HMS Unicorn (I72)

Unicorn at a Japanese port (probably Sasebo)
History
United Kingdom
NameUnicorn
NamesakeUnicorn
Ordered14 April 1939
BuilderHarland and Wolff, Belfast, Northern Ireland
Cost£2,531,000
Yard number1031[1]
Laid down26 June 1939
Launched20 November 1941
Completed12 March 1943[1]
DecommissionedJanuary 1946
RecommissionedMid-1949
Decommissioned17 November 1953
IdentificationPennant number: I72
FateScrapped, 15 June 1959
General characteristics (as completed)
TypeMaintenance aircraft carrier
Displacement
Length640 ft (195.1 m)
Beam90 ft 3 in (27.51 m)
Draught23 ft (7.0 m) (deep load)
Installed power
Propulsion2 × shafts; 2 ×geared steam turbine sets
Speed24 knots (44 km/h; 28 mph)
Range7,000 nmi (13,000 km; 8,100 mi) at 13.5 knots (25.0 km/h; 15.5 mph)
Complement1,200 (wartime)
Sensors and
processing systems
Armament
Armour
Aircraft carriedApproximately 33 (operational use)

HMS Unicorn was an aircraft repair ship and light aircraft carrier built for the Royal Navy in the late 1930s. She was completed during World War II and provided air cover over the amphibious landing at Salerno, Italy, in September 1943. The ship was transferred to the Eastern Fleet in the Indian Ocean at the end of the year. Unicorn supported the aircraft carriers of the fleet on their operations until the British Pacific Fleet (BPF) was formed in November 1944. She was transferred to Australia in early 1945 to support the BPF's operations during Operation Iceberg, the Allied invasion of Okinawa in May. To shorten the time required to replenish the BPF's carriers, the ship was based in the Admiralty Islands and in the Philippine Islands until the Japanese surrender in August. Unicorn was decommissioned and placed in reserve when she returned to the UK in January 1946.

The ship was recommissioned in 1949 to support the light carrier of the Far East Fleet, as the Eastern Fleet had been redesignated after the end of World War II. She was unloading aircraft and equipment in Singapore in June 1950 when the Korean War began. She spent most of the war ferrying aircraft, troops, stores and equipment in support of Commonwealth operations in Korea. Unicorn supported other carriers during operations in Korea, but she became the only aircraft carrier to conduct a shore bombardment with her guns during wartime when she attacked North Korean observers on the coast during the war.[2] The ship returned to the UK after the end of the war and was again placed in reserve. She was listed for disposal in 1958 and sold for scrap in 1959.

  1. ^ a b McCluskie, p. 147
  2. ^ Hobbs 2007, pp. 58–59