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LCPL

The Landing Craft Personnel (Large) or LCP (L) was a landing craft used extensively in the Second World War. Its primary purpose was to ferry troops from transport ships to attack enemy-held shores. The craft derived from a prototype designed by the Eureka Tug-Boat Company of New Orleans, Louisiana, USA. Manufactured initially in boatyards in and around New Orleans, as requirements grew it was produced in a number of yards around the United States. Typically constructed of pine planks and plywood, and fitted with some armor plate, this shallow-draft boat with a crew of 3 could ferry an infantry platoon of 36 to shore at 8 knots (13 km/h). Men generally entered the boat by walking over a gangplank from the boat deck of their troop transport as the LCP(L) hung from its davits. When loaded, the LCP(L) was lowered into the water. Soldiers exited the boat by jumping or climbing down from the craft's bow or sides.

United States Marine Corps reinforcements at Guadalcanal debark from an LCP(L).
Class overview
NameLanding Craft Personnel (Large)
BuildersHiggins Industries, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
Operators
Preceded byVarious ship's boats and cutters
Succeeded byLCP(R), LCVP
Subclasses
  • Royal Navy model
  • US model
Built1940-1943
Active0
Preserved0
General characteristics
TypeLanding craft
DisplacementUS Model: 13,500 pounds (light), 21,600 pounds (loaded)
Length36 ft 8 in
Beam10 ft 10 in
Draught
  • 2 ft 6 in aft. light
  • 3 ft 6 aft. loaded
Ramps0
Propulsion
Speed
  • RN model: 9-11 kts. (max)
  • US model: 8 kts. (fully loaded)
Range
  • RN model: 120 miles at full speed (loaded)
  • US model: 50 miles (gasoline), 130 miles (diesel)
Capacity6,700–8,100 pounds (3,039–3,674 kg)
Troops
  • RN model: 25 troops
  • US model: 36 troops
Crew
ArmamentUS model: 2 x Browning .30 cal. machine guns, or US manufactured Lewis .30 cal. machine guns RN model: 1 x .303 cal. Lewis Gun
Armor3 x 10 lb. plates on bulkheads (fore of the .30 cal. cockpits, of the troop well and the engine space.
Notesfrom US Navy ONI 226 Allied Landing Craft and Ships, US Government Printing Office, 1944.

Origins edit

During the 1930s, the United States Marine Corps (USMC) sought boats practical for landing troops on beaches. In 1936, the USMC conducted experiments with new types of boats, lighters, and launches. Many craft were considered coming from the Navy's Bureau as well as commercial fishing boat designs. Included in these experiments were some prototypes where, upon beaching, a ramp was deployed over rollers on the bow.[1] A few boats were overwhelmed by the surf and others did not prove practical, but the 28 feet (9 m) craft designed by the Eureka Tug-Boat Company of New Orleans was both a good sea boat and superior at beaching.

The craft was based on the company's 1926 spoonbill-bowed craft used by trappers in the bayous of the Mississippi River delta.[2] The boat's draft was rather shallow, 18 inches (46 cm), and it could cut through vegetation and slide over logs without ruining its propeller. It could also run up on shore and extract itself damage-free. As part of sales demonstrations, boats were often run up on the seawalls of Lake Pontchartrain. (The craft was also infamous among law enforcement along the Gulf Coast as a vehicle for rum-runners.)[3][4]

The Marines' specifications at the time were for boats operated by a crew of 6 that could carry a squad of 12 men. Such boats should be able to achieve 15 knots (17 mph; 28 km/h), and to be hoisted on the US Navy's standard davits.[5] The general lines of the boat were accepted by the USMC, and in September 1940 Andrew J. Higgins, president of the Eureka Tug-Boat Company, was contracted to build a slightly larger craft to carry 24 fully equipped troops, or two squads. He produced the 32 feet (10 m) Eureka or Higgins boat.[6] This was the craft first used in American Fleet Landing Exercises in 1941.

