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Landing ship, infantry

A landing ship, infantry (LSI) or infantry landing ship was one of a number of types of British Commonwealth vessels used to transport landing craft and troops engaged in amphibious warfare during the Second World War. LSIs were operated by the Royal Navy, British Merchant Navy, Royal Canadian Navy, Royal Indian Navy, and Royal Australian Navy. They transported British Commonwealth and other Allied troops in sea assaults and invasions throughout the war.

LCAs leave HMS Rocksand, a landing ship, infantry, for the island of Nancowry in the British occupation of the Nicobar Islands, October 1945
Class overview
NameLanding ship, infantry
Operators
Succeeded byLanding ship logistics
Built1938–1945
Completed~40
Active0
General characteristics
Troops150 to 1,500,
Crew120 to 300 officers and ratings
ArmamentTypically a range of anti-aircraft guns
ArmourTypically anti-splinter mattresses and gun shields

Typically, a landing ship, infantry would transport its cargo of infantry from its embarkation port to close to the coast to be invaded. This location (the "lowering position" in Royal Navy terminology) was approximately 6–11 miles off shore. The troops would then transfer to landing craft, most commonly LCAs, for the journey to the beach. The landing craft would return to the LSI after disembarking their cargo and be hoisted up to embark additional troops.

Origins edit

In the years immediately before war was declared the Inter-Service Training and Development Centre sought to identify ships suitable to carry Army and Royal Marine formations being employed in amphibious operations. Such ships would not be purpose-built, but would be found within the lists of merchant marine vessels.[1] These ships needed to be fast and have davits capable of lowering the new landing craft assault fully loaded with troops.[2] Glengyle and her sisters, Glenearn, Glenroy, and Breconshire, then abuilding, were determined to be ideal for infantry landing ships.[3] This class of four fast passenger and cargo liners were intended for the Far East trade route.[4] The Admiralty acquired the four Glens shortly after their launchings, and converted them into fast supply ships. By June 1940, Glengyle, Glenearn, and Glenroy were under conversion to LSI(L)s. The Admiralty insisted on keeping Breconshire in a fast cargo configuration, so the ISTDC consulted the Director of Naval Construction about suitable requisitioned ships. The Dutch Continental passenger steamers Queen Emma and Princess Beatrix were converted to LSIs. Displacing approximately 3,000 gross registered tons and able to make 22 knots, these vessels could carry as many as 800 troops apiece.[5] These were the original 5 LSIs. More LSIs would be found in the years to come from requisitioning or new construction provided by the United States under Lend-Lease.

Design and conversion edit

LSIs were grouped according to their troop capacity and endurance.[6] Initially, all were requisitioned merchant vessels that exchanged carrying lifeboats for landing craft.[7] During April and June 1940, the Glens underwent further conversion into LSIs capable of transporting an embarked force of up to 34 officers and 663 other ranks and carrying 12 LCAs on Welin-McLachan davits and 1 LCM(1) stored in chocks on deck and launched by 30-ton derricks.[8][9][10] Glengyle was built by Caledon Shipbuilding & Engineering Company, Dundee, for the Glen Line. The only vital alterations to the 18 knot Glengyle and her sisters, Glenroy and Glenearn, were to assure davits strong enough to lower fully loaded LCAs, and to provide accommodation for the army units to be transported.[11] This latter alteration entailed introducing tables, forms, and posts for slinging hammocks into the former cargo hold.[12] Glengyle, the first LSI, was accepted into service on 10 September and, on 31 January 1941, she sailed around Africa to the Mediterranean.

Smaller LSI, such as Queen Emma and Princess Beatrix, were generally converted cross-channel ferries,[13] or a converted passenger ship.[14]

Conversion was accomplished, as with LSI(L), by adding davits for the landing craft, providing troop accommodation, plus some defensive armament, such as QF 12 pounder 12 cwt naval guns, and anti-aircraft guns, such as the 20 mm Oerlikon cannon.

