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Spanish seaplane carrier Dédalo

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Dédalo in dazzle camouflage, carrying three Felixstowe F.3 flying boats
History
Germany
NameNeuenfels
NamesakeBurg Neuenfels [de]
OwnerDDG „Hansa“
Port of registryBremen
BuilderWigham Richardson, Low Walker
Cost£81,750
Yard number375
Launched19 April 1901
CompletedMay 1901
Refit1922
Identification
Fateseized by Spain, October 1918
Notes
Spain
Name
  • 1919: España No.6
  • 1921: Dédalo
NamesakeDaedalus
Acquired1921
Commissioned1922
Decommissioned1934
StrickenApril 1936
FateScrapped 1940
General characteristics
Type
Tonnage5,650 GRT, 3,651 NRT
Displacement9,900 tonnes[citation needed]
Length420.0 ft (128.0 m)
Beam55.2 ft (16.8 m)
Depth20.5 ft (6.2 m)
Decks1
Installed power494 NHP, 3,000 shp (2,200 kW)[citation needed]
Propulsion
Speed11.1 knots (20.6 km/h)
Complement(as seaplane tender): 398
Armament
  • (as seaplane tender):
  • 4 × Krupp 105 mm (4.1 in) guns
  • 2 × 57 mm (2.2 in) anti-aircraft guns
Aircraft carried(as seaplane tender and balloon carrier): 20 seaplanes or flying boats, 2 airships, 2 captive balloons

Dédalo was a steamship that was built in England in 1901 as the cargo ship Neuenfels for the German shipping company DDG "Hansa". Spain seized her in 1918 and had her converted into a seaplane tender and balloon carrier, entering Spanish Navy service in 1922. She served in the Rif War, in which her aircraft took part in the Alhucemas landing of French and Spanish forces in 1925. She was decommissioned in 1934 and scrapped in 1940.

Dédalo is Spanish for Daedalus. This is the first of two Spanish Navy ships to bear the name. The second was the former United States Navy aircraft carrier USS Cabot, which Spain borrowed in 1967, bought in 1972 and decommissioned in 1989.

Building

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In 1901 Wigham Richardson built four ships with consecutive yard numbers at its Neptune Yard in Low Walker on the River Tyne for the DDG "Hansa" shipping line. Three were sister ships: Argenfels launched in 7 January, Neuenfels launched on 19 April and Scharzfels launched on 5 June.[1][2][3] The other ship was Wildenfels, which was smaller than the three sisters, and launched on 5 March.[4]

Neuenfels was yard number 375. Her registered length was 420.0 ft (128.0 m), her beam was 55.2 ft (16.8 m), her depth was 20.5 ft (6.2 m) and her tonnages were 5,650 GRT, 3,651 NRT. She had a single screw, driven by a four-cylinder quadruple-expansion engine that was rated at 494 NHP. She achieved 11.1 knots (20.6 km/h) on her sea trials.[2]

DDG "Hansa" paid Wigham Richardson £81,750 to build Neuenfels, on which Wigham Richardson netted a profit of £8,543–3s–6d.[2] She was registered in Bremen. Her code letters were QHJR.[5] By 1914 she was equipped for wireless telegraphy, and her call sign was DNU.[6]

Seizure and conversion

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When the First World War began in July 1914, many German merchant ships made for the nearest neutral port to shelter from the Royal Navy, French Navy and Russian Navy. Neuenfels took refuge in Vigo in Spain. During the Atlantic U-boat campaign of World War I, the Imperial German Navy sank a number of neutral ships, notably during times of unrestricted submarine warfare. These included a number of Spanish merchant ships, for which the Spanish government sought compensation from the German government. In October 1918, Spain seized six German merchant ships that were in Spanish ports. Neuenfels was seized on 22 October, and provisionally renamed España No.6.