 
A Eureka Boat, an early model of the LCP(L), used in commando raids. This image features Jack Churchill leading a charge armed with a broadsword (far right).

Before the USMC received their boats, the British Admiralty’s need for a raiding craft brought the first enquiries for an even larger boat. Purchasing agents from Britain had become aware of Andrew Higgins’ Eureka boats; enquiries were made and a film of the Eureka was sent to the Admiralty in London. The German occupation of France had changed British procurement plans dramatically. The Admiralty's Inter-Service Training and Development Centre wanted a 36 ft 8 in (11.18 m) craft, intending the boat to carry a full British army platoon and two or three attached signallers or assault engineers. An initial order for 136 was placed, with the first 50 delivered to Britain in October 1940.[7] Higgins had already built these boats on spec and is said to have preferred this larger craft. Further US procurements were of this larger boat, and thus the LCP(L) was the forerunner of all American LCP types.[8]

The LCP(L)s were also known as Eurekas or R boats. Before 1942, The USMC referred to them as T Boats.[9] They were American-made landing craft that could carry up to 36 troops. Unlike later landing craft, the LCP(L)s did not have ramps at the bow, so the troops had to jump over the sides to get out. The boats themselves were made of plywood but had armored bulkheads. They were invented by Louisiana native Andrew Higgins before the war and were designed with a shallow draft to operate in swamps. But, it turned out that the design was also excellent for operating on shallow beaches.[10]

 
This boat, an early example from the Eureka Tug-Boat Company, was the progenitor of thousands of Second World War landing craft.

Manning the LCP(L) edit

In US Navy or US Coast Guard service, the craft's crew comprised two gunners and the coxswain.[11] Though the gunners would normally occupy the two gunner's cockpits, forward, during landing, they had other duties also. One acted as the bowman while the other served as the mechanic. The coxswain was in charge of the boat and crew. His position was at the wheel directly behind the gunner's cockpits and only slightly off-set to the port side. From here he steered and operated engine controls.

The craft's raked bow made beaching comparatively easy, and the craft came off without difficulty when unloaded, though it could snag on rocks or poor ground as any other small boat would. The LCP(L) could be loaded from the boat deck,[12] before launching, "unless otherwise specified by the warning plate in the boat",[13] for its construction as much as its light weight made this speeding up of the launching-load time possible. Other craft, especially those with a ramp like the LCV and LCVP, were structurally weak in the bow and could not be loaded before lowering from davits; personnel being transported in these types climbed down scramble nets into these boats.

The 3-man crew of a British LCP(L) was led by a Leading Seaman or Royal Marine Corporal coxswain who steered the boat and operated engine controls on the port side of the cockpit. Beside him was the Lewis gunner who also acted as bowman handling any rope-work forward. The third man was a mechanic who might also handle stern ropes. At other times LCP(L)s might be led or towed by coastal forces craft when a raid was within reasonable range of a sally port. A number of these raids were made in 1940 to 1942 by British forces, sometimes using LCP(L)s though more often going ashore by canoe. The first major landing from LCP(L)s in Europe took place in August 1942 when the Canadians with elements of the British army and Royal Marines landed at Dieppe. The fortunes of the LCP(L) flotillas showed here how units and even individual craft could have very different luck in a landing.

 
US Marines climb down a scramble net to an LCP(L) during preparations in the Fiji Islands for the Guadalcanal Campaign that would take place in August 1942. These men appear to be filling a returned craft as first-wave troops would have entered the boat prior to its being lowered to the water.