In Canada in the spring of 1943, work was under way on the conversion of Prince David and Prince Henry to landing ship infantry (medium) (LSI (M)). They were reconfigured to carry 550 infantrymen transported in six LCAs and two LCM(1)s, and have large sick-bay facilities for the anticipated casualties. Their old 6-inch (152 mm) guns were replaced with two twin 4 inch mountings, two single Bofors 40mm guns, and ten Oerlikons. The rebuilding, which took place at Esquimalt and Vancouver, was completed in December 1943 and shortly after re-commissioning, she left for the United Kingdom via Panama canal and New York City, under Captain T.D. Kelly RCNR, (her final commanding officer) who had supervised the fitting-out of both ships. The ship's davits were capable of lifting an LCA which, by this time in the war, was approaching 14 tons.

 
Four LCAs go ashore from HMCS Prince David off Bernières-sur-Mer, France, 6 June 1944

In Australia in mid-1942, HMAS Manoora was marked for conversion into the Royal Australian Navy's first landing ship, infantry at Garden Island Dockyard.[15] Her armed merchant cruiser armament was removed and replaced with a single 12-pounder gun, six 40 mm Bofors, and eight 20 mm Oerlikons.[16] The Walrus amphibian aircraft was removed, and the ship was modified to carry US manufactured landing craft: 17 LCVPs, and two LCM(3)s.[17][18] Manoora was initially able to accommodate 850 soldiers, but later modifications increased this to 1,250.[19] The ship was recommissioned on 2 February 1943 with the pennant number C77, and after spending six months on amphibious warfare training in Port Phillip, was deployed to New Guinea.[20]

In the United States, a commercial hull was put in war production by the Maritime Commission; the C1-S-AY1 subtype of thirteen ships built by the Consolidated Steel Corporation, were modified for use as LSI(L)s under lend-lease.[21] These ships were all given two-word names beginning with "Empire", such as SS Empire Spearhead. All were able to accommodate two LCA flotillas; a total of 24 craft. The Empire Broadsword was lost during the invasion of Normandy to a mine. Empire Javelin was sunk by a U-boat torpedo on 28 December 1944. All these ships had davits fitted to accept LCAs and the other appropriate British manufactured landing craft for LSIs.

Normally British converted LSIs were fitted with heavy-duty power-operated davits.[22] Early landing ships were fitted with Welin-McLachlin davits – these being generally in use in the Merchant Navy for standard 99 man lifeboats.[23] As the weight of LCAs increased through the war (eventually approaching 14 tons) heavier davits were required. Later LSIs and those being refitted were provisioned with luffing davits of a crossbeam type.[24] The davits themselves provided a demarcation between the responsibilities of the LSI crew (either Royal Navy or Merchant Navy) and the members of the LCA flotilla.

Manning the landing ship, infantry edit

Some of the LSIs were commissioned into the Royal Navy, received navy crews, and flew the White Ensign, while most retained their civilian crews and flew the Red Ensign.[25] Royal Navy LSIs had Royal Navy landing craft flotillas assigned to them until 1943, when a proportion of landing craft flotillas were manned by Royal Marine crews. Merchant Navy LSIs would have Royal Navy gunners for the anti-aircraft equipment, and Royal Navy officers and ratings operating the ship’s flotilla of landing craft.[26] Generally, these divisions of personnel did not cooperate or share in each other's work responsibilities.

LSIs in Royal Canadian Navy service were crewed by Canadians and, by late 1943 on, were assigned RCN landing craft flotillas. The crews intermingled, lent a hand as needed in one another’s work, and messed together.

