French destroyer Triomphant

For other ships with the same name, see French ship Triomphant.
Starboard broadside view of Le Triomphant manning the rails
History
France
Name: Le Triomphant
Namesake: "Triumphant"
Builder: Ateliers et Chantiers de France, Dunkerque
Laid down: 18 August 1931 [1]
Launched: 16 April 1934 [1]
Commissioned: 25 May 1936 [1]
Decommissioned: 6 December 1954 [1]
Reclassified: March 1943
Nickname(s): Reluctant Dragon [2]
General characteristics
Class and type: Le Fantasque-class destroyer
Displacement: 2570 tonnes
Length: 132.40 m (434.4 ft)
Beam: 11.98 m (39.3 ft)
Draught: 4.30 m (14.1 ft)
Propulsion:
  • 4 Penhoët boilers
  • 2 Parsons or Rateau engines
  • 74,000 to 81,000 HP
  • 2 propellers
Speed:
  • 45 knots (83 km/h; 52 mph) (40 nominal)
  • 37 knots after refit
Range:
  • 1,200 km (650 nmi; 750 mi) at 34 knots (63 km/h; 39 mph)
  • 6,600 km at 17 knots
Complement:
  • 10 officers
  • 210 sailors
Armament:

Le Triomphant was a Le Fantasque class destroyer of the French Navy

Career

Built in Dunkerque from 1931, Le Triomphant was launched in 1934.

Phony war

At the outbreak of World War II, in September 1939, Le Triomphant under capitaine de frégate Pothau was part of the 2nd Light Squadron in the 8th Large Destroyer Division, which also included her sister-ships Le Malin and L'Indomptable. The Squadron was headed by contre-amiral Lacroix.[3]

On 2 September, at 20:00 h, she sailed with the Force de Raid to Casablanca, along with Dunkerque and Strasbourg, Georges Leygues, Gloire and Montcalm, L'Audacieux, Le Fantasque, Le Malin, Le Terrible, L'Indomptable, Mogador and Volta.[4]

From 4 October, she escorted convoy BC.8S, from Bristol Channel to the Loire River.[5] From 17 October, she escorted convoy HG.3, from Gibraltar, before returning to Brest on 20. On 22, she departed with Dunkerque and several other destroyers to escort convoy KJ.3, from Kingston, Jamaica.[5]

On 20 November 1939, she was sent out in search for German submarines who had attacked convoy KS.27.[6] On 25 November, along with Le Malin, she joined up with Strasbourg and escorted her to Brest, where they arrived on 29 November.[6]

On 11 December 1939, the battleship Dunkerque departed with a cargo of 100 tonnes of gold for Canada, escorted by Gloire and Mogador, Volta, Le Triomphant, Le Terrible and Valmy.[6]

On 23 April 1940, the 8th Large Destroyer Division conducted a sweep to fend off German anti-submarine ships in the Skagerrak strait. In the early morning of the next day, they encountered the German trawlers Memel and Guido Mohring, which served as auxiliary patrol boats Vp.702 and Vp.709, who managed to break off. The Destroyer Division also located and attacked U-26, who escaped. Le Triomphant was damaged at her port propeller by a near miss.[7] On 28, she sailed to Lorient for repairs.

Career with the Free French Naval Forces

Atlantic

On 10 June 1940, at the Italian declaration of war, Le Triomphant was under repairs at Lorient, under capitaine de frégate Archambeaud.[8] As the Germans advanced in France and threatened the harbours in Brittany, Le Triomphant departed for Plymouth.

Le Triomphant in Free French service in 1940.

On 3 July 1940, she was captured by the British at Plymouth, as part of Operation Catapult. Because of the complexity of her handling and of the need to support the Free French, Le Triomphant was handed to the FNFL, on 28 August 1940, and put under the command of captain Pierre Gilly.[9] Her aft gun was replaced by a British model, mainly for logistical reasons.[10]

On 16 December 1940, she escorted convoy TC-8A.[11] From 18, she served in the escort of convoy WS-5A.[11][12]

Pacific

Le Triomphant, under Philippe Auboyneau, was transferred to the Pacific theater in the summer of 1941, to become the flagship of the Free French Pacific squadron. She arrived at St. John's on 6 August, crossed the Panama canal on 16 August, and departed Balboa on 17 August. In the process, she was recognised and reported by a Japanese observer, whose transmission was intercepted by Magic.[13] Triomphant reached San Diego on 25 August. She departed on 5 September bound for Honolulu, which she reached on 15 September, and Papeete on 23 September.[14]

In December 1941, she escorted the troopship SS Ormiston from Sydney to Nouméa.[15]

In late February 1942, as a Japanese invasion of Nauru and Ocean Island was feared, Le Triomphant departed the New Hebrides to evacuate the part of their population that would be at risk under Japanese invasion. She arrived on 23 February on Nauru, taking aboard 61 Europeans, 391 Chinese and 49 military personnel.[16] Then she headed to Ocean Island, 300 km away and took onboard 823 Chinese and 232 Europeans.[17] She subsequently undertook refit in Sydney, which took most of 1942.[14]

On 8 February 1943, at 2:30 am, the BHP Shipping iron ore carrier SS Iron Knight was hit by a torpedo fired by I-21. She went to the bottom, bow first, in only two minutes, claiming 36 lives. Le Triomphant picked up the 14 survivors on a raft 10 hours later.[18] She attempted to locate I-21 for a day, before returning to Sydney the next day.[2]

On 26 November 1943, Le Triomphant departed Fremantle to escort a convoy comprising the American oil tanker SS Cedar Mills and the Dutch cargo ship Java. The convoy was struck by a cyclone, nearly sinking Le Triomphant; with a 45° list, she was taken in tow by the Gallant Ship.[19] Cedar Mills.[9] On 10 December, HMS Frobisher took the tow, and the tugboat HMRT Prudent took over on 15 December, arriving at Diego Suarez on 19 December.[20]

She was subsequently sent for refit to the United States, where she remained until March 1945.[21] From May, she served with the Eastern Fleet in the Indian Ocean.[22]

Late career

In October 1945, along with battleship Richelieu, Le Triomphant escorted troopships bound for French Indochina.

On 6 March 1946, under Captain Jubelin, she took part in landing operations near Haiphong. She sustained 20mm fire from Chinese troops, killing 8 sailors and wounding 20. Le Triomphant retaliated by firing her 138 mm guns, which ignited ammunition stores and resulted in the surrender of the 28,000-strong Chinese forces.[23][24]

Le Triomphant was decommissioned on 19 December 1954 and was scrapped in Bizerte in 1960.

Sources and references

Starboard broadside view of Le Triomphant.
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