Successors edit

Two significant further developments of the LCP(L) were produced, also designed by Andrew Higgins. These retained the dimensions of the LCP(L) to allow use from the same launch platforms. The first development was the Landing Craft, Personnel (Ramped) (LCP(R)), which added a bow ramp to the LCP(L) design for faster egress. The concept came from the Japanese Daihatsu-class ramped landing craft. The second development, the most-produced of the three, was the Landing Craft, Vehicle and Personnel (LCVP). This widened the bow to the full width of the craft to maximize the ramp size and speed of egress. The LCVP is the craft most referred to as a "Higgins Boat", although its two predecessors and a PT boat design were also developed and produced by Higgins.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Fergusson, p.37
  2. ^ Ladd, 1976, p.24
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 2003-04-09. Retrieved 2013-11-15.
  4. ^ Fergusson, p.
  5. ^ Friedman, p. 75.
  6. ^ Maund, pp. 62-63
  7. ^ Ladd, p. 24
  8. ^ Ladd, p. 24
  9. ^ Miller p. 57.
  10. ^ DeFelice, p. 120
  11. ^ US Navy ONI
  12. ^ Buffetaut, p. 28
  13. ^ US Navy ONI

References edit

  • DeFelice, Jim Rangers at Dieppe New York: Berkley Caliber, The Penguin Group, 2008, ISBN 978-0-425-21921-8
  • Fergusson, Bernard The Watery Maze; the story of Combined Operations, Holt, New York, 1961.
  • Friedman, Norman U.S. Amphibious Ships and Craft: An Illustrated Design History, Naval Institute Press, Annapolis, 2002. ISBN 1557502501
  • Ladd, JD Assault From the Sea: 1939-1945, Hippocrene Books, Inc., New York, 1976. ISBN 0-88254-392-X
  • Lund, Paul, and Ludlam, Harry War of the Landing Craft, New English Library, London 1976. ISBN 0-450-03039-3
  • Maund, LEH Assault From the Sea, Methuen & Co. Ltd., London 1949.
  • Miller, John Guadalcanal: The First Offensive, US Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 1949.
  • Smith, W.H.B. Basic Manual of Military Small Arms Stackpole Books, Harrisburg PA ISBN 0-8117-1699-6
  • US Navy ONI 226 Allied Landing Craft and Ships, US Government Printing Office, 1944.

