Suffren-class cruiser

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The Suffren class was an interwar treaty cruiser built by France for the French Navy. The design was based on the preceding Template:Sclass and traded speed for protection while retaining the same armament. The first ship, Suffren, was completed based on this design.Template:Sfn The following ships, Colbert, Foch, Dupleix, were completed to a modified design with heavier secondary armament and rearranged topside.Template:Sfn The ships entered service from 1930 to 1933, with Suffren being the sole survivor of the Second World War.

Prior to the London Naval Treaty, the French Navy classified cruisers as armoured (croiseur cuirasse) or light (croiseurs legers); afterwards cruisers were divided between first class (croiseur de 1ere classe) and second class (croiseur de 2e classe). The Suffren was initially classified as a light cruiser, and then as a first class cruiser on 1 July 1931.Template:Sfn

Design and description

Hull and protection

The design of the Suffren was based on the Template:Sclass while maintaining the standard displacement of 10.000 tons. The hull maintained the high freeboard with the raised forecastle of all post-war cruisers with excellent sea keeping qualities. The hull design also kept the fine lines for the speed requirement complemented by the clipper bow with a gentle sheer and the marked flare keeping the forecastle dry even in heavy weather. The framing in a French hull was numbered from aft to stem, frame numbering was based on the distance from the aft perpendicular in meters.[1] The longitudinal framing was used for cruisers throughout the interwar period. The hull was Template:Convert between the perpendiculars with an overall length of Template:Convert and a beam of Template:Convert. At her normal displacement of 11,769 tonnes the draft of the ship would be Template:Convert.[2]

The protection was increased over the previous Duquesne. The armour protection in the hull for the Duquesne was only 370 tons whereas Suffern would have 670 tons.[3] The upper deck was Template:Convert thick amidships with Template:Convert bulkheads running to within Template:Convert of the sides enclosing the funnel uptakes and ventilation trunking between the main and first deck. The magazines were enclosed in an armoured box with Template:Convert sides and Template:Convert crowns, forward and aft bulkheads. The turrets and conning tower had Template:Convert plating. The roofs of both the turrets and range finders was Template:Convert of cast nickel. The steering gear was housed inside an armoured box with Template:Convert sides and an Template:Convert top.[4] A Belt of Template:Convert made of non-cemented 60 kg steel was installed to a height of Template:Convert and Template:Convert below the waterline abeam of the machinery spaces in Suffren and Colbert only.[5] The space between the machinery bulkhead and the inside of the hull was approximately Template:Convert. For Suffren and Colbert this space was filled with 500 tons of coal for the cruising boilers and therefore did not count against the standard displacement.

Reinterpreting the rules of the Washington Naval Treaty, the STNC decided to change and improve the level of protection on the next cruiser of the series, Foch. The interpretation was for Washington standard displacement to mean a peacetime load versus what would be required for a full wartime load. With the concept of shells striking the sides above the shallow armoured belt being able to penetrate to the machinery spaces, it was decided to do away with the belt and replace it with an armoured box around the machinery. The sides of this armoured box was Template:Convert with the deck above of the armoured box was Template:Convert. The bulkheads of the box varied in height from Template:Convert to Template:Convert. The protection on the sides of the magazines was increased to Template:Convert with all other protection remaining the same.[6] The last cruiser of the program, Dupleix, would be protected along the same lines as Foch, but with a slight increase. All longitudinal bulkheads were increased from Template:Convert to Template:Convert on the magazines and machinery spaces. The main deck over the machinery spaces was increased from 18 mm to Template:Convert. The upper deck however, was decreased from Template:Convert to Template:Convert. The magazine crowns were also increased to Template:Convert.[7]