Ship designations edit

LSI(S) Landing ship, infantry (small)
LSI(M) Landing ship, infantry (medium)
LSI(L) Landing ship, infantry (large)
LSI(H) Landing ship, infantry (hand-hoisting)

Ships edit

See also edit

Notes and citations edit

  1. ^ Maund, p. 9.
  2. ^ Maund, p. 9.
  3. ^ Maund, p. 9
  4. ^ Fergusson, p. 41
  5. ^ Maund, p. 66.
  6. ^ Bruce, p. 16.
  7. ^ Bruce, p. 16.
  8. ^ Ladd,1976 p. 78
  9. ^ Maund, p. 66
  10. ^ Ladd, 1978, p. 245
  11. ^ Maund, p. 10.
  12. ^ Bruce, p. 21.
  13. ^ "The Heritage Coast: Landing Craft". theheritagecoast.co.uk. 2003. Retrieved 13 February 2011.
  14. ^ Mason, Geoffrey B. (2010). "HMS Royal Scotsman, LSI(L)". naval-history.net. Retrieved 13 February 2011.
  15. ^ Bastock, Australia's Ships of War, pp. 218–9
  16. ^ Bastock, Australia's Ships of War, p. 217.
  17. ^ Bastock, Australia's Ships of War, p. 217.
  18. ^ "HMAS Manoora (I)". HMA Ship Histories. Sea Power Centre – Australia. Retrieved 3 April 2011.
  19. ^ Bastock, Australia's Ships of War, p. 217.
  20. ^ Bastock, Australia's Ships of War, pp. 218–9
  21. ^ Buffetaut, p. 32.
  22. ^ Bruce, p18
  23. ^ Maund, p.10
  24. ^ North, p. 25
  25. ^ Bruce, p. 17.
  26. ^ Bruce, p. 17.
  27. ^ Colledge, J. J.; Warlow, Ben (2006) [1969]. Ships of the Royal Navy: The Complete Record of all Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy (Rev. ed.). London: Chatham Publishing. ISBN 978-1-86176-281-8. p.126
  28. ^ Groenenberg, Joanne (24 November 2004). . mcanet.mcga.gov.uk. Archived from the original on 24 July 2011. Retrieved 13 February 2011.

References edit

  • Bruce, Colin J. Invaders, Chatham Publishing, London, 1999. ISBN 1-84067-533-0
  • Bastock, John. Australia's Ships of War Sydney : Angus and Robertson Publishers, 1975. ISBN 0207129274
  • Buffetaut, Yves. D-Day Ships, Naval Institute Press, Annapolis, Maryland, 1994. ISBN 1-55750-152-1
  • Fergusson, Bernard. The Watery Maze; The Story of Combined Operations, Holt, New York, 1961.
  • Ladd, JD. Assault From the Sea: 1939–1945, Hippocrene Books, Inc., New York, 1976. ISBN 0-88254-392-X
  • Ladd, James D. Commandos and Rangers of World War 2, Macdonalds and Jane's, London, 1978. ISBN 0-356-08432-9.
  • Ladd, JD. Royal Marine Commando, Hamlyn Publishing Group Ltd., London, 1982. ISBN 0-600-34203-4
  • Lavery, Brian. Assault Landing Craft, Seaforth Publishing, Barnsley, UK, 2009. ISBN 978-1-84832-050-5
  • 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.
  • Saunders, Hilary A. St. George. Combined Operations: The Official Story of the Commandos, New York: Macmillan, 1943.
  • US Navy ONI 226. Allied Landing Craft and Ships, US Government Printing Office, 1944.