External links edit

lcpl, this, article, about, world, landing, craft, military, rank, lance, corporal, landing, craft, personnel, large, landing, craft, used, extensively, second, world, primary, purpose, ferry, troops, from, transport, ships, attack, enemy, held, shores, craft,. This article is about the World War II landing craft For the military rank see Lance Corporal The Landing Craft Personnel Large or LCP L was a landing craft used extensively in the Second World War Its primary purpose was to ferry troops from transport ships to attack enemy held shores The craft derived from a prototype designed by the Eureka Tug Boat Company of New Orleans Louisiana USA Manufactured initially in boatyards in and around New Orleans as requirements grew it was produced in a number of yards around the United States Typically constructed of pine planks and plywood and fitted with some armor plate this shallow draft boat with a crew of 3 could ferry an infantry platoon of 36 to shore at 8 knots 13 km h Men generally entered the boat by walking over a gangplank from the boat deck of their troop transport as the LCP L hung from its davits When loaded the LCP L was lowered into the water Soldiers exited the boat by jumping or climbing down from the craft s bow or sides United States Marine Corps reinforcements at Guadalcanal debark from an LCP L Class overviewNameLanding Craft Personnel Large BuildersHiggins Industries New Orleans Louisiana USAOperators United States Navy Royal Navy Royal Canadian Navy Royal Australian Navy Royal New Zealand Navy Royal Indian Navy Polish Navy postwar Preceded byVarious ship s boats and cuttersSucceeded byLCP R LCVPSubclassesRoyal Navy model US modelBuilt1940 1943Active0Preserved0General characteristicsTypeLanding craftDisplacementUS Model 13 500 pounds light 21 600 pounds loaded Length36 ft 8 inBeam10 ft 10 inDraught2 ft 6 in aft light 3 ft 6 aft loadedRamps0Propulsion1 Hall Scott 250 hp gasoline engine or 1 x Kermath 225 hp gasoline engine or 1 x Gray 165 225 hp diesel engine or 1 x Superior 150 hp diesel engineSpeedRN model 9 11 kts max US model 8 kts fully loaded RangeRN model 120 miles at full speed loaded US model 50 miles gasoline 130 miles diesel Capacity6 700 8 100 pounds 3 039 3 674 kg TroopsRN model 25 troops US model 36 troopsCrewUS model 4 coxswain engineer signalman and bow hookman last two also operated the machine guns RN model 3 coxswain stoker bowman machine gunner plus 1 officer per group of 3 boatsArmamentUS model 2 x Browning 30 cal machine guns or US manufactured Lewis 30 cal machine guns RN model 1 x 303 cal Lewis GunArmor3 x 10 lb plates on bulkheads fore of the 30 cal cockpits of the troop well and the engine space Notesfrom US Navy ONI 226 Allied Landing Craft and Ships US Government Printing Office 1944 Contents 1 Origins 2 Manning the LCP L 3 Successors 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksOrigins editDuring the 1930s the United States Marine Corps USMC sought boats practical for landing troops on beaches In 1936 the USMC conducted experiments with new types of boats lighters and launches Many craft were considered coming from the Navy s Bureau as well as commercial fishing boat designs Included in these experiments were some prototypes where upon beaching a ramp was deployed over rollers on the bow 1 A few boats were overwhelmed by the surf and others did not prove practical but the 28 feet 9 m craft designed by the Eureka Tug Boat Company of New Orleans was both a good sea boat and superior at beaching The craft was based on the company s 1926 spoonbill bowed craft used by trappers in the bayous of the Mississippi River delta 2 The boat s draft was rather shallow 18 inches 46 cm and it could cut through vegetation and slide over logs without ruining its propeller It could also run up on shore and extract itself damage free As part of sales demonstrations boats were often run up on the seawalls of Lake Pontchartrain The craft was also infamous among law enforcement along the Gulf Coast as a vehicle for rum runners 3 4 The Marines specifications at the time were for boats operated by a crew of 6 that could carry a squad of 12 men Such boats should be able to achieve 15 knots 17 mph 28 km h and to be hoisted on the US Navy s standard davits 5 The general lines of the boat were accepted by the USMC and in September 1940 Andrew J Higgins president of the Eureka Tug Boat Company was contracted to build a slightly larger craft to carry 24 fully equipped troops or two squads He produced the 32 feet 10 m Eureka or Higgins boat 6 This was the craft first used in American Fleet Landing Exercises in 1941 nbsp A Eureka Boat an early model of the LCP L used in commando raids This image features Jack Churchill leading a charge armed with a broadsword far right Before the USMC received their boats the British Admiralty s need for a raiding craft brought the first enquiries for an even larger boat Purchasing agents from Britain had become aware of Andrew Higgins Eureka boats enquiries were made and a film of the Eureka was sent to the Admiralty in London The German occupation of France had changed British procurement plans dramatically The Admiralty s Inter Service Training and Development Centre wanted a 36 ft 8 in 11 18 m craft intending the boat to carry a full British army platoon and two or three attached signallers or assault engineers An initial order for 136 was placed with the first 50 delivered to Britain in October 1940 7 Higgins had already built these boats on spec and is said to have preferred this larger