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PostPosted: Thu Sep 30, 2010 6:06 pm 
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bengtsson wrote:
I'm short for time right now, but this ship has some strong similarities to WWII Soviet Destroyers . It is clearly post war. The gun mount, and the bridge, the step in the hull all fit. Including the wind baffles at the top of the bridge. It's a path worth looking into. The background looks very Leningrad as well.

Bob B.


Now that you mentioned it...yes, the bridge somehow looks soviet design but what about the AA guns? Did they have 20mm (if those are Oerlikons in the photo at all) installed in their ships. Also the camo ship doesn't look the standard soviet schemes. Still, bridge looks either Soviet or Italian design to me. Will have to take a better look on my books this weekend to see if I find something.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 30, 2010 6:30 pm 
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The mystery "escort" is a pre-war built (or completed from one post-war) French Navy warship in the immediate post-war era, I'm pretty sure of that.

1) The camo scheme was standard for post-war French warships and the location of the hull number (right on the line between the two hull colors) is in-line with French practice as well. (Post-war photos of French warships in reference books like JANES FIGHTING SHIPS clearly show this.)

2) The gun mount looks like one of the standard 100-mm guns and has the late-war/post-war rocket launcher racks mounted on the mount.

3) The two 20-mm guns in front of the bridge have the standard USN shields (the RN could have used these as well I guess).

The problem with me identifying the ship is that I don't have a good database of photos for French post-war ships. I keep swinging back and forth, but I'm thinking more and more that your mystery ship is a unit of the MELPOMENE Class of Light Destroyers. Here is a photo of this class pre-war I found on World Naval Ships Forum. Comparing the two photos show some similarities (Fire Control Director, 100-mm gun, general hull design, etc), but the forward bridge area would have needed to have been altered (in RN service?). The references I have state that six units were taken over by the RN, one was lost. The remaining five (BOUCLIER, La FLORE, La MELPOMENE, La CORDELIERE, AND L'INCOMPRISE) were returned to France after the war ... but it is unclear if they had any service before being scrapped in 1950.

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PostPosted: Fri Oct 01, 2010 10:44 pm 
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Well, it appears there is an answer to this mystery. I sent a request to Chris Wright (Warship International editor) and Charles Haberlein (until recently retired, the NHHC Photo Collections director) and they narrowed down the candidates and found a likely ID.

From Charles Haberlein:

I'm far from an expert on things French (which this one certainly is), but my suspicion is that it's a Chamois class minesweeping sloop (Aviso de Deuxieme Classe to its proud owners). My trusty 1950 "Flottes de Combat" lists seven of the suckers (with pendant numbers): Chevreuil (A 10), Gaxelle (A 08), Annamite (A 09), Bisson (A 05), Commandant Ducuing (no number given), Commandant Amyot d'Inville (A 07) and Commandant De Pimodan (A 06). The first three listed were completed before the Germans made France their own, and the last four entered service after the nice Germans went back to the Fatherland. "Flottes de Combat"'s drawing & photo of Bisson does not look like the ship in the photo, but its sketch of Commandant de Pimodan resembles it reasonably well and its photo of Commandant Amyot d'Inville is nearly a spitting image. But for the fact that I don't know the subject very well, and don't have access to photos of all of the class, I'd be inclined to put my money on the latter.

From Chris Wright:

Kudos to Mr. Haberlein. It happens that our eminent French friends have published a superb and definitive volume on "Les Avisos-Drageurs Coloniaux de 647tW du Type Chamois", written by Charles Salou and published this year by Editions Lela presse. It describes these vessels in copious detail (available to all at 42 Euros per copy.) The vessel in question almost certainly is Commandant Amyot d'Inville, wearing pendant A53 in the photos in this French book. That number looks like it could match what you have. The only other possibility is Commandant de Pimodon, but the photos in the book lack any pendant number on the hull where it appears in your photo. Plus the Pimodon 1947 photo lacks the 20-mm guns on the forward deckhouse, though they were added by the early 50s (and by which time the bridgeword was modified noticeably.) The forward deckhouse and bridge of the two vessels, both built by the same yard, look essentially identical as completed. Both received the same hull paint scheme upon completion. And the two headed out together at the end of 1947 to Vietnam, returning to metropolitan France in 1950 (Pimodon) and 1955 (Amyot d'Inville).

Looking up via Google for Commandant Amyot d'Inville, I found this website ... http://www.netmarine.net/bat/avisos/amy ... ancien.htm ...

(English translation ... http://translate.google.com/translate?h ... 6prmd%3Div ...)


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PostPosted: Sat Oct 02, 2010 7:18 am 
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Yes, yes, yes! Thanks sooo very much very the effort and the information, everyone. It's always good to have closure to such a vexing question. I'll inform the fellas on the Dutch forum where the images first surfaced. Thanks again!

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PostPosted: Sat Oct 02, 2010 8:05 am 
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Location: turning into a power-hungry Yamato-models-munching monster... buahahahaha...
Thanks for solving that riddle, Rick! Very interesting indeed. :thumbs_up_1:

Jorit

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PostPosted: Sat Oct 02, 2010 10:11 am 
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A little more to pass on. Chris Wright clarified the the pendant numbers assigned for the three ships of this class completed AFTER WWII into mid-1948 were;

In the system that existed through July 1948, BISSON was A 51, AMYOT d'INVILLE A 53, and de PIMODON A 52.

Since BISSON had a different configuration and the other two were nearly "twin sisters", it could be either ship.

Michel, if you could get a better ... higher resolution ... version of this photo and can read the pendant number, then the answer would be firm.


Last edited by Rick E Davis on Sun Oct 03, 2010 12:27 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Sat Oct 02, 2010 12:45 pm 
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The original file was not much bigger (1060 by 600 -ish), but here's a crude enlargement. I'm fairly certain that spells A53. The event itself I think is the grounding in the Suez canal mentioned in the operational history of the ship on the translated page.


You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.

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PostPosted: Sat Oct 02, 2010 2:30 pm 
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Yes that does look like A53. Thanks for posting that enlargement.

COMMANDANT AMYOT d'INVILLE, A 53, it is then.


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PostPosted: Sun Oct 03, 2010 8:52 am 
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It's the french colonial sloop "Commandant Amyot d'Inville' (647tw, type Chamois). The picture has bee taken between 1948 and 1955


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PostPosted: Thu Oct 07, 2010 3:02 am 
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The chaps at dutchfleet.net have passed on the information to the other forum (yet another one in the chain) where it was first posted, and they all whish to express their thanks to you guys for this inter-forum effort at naval sleuthing. :thumbs_up_1:

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PostPosted: Sat Oct 09, 2010 11:21 pm 
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Was the Captain was relieved for wrecking the pier?

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PostPosted: Thu Oct 28, 2010 5:55 pm 
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Here are plans for Commandant Amyot d'Inville (1941):

http://www.servicehistorique.sga.defens ... php?id=490

These might help.

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