Albany-class cruiser

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USS Albany, lead ship of her class
Class overview
Operators: United States Navy
Preceded by: Long Beach-class cruiser
Succeeded by: Leahy-class cruiser
Built: 1959-1964 (conversions)
In commission: 1962-1980
Planned: 5
Completed: 3
Retired: 3
Preserved: 0 (Anchor of USS Chicago given to the city of Chicago and placed as a memorial at Navy Pier to remember all ships to bear the same name)
General characteristics
Type: Guided missile cruiser
Displacement: 13,700 std, 17,500 full load
Length: 664 ft (202 m) waterline, 674 ft (205 m) overall
Beam: 70 ft (21 m)
Draft: 30 ft (9.1 m)
Propulsion: four Babcock & Wilcox boilers, four General Electric geared turbines, 120,000 shaft horsepower, w. four shafts
Speed: 32 kn (59 km/h)
Complement: 1,222 (72 officers, 1,150 enlisted men)
Sensors and
processing systems:
AN/SPS-48 3D air search radar, AN/SPS-43, AN/SPS-30, AN/SPS-10 surface search radar, AN/SPG-49 fire control radar for Talos, AN/SPG-51 fire control radar for Tartar, AN/SQS-23 bow mounted sonar
Armament:
  • Two Mk 12 twin RIM-8 Talos SAM launchers (104 missiles)
  • Two Mk 11 twin RIM-24 Tartar SAM launchers (84 missiles)
  • One Mk 112 ASROC octuple-tube missile launcher
  • 2 5-inch (130 mm) gun
  • 2 triple Mk-32 torpedo tubes
Aircraft carried: Flight deck only

The Albany-class guided missile cruisers were converted Baltimore and Oregon City class heavy cruisers of the United States Navy. All original superstructure and weapons were removed and replaced. The converted ships had new very high superstructures and relied heavily on aluminum to save weight.

Class description

Chicago on the day of her commissioning in 1964

The conversion was extensive, stripping the ships down to their hulls, removing all armament and the ship's superstructure. USS Albany (CA-123), an Oregon City-class cruiser, was converted at Boston Naval Shipyard starting in January 1959 and recommissioned as CG-10 on November 3, 1962. USS Chicago (CA-136), a Baltimore-class cruiser, was converted at San Francisco Naval Shipyard starting in July 1959 and was recommissioning as CG-11 on May 2, 1964. USS Fall River (CA-131) was originally slated to be CG-12, but USS Columbus (CA-74) was converted instead. Columbus was converted at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard beginning in September 1959 and recommissioning as CG-12 on December 1, 1962. USS Rochester (CA-124) and USS Bremerton (CA-130) were also proposed for conversion to CG-13 and CG-14, but those plans were dropped because of the high cost of the conversion and capabilities of newer guided missile frigates.[1]

Weapons and systems

The weapon systems carried included the Mk 77 missile fire-control system with four AN/SPG-49 fire-control radars and two Mk 12 twin launchers for their armament of 104 Talos long-range surface-to-air missiles, one forward and one aft. These cruisers also carried an armament of 84 shorter-ranged Tartar missiles launched from two Mk 11 twin launchers, one to the port of and one to the starboard of the cruiser's main superstructure. The Tartar missiles were controlled by the Mk 74 missile fire-control system with four AN/SPG-51 fire-control radars. Some space was allocated amidships on these cruisers for the possible installation of eight Polaris missiles, but the concept to add these ballistic missiles were dropped in mid-1959.

For anti-submarine warfare (ASW), one eight-cell Mk 112 "matchbox" ASROC missile launcher was installed amidships on each of these cruisers, located between their two stacks. Also for ASW purposes, two triple Mk 32 torpedo tubes for the Mk 46 ASW torpedo were installed.

These cruisers were initially converted into all-missile warships with no naval guns, but later on, two open-mount Mk 24 5-inch 38 calibre guns were added to the port side and the starboard side, near their aft exhaust stacks.

In the late 1960s Chicago and Albany underwent major engineering overhauls and both the missile systems (Talos and Tartar) had new digital fire control system upgrades to handle the increasing threat from Soviet Navy anti-ship cruise missiles and aircraft. Columbus did not receive these missile system upgrades due to lack of funding. The Talos system was deactivated on the Albany class (leaving them with the Tartar as the only SAM system operational) and all other ships in the fleet that carried it during 1976.

In late 1979 the two surviving ships (Chicago and Albany) were scheduled for massive overhauls. SM-1 (MR) missiles (which were to replace the Tartar system), as well as 2 Phalanx CIWS and 2 four-cell Harpoon missile launchers were planned to be installed, as well as a major refitting of the ships machinery, structure, and electronics. The funding appropriated for this work was diverted however, to other ships and both cruisers were finally decommissioned in 1980.[1]

Service history

All three ships served extensively through the 60's and 70's with Chicago being a long time flagship for the Third Fleet in the Pacific, and Albany serving likewise as the Second Fleet flagship in the Western Atlantic and as the Sixth Fleet flagship in the Mediterranean. Columbus did not receive the extensive Talos fire-control upgrades and extensive refits that the other two ships received in the late 60's, though she did receive engineering overhauls to allow her remain active until she was decommissioned early in 1976, and then immediately sold for scrap. Albany and Chicago soldiered on until 1980, and while funding for massive overhauls for both was appropriated for 1979, the funds were diverted to other projects, and both ships were laid up in 1980.

Ships in class

Ship Name Hull No. Converted at Commissioned Fate Link
Albany CG-10 Boston Naval Shipyard 3 November 1962 Disposed of, sold by DRMS for scrapping, 08/12/1990 NVR DANFS
Chicago CG-11 San Francisco Naval Shipyard 2 May 1964 Disposed of, sold by DRMS for scrapping, 10/24/1991 NVR DANFS
Columbus CG-12 Puget Sound Naval Shipyard 1 December 1962 Disposed of, sold by DRMS for scrapping, 11/01/1977 NVR

Gallery

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Moore, John. Janes American Fighting Ships of the 20th Century. p126. Mallard Press, 1991. ISBN 0-7924-5626-2.

External links