External links edit

landing, ship, infantry, united, states, navy, world, equivalent, attack, transport, united, states, navy, class, created, 1949, landing, craft, infantry, landing, ship, infantry, infantry, landing, ship, number, types, british, commonwealth, vessels, used, tr. For the United States Navy World War II equivalent see Attack transport For the United States Navy LSI class created in 1949 see Landing Craft Infantry A landing ship infantry LSI or infantry landing ship was one of a number of types of British Commonwealth vessels used to transport landing craft and troops engaged in amphibious warfare during the Second World War LSIs were operated by the Royal Navy British Merchant Navy Royal Canadian Navy Royal Indian Navy and Royal Australian Navy They transported British Commonwealth and other Allied troops in sea assaults and invasions throughout the war LCAs leave HMS Rocksand a landing ship infantry for the island of Nancowry in the British occupation of the Nicobar Islands October 1945Class overviewNameLanding ship infantryOperators Royal Navy Ministry of War Transport Royal Canadian Navy Royal Indian Navy Royal Australian NavySucceeded byLanding ship logisticsBuilt1938 1945Completed 40Active0General characteristicsTroops150 to 1 500 Crew120 to 300 officers and ratingsArmamentTypically a range of anti aircraft gunsArmourTypically anti splinter mattresses and gun shieldsTypically a landing ship infantry would transport its cargo of infantry from its embarkation port to close to the coast to be invaded This location the lowering position in Royal Navy terminology was approximately 6 11 miles off shore The troops would then transfer to landing craft most commonly LCAs for the journey to the beach The landing craft would return to the LSI after disembarking their cargo and be hoisted up to embark additional troops Contents 1 Origins 2 Design and conversion 3 Manning the landing ship infantry 4 Ship designations 5 Ships 6 See also 7 Notes and citations 8 References 9 External linksOrigins editIn the years immediately before war was declared the Inter Service Training and Development Centre sought to identify ships suitable to carry Army and Royal Marine formations being employed in amphibious operations Such ships would not be purpose built but would be found within the lists of merchant marine vessels 1 These ships needed to be fast and have davits capable of lowering the new landing craft assault fully loaded with troops 2 Glengyle and her sisters Glenearn Glenroy and Breconshire then abuilding were determined to be ideal for infantry landing ships 3 This class of four fast passenger and cargo liners were intended for the Far East trade route 4 The Admiralty acquired the four Glens shortly after their launchings and converted them into fast supply ships By June 1940 Glengyle Glenearn and Glenroy were under conversion to LSI L s The Admiralty insisted on keeping Breconshire in a fast cargo configuration so the ISTDC consulted the Director of Naval Construction about suitable requisitioned ships The Dutch Continental passenger steamers Queen Emma and Princess Beatrix were converted to LSIs Displacing approximately 3 000 gross registered tons and able to make 22 knots these vessels could carry as many as 800 troops apiece 5 These were the original 5 LSIs More LSIs would be found in the years to come from requisitioning or new construction provided by the United States under Lend Lease Design and conversion editLSIs were grouped according to their troop capacity and endurance 6 Initially all were requisitioned merchant vessels that exchanged carrying lifeboats for landing craft 7 During April and June 1940 the Glens underwent further conversion into LSIs capable of transporting an embarked force of up to 34 officers and 663 other ranks and carrying 12 LCAs on Welin McLachan davits and 1 LCM 1 stored in chocks on deck and launched by 30 ton derricks 8 9 10 Glengyle was built by Caledon Shipbuilding amp Engineering Company Dundee for the Glen Line The only vital alterations to the 18 knot Glengyle and her sisters Glenroy and Glenearn were to assure davits strong enough to lower fully loaded LCAs and to provide accommodation for the army units to be