Encyclopedia:
Seaplane tender,
HMAS Albatross (seaplane tender),
Template:Curtiss class seaplane tender,
Template:Currituck class seaplane tender,
Template:Whiting class seaplane tender,
Talk:HMAS Albatross (seaplane tender),
Template:Barnegat class small seaplane tender,
Template:Curtiss class seaplane tender displacement,
Template:Curtiss class seaplane tender length,
Template:Curtiss class seaplane tender beam
seaplane tender (or
seaplane carrier) is a
ship which provides the facilities necessary for operating
seaplanes. These ships were the first
aircraft carriers and appeared just before the
First World War.
thumb|250px|The first seaplane carrier, the French [La Foudre in 1912, with plane hangar and cranes.]
The first seaplane tender appears in
1911 with the French Navy
La Foudre, following the invention of the
seaplane in 1910 with the French
Le Canard.
La Foudre carried float-equipped planes under hangars on the main deck, from where they were lowered on the sea with a crane.
La Foudre was further modified in November 1913 with a 10 meters flat deck to launch her seaplanes.
[http://www.hazegray.org/navhist/carriers/france.htm#foud Description of Foudre]. Another early seaplane carrier was the
HMS Hermes, an old cruiser converted and commissioned in
1913.
These carriers had
hangars for storing and maintaining the aircraft, but no
flight deck as in a true aircraft carrier. Instead they used cranes to lower the aircraft into the sea for takeoff and to recover them after landing. The ships were normally
converted merchant vessels rather than specially constructed for the task. As aircraft improved the problems of using seaplanes became more of a handicap. The aircraft could only be operated in a smooth sea and the ship had to stop for launching or recovery, both of which would take around 20 minutes. The tender was often stationed ten miles or so in front of the main battle fleet with the
cruiser screen so that it would not fall hopelessly behind when it launched its aircraft. Seaplanes also had poorer performance than other aircraft because of the drag and weight of the floats. Seaplane tenders had largely been superseded by aircraft carriers in the battle fleet by the end of the First World War, although aircraft were still of minor importance compared to the firepower of naval artillery.
thumb|250px|The Australian seaplane tender HMAS Albatross with one of her aircraft overhead (AWM 300122)]
In the inter-war years, it was common for
cruisers and
battleships to be equipped with
catapult-launched
reconnaissance seaplanes. A few navies, especially those which lacked true aircraft carriers, also acquired catapult-equipped seaplane carriers for fleet reconnaissance purposes.
During the
Second World War both the
United States Navy and the
Imperial Japanese Navy built a number of seaplane tenders to supplement their aircraft carrier fleets; however these ships often had their catapults removed, and were used usually as support vessels which operated seaplanes from harbours rather than in a seaway. These aircraft were generally for long range reconnaissance patrols. The tenders allowed the aircraft to be rapidly deployed to new bases because their runways did not have to be constructed, and support facilities were mobile much like
supply ships for
submarines or
destroyers.
Seaplane tenders became obsolete at the end of the Second World War. A few remained in service after the war but by the late-1950s most had been scrapped or converted to other uses such as
helicopter repair ships.
Seaplane tenders included:
*
HMAS Albatross (Australia, 1928)
*
La Foudre (France, converted into the world's first seaplane tender in 1911-13)
*
Commandant Teste (France, 1932)
*
Giuseppe Miraglia (Italy, converted from merchant vessel
Citta de Messina in 1927)
*
Ise and
Hyuga (Japan, converted into hybrid battleships/seaplane carriers during WWII)
*
HMS Ark Royal (1914) (UK)
*
HMS Ben-my-chree (UK, a converted ferry used in WWI)
*
HMS Engadine (UK, another converted ferry present at the
Battle of Jutland)
*
HMS Riviera (UK, sister ship of Engadine)
*
USS Langley (CV-1) (USA's first
aircraft carrier, but converted into a seaplane tender in
1937)
*
USS Mississippi (BB-23) (USA, an obsolete
battleship used as a seaplane tender in
1914)
*
USS Currituck and
USS Pine Island (USA WWII-era seaplane tender, both later participated in
Operation Highjump, a 1947 mission to
Antarctica)
See also
*
Seaplane bases in the United KingdomCategory:Ship types*Category:Aircraft carriersCategory:Aircraft carriers by typede:Flugzeugmutterschiffit:Nave appoggio idrovolantihu:Repülőgép-anyahajója:水上機母艦