craft Further US procurements were of this larger boat and thus the LCP L was the forerunner of all American LCP types 8 The LCP L s were also known as Eurekas or R boats Before 1942 The USMC referred to them as T Boats 9 They were American made landing craft that could carry up to 36 troops Unlike later landing craft the LCP L s did not have ramps at the bow so the troops had to jump over the sides to get out The boats themselves were made of plywood but had armored bulkheads They were invented by Louisiana native Andrew Higgins before the war and were designed with a shallow draft to operate in swamps But it turned out that the design was also excellent for operating on shallow beaches 10 nbsp This boat an early example from the Eureka Tug Boat Company was the progenitor of thousands of Second World War landing craft Manning the LCP L editIn US Navy or US Coast Guard service the craft s crew comprised two gunners and the coxswain 11 Though the gunners would normally occupy the two gunner s cockpits forward during landing they had other duties also One acted as the bowman while the other served as the mechanic The coxswain was in charge of the boat and crew His position was at the wheel directly behind the gunner s cockpits and only slightly off set to the port side From here he steered and operated engine controls The craft s raked bow made beaching comparatively easy and the craft came off without difficulty when unloaded though it could snag on rocks or poor ground as any other small boat would The LCP L could be loaded from the boat deck 12 before launching unless otherwise specified by the warning plate in the boat 13 for its construction as much as its light weight made this speeding up of the launching load time possible Other craft especially those with a ramp like the LCV and LCVP were structurally weak in the bow and could not be loaded before lowering from davits personnel being transported in these types climbed down scramble nets into these boats The 3 man crew of a British LCP L was led by a Leading Seaman or Royal Marine Corporal coxswain who steered the boat and operated engine controls on the port side of the cockpit Beside him was the Lewis gunner who also acted as bowman handling any rope work forward The third man was a mechanic who might also handle stern ropes At other times LCP L s might be led or towed by coastal forces craft when a raid was within reasonable range of a sally port A number of these raids were made in 1940 to 1942 by British forces sometimes using LCP L s though more often going ashore by canoe The first major landing from LCP L s in Europe took place in August 1942 when the Canadians with elements of the British army and Royal Marines landed at Dieppe The fortunes of the LCP L flotillas showed here how units and even individual craft could have very different luck in a landing nbsp US Marines climb down a scramble net to an LCP L during preparations in the Fiji Islands for the Guadalcanal Campaign that would take place in August 1942 These men appear to be filling a returned craft as first wave troops would have entered the boat prior to its being lowered to the water Successors editTwo significant further developments of the LCP L were produced also designed by Andrew Higgins These retained the dimensions of the LCP L to allow use from the same launch platforms The first development was the Landing Craft Personnel Ramped LCP R which added a bow ramp to the LCP L design for faster egress The concept came from the Japanese Daihatsu class ramped landing craft The second development the most produced of the three was the Landing Craft Vehicle and Personnel LCVP This widened the bow to the full width of the craft to maximize the ramp size and speed of egress The LCVP is the craft most referred to as a Higgins Boat although its two predecessors and a PT boat design were also developed and produced by Higgins See also editGray Marine Engine Landing Craft Assault LCM 2 LCP R LCVP United States Landing Craft Mechanized Landing Ship InfantryNotes edit Fergusson p 37 Ladd 1976 p 24 LCPL Landing Craft Personnel Large Archived from the original on 2003 04 09 Retrieved 2013 11 15 Fergusson p Friedman p 75 Maund pp 62 63 Ladd p 24 Ladd p 24 Miller p 57 DeFelice p 120 US Navy ONI Buffetaut p 28 US Navy ONIReferences editDeFelice Jim Rangers at Dieppe New York Berkley Caliber The Penguin Group 2008 ISBN 978 0 425 21921 8 Fergusson Bernard The Watery Maze the story of Combined Operations Holt New York 1961 Friedman Norman U S Amphibious Ships and Craft An Illustrated Design History Naval Institute Press Annapolis 2002 ISBN 1557502501 Ladd JD Assault From the Sea 1939 1945 Hippocrene Books Inc New York 1976 ISBN 0 88254 392 X Lund Paul and Ludlam Harry War of the Landing Craft New English Library London 1976 ISBN 0 450 03039 3 Maund LEH Assault From the Sea Methuen amp Co Ltd London 1949 Miller John Guadalcanal The First Offensive US Government Printing Office Washington DC 1949 Smith W H B Basic Manual of Military Small Arms Stackpole Books Harrisburg PA ISBN 0 8117 1699 6 US Navy ONI 226 Allied Landing Craft and Ships US Government Printing Office 1944 External links edit LCPL Landing Craft Personnel Large USS Rankin AKA 103 Archived from the original on 2003 04 09 Retrieved 2013 11 15 At Home A Float part 2 Popular Mechanics September 1937 Retrieved 2013 11 15 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title LCPL amp oldid 1192921886, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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