transported 11 This latter alteration entailed introducing tables forms and posts for slinging hammocks into the former cargo hold 12 Glengyle the first LSI was accepted into service on 10 September and on 31 January 1941 she sailed around Africa to the Mediterranean Smaller LSI such as Queen Emma and Princess Beatrix were generally converted cross channel ferries 13 or a converted passenger ship 14 Conversion was accomplished as with LSI L by adding davits for the landing craft providing troop accommodation plus some defensive armament such as QF 12 pounder 12 cwt naval guns and anti aircraft guns such as the 20 mm Oerlikon cannon In Canada in the spring of 1943 work was under way on the conversion of Prince David and Prince Henry to landing ship infantry medium LSI M They were reconfigured to carry 550 infantrymen transported in six LCAs and two LCM 1 s and have large sick bay facilities for the anticipated casualties Their old 6 inch 152 mm guns were replaced with two twin 4 inch mountings two single Bofors 40mm guns and ten Oerlikons The rebuilding which took place at Esquimalt and Vancouver was completed in December 1943 and shortly after re commissioning she left for the United Kingdom via Panama canal and New York City under Captain T D Kelly RCNR her final commanding officer who had supervised the fitting out of both ships The ship s davits were capable of lifting an LCA which by this time in the war was approaching 14 tons nbsp Four LCAs go ashore from HMCS Prince David off Bernieres sur Mer France 6 June 1944In Australia in mid 1942 HMAS Manoora was marked for conversion into the Royal Australian Navy s first landing ship infantry at Garden Island Dockyard 15 Her armed merchant cruiser armament was removed and replaced with a single 12 pounder gun six 40 mm Bofors and eight 20 mm Oerlikons 16 The Walrus amphibian aircraft was removed and the ship was modified to carry US manufactured landing craft 17 LCVPs and two LCM 3 s 17 18 Manoora was initially able to accommodate 850 soldiers but later modifications increased this to 1 250 19 The ship was recommissioned on 2 February 1943 with the pennant number C77 and after spending six months on amphibious warfare training in Port Phillip was deployed to New Guinea 20 In the United States a commercial hull was put in war production by the Maritime Commission the C1 S AY1 subtype of thirteen ships built by the Consolidated Steel Corporation were modified for use as LSI L s under lend lease 21 These ships were all given two word names beginning with Empire such as SS Empire Spearhead All were able to accommodate two LCA flotillas a total of 24 craft The Empire Broadsword was lost during the invasion of Normandy to a mine Empire Javelin was sunk by a U boat torpedo on 28 December 1944 All these ships had davits fitted to accept LCAs and the other appropriate British manufactured landing craft for LSIs Normally British converted LSIs were fitted with heavy duty power operated davits 22 Early landing ships were fitted with Welin McLachlin davits these being generally in use in the Merchant Navy for standard 99 man lifeboats 23 As the weight of LCAs increased through the war eventually approaching 14 tons heavier davits were required Later LSIs and those being refitted were provisioned with luffing davits of a crossbeam type 24 The davits themselves provided a demarcation between the responsibilities of the LSI crew either Royal Navy or Merchant Navy and the members of the LCA flotilla Manning the landing ship infantry editSome of the LSIs were commissioned into the Royal Navy received navy crews and flew the White Ensign while most retained their civilian crews and flew the Red Ensign 25 Royal Navy LSIs had Royal Navy landing craft flotillas assigned to them until 1943 when a proportion of landing craft flotillas were manned by Royal Marine crews Merchant Navy LSIs would have Royal Navy gunners for the anti aircraft equipment and Royal Navy officers and ratings operating the ship s flotilla of landing craft 26 Generally these divisions of personnel did not cooperate or share in each other s work responsibilities LSIs in Royal Canadian Navy service were crewed by Canadians and by late 1943 on were assigned RCN