
1970
Sold for scrap, 8 September 1993
Comstock
LSD-19
3 January 1945
28 April 1945
2 July 1945
20 April 1970
Transferred to Taiwan, 17 October 1984; sunk as artificial reef on 30 June 2015
Donner
LSD-20
Boston Navy Yard
1 December 1944
6 April 1945
31 July 1945
23 December 1970
Sold for scrap, March 2005
Fort Mandan
LSD-21
2 January 1945
2 June 1945
31 October 1945
23 January 1971
Transferred to Greece, 23 January 1971; sold for scrap, November 2001
Fort Marion
LSD-22
Gulf Shipbuilding Corp. , Chickasaw, Alabama
15 September 1944
22 May 1945
29 January 1946
13 February 1970
Transferred to Taiwan , 15 April 1977; sunk as artificial reef, 9 December 2000
Fort Snelling
LSD-23
8 November 1944
Never
Never
Completed as a ferry and renamed SS Carib Queen ; sold for scrap, 25 June 1969
Point Defiance
LSD-24
28 May 1945
Never
Never
Cancelled, 17 August 1945; broken up on slipway
San Marcos
LSD-25
Philadelphia Navy Yard
1 September 1944
10 January 1945
15 April 1945
1 July 1971
Transferred to Spain , 1 July 1971; scrapped in 1989
Tortuga
LSD-26
Boston Navy Yard
16 October 1944
21 January 1945
8 June 1945
26 January 1970
Run aground during storm, 15 December 1987; scrapped, 1988
Whetstone
LSD-27
7 April 1945
18 July 1945
12 February 1946
2 April 1970
Sold for scrap, 17 February 1983
Royal Navy
HMS Highway
Ship name
Hull number
Builder
Laid down
Launched
Commissioned
Decommissioned
Fate
Eastway
F130
Newport News Shipbuilding , Newport News, Virginia
23 November 1942
21 May 1943
14 November 1943
23 April 1946
Transferred to Greece , 1953; scrapped, 1972
Highway
F141
23 November 1942
19 July 1943
19 October 1943
23 April 1946
Sold for scrap, 17 December 1948
Northway
F142
24 May 1943
18 November 1943
15 February 1944
1946
Sold to a commercial interest, 19 March 1948; scrapped, 1975
Oceanway
F143
23 July 1943
29 December 1943
29 March 1944
1947
Transferred to Greece , March 1947; transferred to France , 1952; sunk as target, 10 February 1970
Gallery
An
LCVP bucks in the well of USS
Catamount (LSD-17) during
mine clearance operations off
Chinnampo ,
North Korea , in November 1950
LVTs embarking British commandos leave USS
Fort Marion (LSD-22) for the beach at Sorye Dong, Korea, on 7 April 1951
USS Casa Grande (LSD-13) discharging LCU-1491 from her well deck, circa 1957
USS San Marcos (LSD-25, front) with USS Donner (LSD-20, rear)
Decommissioned USS Shadwell (LSD-15) in Mobile Bay as a Fire Research asset, 2014
Notes
^ a b c d e f Gardiner. Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1922–1946 . p. 161.
^ Fighting Ships of World War II . p. 304.
References
External links