Machinery

The propulsion system was changed from the four shaft arrangement of the Duquesne to a three shaft arrangement in the Suffren. Three single reduction gear Rateau-Bretagne steam turbines with six Guyot du Temple small tube boilers built by Indret rated at 20 kg/cm2 while operating at Template:Convert would produce 90,000 CVTemplate:Refn on three shafts to achieve a designed speed of Template:Convert. The forward boiler and engine rooms would be the same as in the Duquesne. The forward engine room would drive the wing shafts. The aft boiler rooms and turbine would be inline driving the center shaft. Each boiler room would have only one boiler.[8] Between the forward engine room and the aft boiler rooms two smaller coal/oil fired boilers would be installed in Suffren and Colbert only. These smaller boilers would be connected to the center line turbine for low speed cruising and were known as cruising boilers. The six main boilers would be oil fired with a maximum load of 1,876 tons of oil giving an endurance of 4,600 nm at 15 knots and 3,700 nm at 20 knots. For Suffren and Colbert carried 640 tons of coal for the cruise boilers and would provide another 2,000 nm at 11 knots. Twin side by side rudders were installed abaft between the shafts. To reduce the tactical radius of the vessels the centerline skeg was removed in the first three vessels (Suffren, Colbert and Foch) though it was reinstalled on the fourth unit (Dupleixh).[9] They were considered good sea boats and responsive to the helm at speeds above 10 knots.[10]

Armament

The armament as designed mirrored the Duquesne.Template:Sfn

The main armament was eight 203 mm/50 Model 1924 guns in four twin turrets;Template:Sfn the turrets were the same ones used on the Duquesnes.Template:Sfn The magazines held 150 rounds per gun, although only 120 rounds per gun were carried in peacetime to keep displacement within treaty limits.Template:Sfn The magazines were raised to accommodate the central shaft.Template:Sfn

The secondary armament on Suffren was eight 75 mm/50 Model 1924 high-angle guns in single mounts. Starting with Colbert these were replaced by eight 90 mm/50 Model 1926 high-angle guns in Model 1926 single mounts.Template:Sfn Dupleix carried the 90 mm guns in four Model 1930 twin mounts.Template:Sfn

The light anti-aircraft armament on Suffren was eight 37 mm/50 Model 1925 guns in single mounts. Starting with Colbert this was reduced to six;Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn the reduction was to be compensated by adding quadruple 13.2 mm Hotchkiss machine guns but these did not become available in quantity until the end of the 1930s.Template:SfnSuffren received six twin 13.2 mm Hotchkiss machine guns in 1934.Template:Sfn In 1941, Colbert was fitted with four of the quadruple Hotchkiss machine guns as well as four single 13.2 mm Browning machine guns.Template:Sfn Foch and Dupleix received a few Browning machine guns by the time they was scuttled;Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn the latter had the forecastle 37 mm gun removed.Template:Sfn

Two triple-tubed Model 1925T torpedo launchers were mounted to port and starboard, firing 550 mm Model 1923D torpedoes. There were three reloads.Template:Sfn

SuffrenTemplate:'s refit in early-1944 replaced most of her earlier secondary and light armament with Bofors 40 mm and Oerlikon 20 mm cannon.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Two 75 mm were retained aft.Template:Sfn The torpedoes were also removed.Template:Sfn

Aircraft

Two catapults were installed. On Suffren, they were mounted were installed between the aft funnel and the main mast.Template:Sfn On the later ships, they were moved forward between the funnels.Template:Sfn The original design embarked four aircraft - one on each catapult, and two between the funnels - but in practice Suffren carried only two - one on a catapult, and another abaft the forward funnel.Template:Sfn The CAMS 37 was the intended aircraft but was never carried. Instead, the Gordou-Lesseurre GL-810 and GL-811 were operated in the early years of service.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The catapults were modified to operate the Loire 130; this occurred in 1937 for SuffrenTemplate:Sfn and shortly before the Second World War for the remaining ships.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

SuffrenTemplate:'s aviation facilities were removed during the refit in early-1944.Template:Sfn

