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Career (Italy) Flag of Italy (1861-1946) crowned
Name: Giuseppe Miraglia
Builder: Regio Arsenale della Spezia
Laid down: 5 March 1921
Launched: 20 December 1923
Commissioned: 1 November 1927
Struck: 15 July 1950
Fate: Scrapped
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General characteristics
Class & type: seaplane tender
Displacement:

5,400 tonnes normal

5,913 tonnes full
Length: 121.22 m
Beam: 14.99 m
Draught: 5.82 m
Propulsion: 2 Parsons steam turbines with 8 Yarrow boilers, 2 shafts, 16,700 shp
Speed: 21 knots (39 km/h)
Complement:
  • 16 Officers
  • 40 NCOs
  • 240 Ratings
Armament:
  • 4x102mm/35 guns
  • 12x13.2mm MGs
  • Armour:
  • belt 70mm
  • deck 80mm
  • Aircraft carried: 17 seaplanes
    Aviation facilities: 2 catapults

    Giuseppe Miraglia was an Italian seaplane carrier.

    History[]

    Giuseppe Miraglia was laid down in 1921 as the train ferry Città di Messina, intended for use by the Italian State Railway Company, but was acquired by the Regia Marina soon after her launch in 1923. Works to convert her into a seaplane carrier began immediately; in 1925, with the ship nearly complete, Miraglia capsized during a storm. Salvaged under the direction of Giuseppe Pugliese, she was repaired and commissioned in November 1927.[1]

    Giuseppe Miraglia participated in the Second Italo-Abyssinian War and the Spanish Civil War. During World War II, after surviving the Battle of Taranto, she was employed in the Mediterranean theatre. After the Armistice she sailed (along with much of the Italian fleet) to Malta for internment.

    After the RN Costal forces MTB depot ship HMS Viennawas straddle by bombs and damaged beyond repair during the Luftwaffe bombing raid on the Italian port of Bari on December 2, 1943 and the subsequent mustard gas disaster the Giuseppe Miraglia was impressed by the (British) Royal Navy as temporary replacement.

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    After the War Giuseppe Miraglia was used to repatriate Italian prisoners-of-war, then spent the rest of her career as a barrack ship and workshop at Taranto until her scrapping in 1950.[1]

    Aircraft facilities[]

    Giuseppe Miraglia could carry some 17 seaplanes (originally Macchi M.18, later IMAM Ro.43), and was equipped with two catapults. Seaplanes could be retrieved by means of large doors and cranes at the sides of the hangar.

    See also[]

    References[]

    1. 1.0 1.1 Cernuschi, Enrico and Vincent P. O'Hara. in Jordan, John (2007). Warship 2007. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1844860418. Page 64.
    All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
    The original article can be found at Italian seaplane carrier Giuseppe Miraglia and the edit history here.


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