landing craft flotillas The crews intermingled lent a hand as needed in one another s work and messed together Ship designations editLSI S Landing ship infantry small LSI M Landing ship infantry medium LSI L Landing ship infantry large LSI H Landing ship infantry hand hoisting Ships editSS Ben my Chree Isle of Man Steam Packet Company passenger ferry Served at Pointe du Hoc with 2nd US Rangers 6 June 1944 TSS Duke of York SS El Hind hired as LSI L in 1943 destroyed by fire in Bombay docks April 1944 27 HMS Cicero HMS Empire Battleaxe SS Empire Broadsword LSI L HMS Sansovino SS Empire Javelin LSI L HMS Empire Spearhead HMS Glengyle LSI L 10 000 tons 700 troops HMS Glenearn LSI L HMS Glenroy LSI L HMS Invicta LSI S HMAS Kanimbla SS Karanja LSI L sunk off Algeria 1942 MV Llangibby Castle SS Llanstephan Castle Union Castle Line 11 293 GRT sister ship of HMHS Llandovery Castle HMAS Manoora HMNZS Monowai formerly an ocean going passenger ship Belgian ferry SS Princesse Marie Jose HMS Prince Charles HMCS Prince David LSI M 500 troops HMCS Prince Henry LSI M former passenger liner HMS Prince Leopold LSI S former Belgian cross channel ferry torpedoed in 1944 by U 621 28 HMS Princess Astrid LSI S HMS Princess Beatrix LSI M HMS Princess Josephine Charlotte LSI S HMS Prince Albert HMS Queen Emma LSI M HMS Rocksand formerly Cape Argos then Empire Anvil HMS Royal Scotsman LSI H former passenger ferry operating in the Irish Sea HMS Royal Ulsterman HMS Sainfoin formerly Empire Crossbow HMS St Helier LSI H former Channel Island ferry MS Sobieski with LCP L s HMS Ulster Monarch LSI H former passenger ferry operating in the Irish Sea HMAS WestraliaSee also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Landing Ship Infantry Auxiliary personnel attack ship US term for a similar ship Landing craft assaultNotes and citations edit Maund p 9 Maund p 9 Maund p 9 Fergusson p 41 Maund p 66 Bruce p 16 Bruce p 16 Ladd 1976 p 78 Maund p 66 Ladd 1978 p 245 Maund p 10 Bruce p 21 The Heritage Coast Landing Craft theheritagecoast co uk 2003 Retrieved 13 February 2011 Mason Geoffrey B 2010 HMS Royal Scotsman LSI L naval history net Retrieved 13 February 2011 Bastock Australia s Ships of War pp 218 9 Bastock Australia s Ships of War p 217 Bastock Australia s Ships of War p 217 HMAS Manoora I HMA Ship Histories Sea Power Centre Australia Retrieved 3 April 2011 Bastock Australia s Ships of War p 217 Bastock Australia s Ships of War pp 218 9 Buffetaut p 32 Bruce p18 Maund p 10 North p 25 Bruce p 17 Bruce p 17 Colledge J J Warlow Ben 2006 1969 Ships of the Royal Navy The Complete Record of all Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy Rev ed London Chatham Publishing ISBN 978 1 86176 281 8 p 126 Groenenberg Joanne 24 November 2004 Maritime and Coastguard Agency Press Releases mcanet mcga gov uk Archived from the original on 24 July 2011 Retrieved 13 February 2011 References editBruce Colin J Invaders Chatham Publishing London 1999 ISBN 1 84067 533 0 Bastock John Australia s Ships of War Sydney Angus and Robertson Publishers 1975 ISBN 0207129274 Buffetaut Yves D Day Ships Naval Institute Press Annapolis Maryland 1994 ISBN 1 55750 152 1 Fergusson Bernard The Watery Maze The Story of Combined Operations Holt New York 1961 Ladd JD Assault From the Sea 1939 1945 Hippocrene Books Inc New York 1976 ISBN 0 88254 392 X Ladd James D Commandos and Rangers of World War 2 Macdonalds and Jane s London 1978 ISBN 0 356 08432 9 Ladd JD Royal Marine Commando Hamlyn Publishing Group Ltd London 1982 ISBN 0 600 34203 4 Lavery Brian Assault Landing Craft Seaforth Publishing Barnsley UK 2009 ISBN 978 1 84832 050 5 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 Saunders Hilary A St George Combined Operations The Official Story of the Commandos New York Macmillan 1943 US Navy ONI 226 Allied Landing Craft and Ships US Government Printing Office 1944 External links edithttp www naval history net xGM Chrono 40LSI L Royal 20Scotsman htm http www maritimequest com liners 02 pages p prince leopold 1930 data htm Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Landing ship infantry amp oldid 1138936806, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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