|
PT boats in line
A PT boat was a motor torpedo boat (hull classification symbol "PT"), a small, fast vessel
used by the United States Navy in World War II to attack larger surface ships.
During the late 1800s, the development of metal-hulled ships of large size, and the
use of gyroscopes to even out the action of waves, allowed for the rapid
development of the very large gunship, which soon became known as battleships.
These were fiendishly expensive so only the largest and richest nations could afford to continue in the race to build such
ships.
But at the same time, the new weight of armor slowed them and the huge guns needed to penetrate that armor fired at very slow
rates. This allowed for the possibility of a small and fast ship that could attack the battleships en-mass, at a much lower cost.
However two problems remained, a weapon that could attack such a ship was not small, nor was a small power source available to
power such a ship.
Both of these problems were solved at about the same time. The introduction of the steam turbine (and later, the internal
combustion engine resulted in a power source that could offer much higher output from a small source. The introduction of the
torpedo provided a weapon that could cripple, and sink, any battleship.
The result was the torpedo boat, a small boat (perhaps 50 feet (15 m)) with high speed, carrying a small number of torpedoes.
They were inexpensive and could be purchased in some quantity, allowing for mass attacks on larger fleets. While some of them
would undoubtedly be lost to the guns of the larger ships while they ran into firing range, their cost was so low that sinking
even one battleship in return would be a victory.
The introduction of the torpedo boat resulted in a flurry of activity in the fleets around the world, as smaller and faster
guns were added to existing ships to ward off the new threat, and an entirely new class of ships, the torpedo boat destroyer was invented to counter them.
The most famous of these torpedo boats, PT-109, commanded by future
United States President John F. Kennedy, was one of the hundreds of members of the PT-103
class completed between 1942 and 1945 by Elco Naval
Division of Electric Boat Company at Bayonne, New Jersey.
The Elco boats were the largest in size of the three types of PT boats built for US Navy use during World War II.
Wooden-hulled, 80 feet (24 m) long with a 20 ft 8 i (6.3 m) beam, the Elco PT boats had three 12-cylinder Packard gasoline
engines generating a total of 4,500 horsepower (3,400 kW) for a designed speed of 41 knots (76 km/h). With accommodations for 3
officers and 14 men, the crew varied from 12 to 14. Its full-load displacement was 56 tons.
Early Elco boats had two 20 mm guns, four .50-caliber (~12.7 mm) machine
guns, and two or four 21 inch (533 mm) torpedo tubes. Some of them carried depth charges or mine racks. Later boats mounted one 40 mm gun and four torpedo launching racks. Many boats
received ad-hoc refits at advanced bases, mounting such light guns as Army Air Forces 37 mm aircraft guns and even Japanese 23 mm
guns. Some PTs later received rocket launchers.
Originally conceived as antiship weapons, PTs were publicly, but erroneously, credited with sinking Japanese warships during
the early months after Pearl Harbor.
During the long Solomons campaign, they operated usefully at night and times of low visibility against Japanese barge traffic
in "the Slot." Throughout World War II, PTs operated in the southern, western, and
northern Pacific, as well as in the Mediterranean and the English Channel. Some
served off Normandy during that invasion.
Though their primary mission continued to be seen as attack of surface ships and craft, PTs were also used effectively to lay
mines and smoke screens, to rescue downed aviators, and to carry out intelligence or raider operations. Almost all surviving Elco
PTs were disposed of shortly after V-J Day. Two PTs survive in WW II configuration on static dispaly--Elco boat, PT-617,
and PT 796, A 78 foot Higgins Fall River,
Massachusetts. These boats are owned by PT Boats, Inc., a WW II PT veterans organization headquartered in a suburb of
Memphis, TN.
Although more 80-foot Elco boats were built than any other type of motor torpedo boat, other types were built by the U. S. The
British-designed 70 foot (21 m) Vosper
boats which were built for Lend Lease fired 18 inch (457 mm) torpedoes.
Since the U.S. produced the heavier and longer 21-inch torpedoes, the U.S. Navy wanted a larger PT boat. After experimentation,
the first PT boat built in any quantity was the 77 foot (23 m) type built by Elco. These boats were used early in World War
II.
In 1943 in the Solomons, three of these 77 foot (23 m) PT boats, PT-59, PT-60, and PT-61, were even
converted into gunboats by stripping the boat of all original armament except for the two twin .50 caliber (~12.7 mm) gun mounts,
and then adding two 40 mm guns and four more twin .50 caliber (~12.7 mm) machine guns. LTJG John F. Kennedy was the first
commanding officer of PT-59 after the conversion.
Although the Huckins Yacht Company of Jacksonville,
Florida, built a few 78 foot (24 m) boats of the PT-95 class, the 80 foot (24.4 m) Elco boats and the 78 foot (24 m)
Higgins boats became the standard motor torpedo boats of World War II. The Higgins boats which were built by Higgins Industries
in New Orleans, Louisiana, were 78 foot (24 m) boats
of the PT-71 class. The Higgins boats had the same beam, full load displacement, engine, generators, shaft horsepower,
trial speed, armament, and crew accommodations as the 80 foot (24.4 m) Elco boats.
Cultural Impact
The story of Motor Torpedo Boat Squadron 3 in the retreat from the Philippines early in World War II was documented in the
book They Were Expendable by W.L. White, ISBN 1557509484, originally published in 1942 soon after the events
depicted. Later, in 1945 John Ford made it
into a notable war film starring John
Wayne.
The JFK story is told in PT 109: John F. Kennedy in WWII by Robert J. Donovan, published in
1961. (ISBN 0071376437). PT 109 was also a 1963 film starring Cliff Robertson. While he was president, JFK handed out PT 109 tieclasps to
favored guests and associates.
The TV situation
comedy, and later film, McHale's Navy was set in a PT
boat squadron.
|