French cruiser Foch
Foch
Foch |
History |
France |
Name: |
Foch |
Namesake: |
Ferdinand Foch |
Builder: |
Arsenal de Brest |
Laid down: |
21 June 1928 |
Launched: |
24 April 1929 |
Commissioned: |
15 August 1931 |
Fate: |
scuttled at Toulon, 27 November 1942, scrapped 1943-44 |
General characteristics |
Class and type: |
Suffren-class cruiser |
Displacement: |
- 10,000 tonnes (standard)
- 12,780 tonnes (full load)
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Length: |
196 m (643.04 ft) |
Beam: |
20 m (65.62 ft) |
Draught: |
7.3 m (23.95 ft) |
Propulsion: |
3-shaft Rateau-Bretagne SR geared turbines, 9 Guyot boilers, 100,000 shp (75,000 kW) |
Speed: |
32 knots (59 km/h; 37 mph) |
Range: |
4,500 nautical miles (8,300 km; 5,200 mi) at 15 knots (28 km/h; 17 mph) |
Complement: |
773 |
Armament: |
- 8 203mm/50 Modèle 1924 guns (4 × 2)
- 8 90 mm (3.5 inch) 55-calibre anti-aircraft guns (8 × 1)
- 8 37 mm anti-aircraft guns (4 × 2)
- 12 13.2 mm AA (4 × 3)
- 6 550 mm (21.7 inch) torpedo tubes (2 × 3);
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Armour: |
- belt 60 millimetres;
- deck 25 millimetres;
- turrets and tower, 30 millimetres.
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Aircraft carried: |
2 Loire-Nieuport 130, 2 catapults |
Foch was a French Navy heavy cruiser of the Suffren class, that saw service in World War II. She was the first French warship named for the French Marshal Ferdinand Foch.
Service history
In the early part of World War II, Foch and her sister, Dupleix, formed Force M, based at Dakar.
On 14 June 1940, during World War II, the French 1st Cruiser Division comprising the cruisers Algérie and Foch and escorting destroyers bombarded Vado near Genoa, Italy.
After France surrendered to Germany in June 1940, Foch served with the navy of Vichy France. Foch was among the ships scuttled during the scuttling of the French fleet in Toulon on 27 November 1942 . The ship was scuttled with open sea valves, plus charges to her main armament, to prevent her capture by the Germans. However, the ship was relatively undamaged and repair (possibly as an aircraft carrier) was contemplated by the Italians, who refloated her on 16 April 1943. She was instead towed to La Seyne where she was broken up during 1943-1944.
References
- Jordan, John; Moulin, Jean (2013). French Cruisers 1922-1956. Seaforth Publications.
- Saibène, Marc (n.d.). Toulon et la Marine 1942-1944. Bourg en Bresse: Marines Editions at Realisations.
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Shipwrecks |
- 2 Nov: Empire Antelope, Empire Leopard
- 4 Nov: Hobbema, U-132
- 5 Nov: U-408
- 6 Nov: City of Cairo
- 7 Nov: Eveleen, Ha-11, USS Majaba
- 8 Nov: Albatros, Brestois, Boulonnais, Fougueux, Frondeur, HMS Hartland, Milan, Primauguet, Surprise, Tornade, Tramontane, HMS Walney, West Humhaw
- 9 Nov: HMS Cromer, USS Leedstown, Typhon
- 10 Nov: HMS Broke, I-15, HMS Ibis, Jean Bart, HMS Martin, Méduse
- 11 Nov: USS Joseph Hewes, HMS Unbeaten, Viceroy of India
- 12 Nov: USS Edward Rutledge, USS Erie, USS Hugh L. Scott, USS Tasker H. Bliss, HMS Tynwald, U-272, U-660
- 13 Nov: Akatsuki, USS Atlanta, USS Barton, USS Cushing, Empire Wold, HNLMS Isaac Sweers, USS Juneau, Kinugasa, USS Laffey, USS Monssen, U-411, Yūdachi
- 14 Nov: Hiei, Scillin, U-595, U-605
- 15 Nov: HMS Algerine, HMS Avenger, Ayanami, USS Benham, Kirishima, USS Preston, U-98, U-259, USS Walke
- 16 Nov: Irish Pine, U-173
- 17 Nov: U-331
- 18 Nov: Krasnoye Znamya, Tower Grange
- 19 Nov: USS YP-26
- 20 Nov: Prins Harald
- 21 Nov: U-517
- 24 Nov: Hayashio
- 25 Nov: HMS Utmost
- 27 Nov: Aigle, Algérie, Bordelais, Casque, Cassard, Colbert, Commandant Teste, D'Iberville, Dunkerque, Dupleix, Foch, Foudroyant, Gerfaut, Guépard, Jean de Vienne, Kersaint, La Galissonnière, Lion, Lynx, Mameluk, Marseillaise, Mogador, Panthère, Provence, Siroco, Strasbourg, Tartu, Tigre, Trombe, Valmy, Vauban, Vauquelin, Vautour, Vénus, Verdun
- 28 Nov: Empire Cromwell, HMS Ithuriel, Nova Scotia, Thomas T. Tucker
- 29 Nov: Dunedin Star
- 30 Nov: USS Northampton, HMCS Quinte, Takanami, Thor, Uckermark
- Unknown date: La Sibylle, Saint Edmond, U-184
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Other incidents | |
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1941 1942 1943 October 1942 December 1942 |