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USS Carronade (IFS-1)
USS Carronade
Career
Laid down: 19 November 1952
Launched: 26 May 1953
Commissioned: 25 May 1955, and
1 January 1969
Struck: 1973
Fate: scrapped
General characteristics
Displacement: 1,500 tons
Length: 245 ft (75 m)
Beam: 38 ft 6 in (11.73 m)
Draft: 11 ft (3.4 m)
Propulsion: Diesel, twin screw, 3,100 SHP
Speed: 15 kts
Capacity: 162 officers and enlisted
Armament: 1 × 1 5"/38 caliber gun DP mount
2 × twin 40 mm Bofors
8 × twin Mark 105 rocket launchers

USS Carronade (IFS-1/LFR-1) was a ship of the United States Navy first commissioned in 1955. She is named after the carronade, a type of short barrelled cannon.

As an Inshore Fire Support Ship (IFS), part of the so-called "brown-water navy", Carronade was built to provide direct naval gunfire support to amphibious landings or operations close to shore. Carronade was armed with two twin 40mm anti-aircraft mounts (mounted fore and aft of the superstructure), one dual-purpose 5" .38caliber naval cannon, and eight mk.105 twin automatic rocket launchers. Each launcher was capable of firing thirty spin-stabilized rockets per minute.

History[]

Carronade's keel was laid 19 November 1952, and she was launched 26 May 1953[1] by Puget Sound Bridge & Dredging Co., Seattle, Washington; sponsored by Mrs. L. Herndon; and commissioned 25 May 1955,[1] Lieutenant Commander D. O. Doran in command.

Carronade departed Bremerton for her home port, San Diego, 21 July 1955. She arrived 24 July, and was inspected by Secretary of the Navy C. S. Thomas on 26 July. The first ship of her design, Carronade carried out extensive training in the San Diego area until 19 March 1956 when she sailed to Pearl Harbor for a month of operations. Returning to San Diego for local exercises she made a good-will visit to Vancouver, British Columbia (20 August – 1 September), and then participated in amphibious exercises demonstrating the effectiveness of the inshore fire support ship (November 1956 – January 1957).

Carronade resumed local operations, upkeep and overhaul in the San Diego area until a Far Eastern tour of duty (18 January – 15 July 1958). She returned to the West Coast and local operations the autumn of 1959 when she departed on another cruise to the Orient. Sailing back to San Diego in February 1960, Carronade remained there and was decommissioned and placed in reserve on 31 May 1960.

Carronade was re-commissioned as IFS-1 on 2 October 1965. During the Vietnam War, Carronade served as the Flagship of Inshore Fire Support Division 93 (IFSDIV93), working alongside the USS Clarion River (LSM(R)-409), USS St. Francis River (LSMR-525) and USS White River (LSMR-536). Shortly before decommissioning, all ships in IFSDIV93 were re-designated as LFR.[citation needed]

Decommissioned again in 1969, Carronade was stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on 1 May 1973. She was sold for scrap on 1 September 1974.[1]

References[]

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 USS Carronade (IFS-1) and the edit history here.
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