For some time the Spanish Navy had wanted to acquire a seaplane tender. In the autumn of 1921 España No.6 was transferred to the Navy, and from that December she spent five months in Barcelona being converted. The conversion was completed for eight million pesetas, and in 1922 the Navy commissioned her as Dédalo.[7]

Aircraft facilities

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Profile of Dédalo in 1922, after conversion into a seaplane tender and balloon carrier

Dédalo could carry two captive observation balloons of 1,200 m3 (42,000 cu ft) volume, two Italian-built armed airships of 1,500 m3 (53,000 cu ft) volume, and up to 20 seaplanes or flying boats. During her career she carried several types of flying boat, including the Felixstowe F.3, Savoia S.16 and S.16 bis, Macchi M.18 and Supermarine Scarab.

Dédalo had two hangars. One was forward of her superstructure and was for her airships, for which she had a mooring mast on her bow. The other was abaft her superstructure, and had an elevator to service her flying boats. Having neither a flush deck nor a catapult, she used cranes to launch and retrieve her flying boats.

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Dédalo taking part in the Alhucemas landing, September 1925

Dédalo was based at Cartagena. She took part in the Rif War until late September 1925 under the command of Wenceslao Benítez Inglott. On 8 September 1925 her Supermarine Scarab flying boats and one of her airships conducted bombing raids in support of the Alhucemas landing, which was the first successful amphibious landing of the modern era.[8][9][10][11]

Juan de la Cierva´s Cierva C.30 autogyro taking off from Dédalo in 1934

After the Second Spanish Republic was declared in April 1931, Dédalo became part of the Spanish Republican Navy. On 7 March 1934 aviation history was made when Juan de la Cierva, the inventor of the autogyro, performed a perfect landing on Dédalo with a Cierva C.30 autogyro, registered G-ACIO, near the Port of Valencia. Half an hour later Cierva and his autogyro took off from her deck, after a short run of just 24 metres. This was the first rotorcraft to take off and land on the deck of a ship.[12]

Dédalo was decommissioned in 1934, laid up at Sagunto in 1935, and struck from the naval register in April 1936.[13] That July the Spanish Civil War began, during which a Nationalist air attack damaged her and prevented her from leaving Cartagena. The war ended in April 1939, and on 1 March 1940 she was towed to Valencia to be scrapped. However, due to bomb damage she sank, causing an obstruction in Valencia harbour. She was later blown up to clear the obstruction.[2]

References

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  1. ^ "Argenfels". Tyne Built Ships. Retrieved 5 November 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d "Neuenfels". Tyne Built Ships. Retrieved 5 November 2022.
  3. ^ "Scharzfels". Tyne Built Ships. Retrieved 5 November 2022.
  4. ^ "Wildenfels". Tyne Built Ships. Retrieved 5 November 2022.
  5. ^ Lloyd's Register, 1901, NER–NEU.
  6. ^ The Marconi Press Agency Ltd 1914, p. 373.
  7. ^ "Reales Órdenes, Estado Mayor Central". Diario Oficial del Ministerio de Marina (in Spanish). 7 January 1922. p. 30. Retrieved 10 January 2021 – via Biblioteca Virtual de Defensa, Ministerio de Defensa.
  8. ^ "Las sufridas, Heroicas alas de España". Blanco y Negro Madrid (in Spanish). 20 September 1925. p. 88 – via Archivo ABC.
  9. ^ Díaz-Bedia Astor 2016, p. 274.
  10. ^ Laforet Hernández 2010, p. 74.
  11. ^ Armada Española 2017, pp. 57–60.
  12. ^ "The first Dédalo was an aircraft transportation ship and the first in the world from which an autogyro took off and landed." Naval Ship Systems Command, US: Naval Ship Systems Command technical news.1966, v. 15–16, page 40
  13. ^ "El portaeronaves Dédalo, ha sido dado de baja". ABC Sevilla (in Spanish). 29 April 1936. p. 39.

Bibliography

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