The Ships of Brawling Battleships Steel: Italy Battleship Andrea Doria
| Displacement | Overall Length | Beam |
|---|---|---|
| 22,700 tons | 578 feet | 92 feet |
| Speed | Belt Armor | Main Guns |
| 21.5 knots | 9.8 inches | 13 × 12″ |
Laid down on March 24, 1912, launched on March 30, 1913 and commissioned on June
13, 1916, the ship carried a main armament of thirteen 12 inch main guns with
three turrets having three guns each and two turrets having two guns each; two
centerline superfiring forward, two centerline superfiring aft and one
centerline amidships that could fire to both sides. The higher superfiring
turrets fore and aft were the ones with only two guns. Andrea Doria was
half of the two-ship Caio Duilio battleship class, which was very
similar to the previous Conte di Cavour class. The class was powered
by turbines with both oil-fired and coal-fired boilers and supplementary oil
burners. Compared to contemporary foreign battleships, the Caio Duilios
were slightly faster, slightly under armed (the 12 inch gun was rapidly being
replaced by something larger in most navies) and not as well protected. The
name honored a long-lived Genoese admiral (1466–1560) who fought for just about
everybody at one time or another and lost about as many battles as he won.
During World War One, the Andrea Doria saw no action, as the Italian
fleet watched the Austrian Fleet in the Adriatic and nothing much happened.
From April 8, 1937 to October 26, 1940, the ship went through a total overhaul
and modernization into a "fast battleship" configuration. The propulsion system
was replaced by new oil-fired turbines that increased the ship’s speed to 27
knots. In other important changes, the amidships turret was removed and the
guns in the other turrets bored out and re-chambered to 12.6 inch main guns,
the island structure was centralized and modernized, a "clipper" bow was added
and many new anti-aircraft guns were mounted. The ship looked utterly different
after these changes. During the Second World War, the Andrea Doria sortied
to provide long-distance escorts for convoys to North Africa and to attempt to
intercept Allied convoys to Malta, including a battle with British cruisers and
destroyers on December 17, 1941. The Italian Navy in World War II had some good
ships but timid leadership and many technical shortcomings. The Italian Navy
was dependent on their German allies for fuel oil and could only sortie when
the Germans gave them enough oil to do so. They had few radar sets,
old-fashioned fire control and a communications system so bad that the Allies,
via their Ultra radio intercepts and decryptions, sometimes had a better idea
of an Italian naval squadron’s location than its assigned air cover from the
Italian Air Force. The ship was taken out of service in March 1942 and
transferred to Malta on September 9, 1943 after Italy’s surrender to the Allied
powers. Returned to Italy in June 1944, the Andrea Doria served as a
training ship until deleted in 1956. She was scrapped during 1957 and 1958.
See other battleships: Dante Alighieri, Leonardo da Vinci, Gangut