History

Following the completion of the Duquesne design, France learned that the Italian Template:Sclass incorporated 70mm belt and 50mm deck armour. The 1924 Naval General Staff requirements for the next French treaty cruiser demanded greater protection while closely matching other characteristics of the Duquesne. This was impossible within the 10,000 long ton limit. Instead, the added protection was paid for by removing machinery and reducing speed by 2 knots.Template:Sfn A second catapult was added, and the light anti-aircraft armament changed from 40 mm to 37 mm guns, after January 1925.Template:Sfn One ship, Suffren, was ordered as part of the 1925 building programme and laid down in 1926.Template:Sfn The Suffren design was further modified to improve aircraft and boat handling. The single centerline crane between the funnels was replaced by cranes to either side of the aft funnel. The ship's silhouette was further changed by rearranging the catapults, boats, and torpedo tubes. Finally, the 76mm guns were replaced by 90mm guns.Template:Sfn The remaining ships were built to the modified design. The first ship, Colbert, was ordered as part of the 1926 programme and laid down in 1927.Template:Sfn The Suffrens joined the Mediterranean Fleet at Toulon in 1931-1932.Template:Sfn

Suffren replaced the cruiser Primauguet in French Indochina in July 1939Template:Sfn and remained until April 1940. She conducted patrols and escorted troops convoys during the first months of the Second World War.Template:Sfn The cruiser returned to the Mediterranean Sea in May 1940 and joined Force X at Alexandria.Template:Sfn

Colbert, Foch and Dupleix performed wartime service in the Mediterranean and the Atlantic Ocean as parts of Force X and Y.Template:Sfn On the night of 13-14 June 1940, they and the cruiser Algérie bombarded the Italian coast around Genoa as part of Operation Vado; little damage was done.Template:Sfn The cruisers returned to Toulon after the French armistice in June 1940, and were scuttled there in November 1942.Template:Sfn

Suffren and Force X were immobilized at Alexandria by the British,Template:Sfn and rejoined the Allies in May 1943.Template:Sfn She conducted Atlantic blockade patrols from Dakar in 1943-1944.Template:Sfn After the war, she participated in reasserting French rule in French Indochina, including transporting troops from France and in theatre, and conducting shore bombardment.Template:Sfn Suffren decommissioned in 1947 and used for training, being renamed Ocean in 1962 to free the name for a frigate. The hull was stricken in March 1972 and scrapped after February 1976.Template:Sfn

Ships

Construction data
Ship name[11] Launched[11] In service[11] Out of service[12] Fate[12]
Suffren 3 May 1927 8 March 1930 24 March 1972 Towed from Toulon for scrapping 22 February 1976
Colbert 20 April 1928 1 April 1931 27 November 1942 Scuttled at Toulon
Foch 21 June 1928 20 December 1931 27 November 1942 Scuttled at Toulon
Dupleix 9 October 1930 15 November 1933 27 November 1942 Scuttled at Toulon

Notes

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  • all ship statistical data from French Cruisers 1922 - 1956 (Jordan & Moulin, Chapter 3, The Suffren Class, Design and Construction, Building Data and General Characteristics: Suffren and Colbert) unless otherwise noted

References

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Bibliography

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Template:Suffren class cruisers Template:WWII French shipsTemplate:Treaty Cruisers

  1. Jordan & Moulin, Introduction, Construction
  2. Jordan & Moulin, Chapter 3, The Suffren Class, Design and Construction, Building Data and General Characteristics
  3. Jordan & Moulin, Chapter 3, The Suffren Class, Suffren, Protection
  4. Jordan & Moulin, Chapter 3, The Suffren Class, Suffren, Protection
  5. Jordan & Moulin, Chapter 3, The Suffren Class, Suffren, Protection
  6. Jordan & Moulin, Chapter 3, The Suffren Class, Foch (C2)
  7. Jordan & Moulin, Chapter 3, The Suffren Class, Dupleix (C3)
  8. Jordan & Moulin, Chapter 3, The Suffren Class, Design and Construction, Machinery
  9. Jordan & Moulin, Chapter 3, The Suffren Class, Design and Construction
  10. Jordan & Moulin, Chapter 3, The Suffren Class, Design and Construction, Ground Tackle and Navigation
  11. a b c Whitley, Suffren Class, p. 31
  12. a b Jordan & Moulin, Chapter 12, The Period 1945 - 1956, The Deactivation of Cruisers