DevelopmentThe lessons learned from operations with the large battlecruiser conversion Lexington class in comparison with the smaller purpose-built Ranger had taught the Navy that large carriers were more operationally flexible and survivable than smaller ones. As the result of this experience, the U.S. Navy built the Yorktown (CV-5) and Enterprise (CV-6), commissioned in 1937 and 1938 respectively. These were fast and versatile carriers, able to carry and operate over 80 warplanes, almost as many as the much larger Lexington class. With the addition of the 14,700 ton Wasp (CV-7), a scaled down version of the class, the U.S. Navy used up its full 135,000 ton Washington Naval Treaty limit of aircraft carrier tonnage. The scrapping of the treaty system in 1937 allowed the US to begin building more carriers, and the first of this new carrier program was Hornet (CV-8), another of the class, commissioned in 1941. Improvements to the Yorktown design and freedom from the Washington Treaty limitations brought about the Essex (CV-9) class. Unusually, the Yorktowns carried a seldom used catapult on the hangar deck level; this catapult was eliminated on all following carrier classes as it was relatively useless in operation. The hangar deck catapult was removed from Enterprise and Hornet in late June 1942. All three ships of the Yorktown class were built at the Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company, Newport News, Virginia. - Yorktown (CV-5).
- Enterprise (CV-6).
- Hornet (CV-8).
Operational HistoryExcept for Enterprise, the entire class had been lost by the end of 1942, with Yorktown sunk at the Battle of Midway in June; smaller cousin Wasp sunk in September, and Hornet lost in October at the Battle of Santa Cruz. All three ships had been lost to torpedo strikes. Orphaned sister Enterprise, for a time the only operational carrier in the South Pacific, soldiered on, and participated in most of the principal actions of the Pacific War. She became the most frequently decorated ship of the war. Though the Yorktown class was soon overshadowed by the larger and more numerous Essex class, Enterprise remained at the forefront of the Pacific campaigns due to the experience of her crew. By the end of World War II, Enterprise had been considerably modified. Her final displacement was 32,060 tons and her final armament was 8 single 5 in (127 mm) 38 DP, 6 quad 40 mm AA (replacing the ineffective 1.1"/75 (28mm) gun quad mounts which the Yorktown class had initially been fitted with), 8 twin 40 mm AA and 50 single 20 mm AA. The Yorktowns had proved to be vulnerable to torpedoes, and while undergoing repairs at Bremerton, Washington, from July to October, 1943, Enterprise received an extensive refit, which included an anti-torpedo blister that significantly improved her underwater protection. Enterprise was finally put out of action on 14 May 1945 when she was struck in the forward elevator by a kamikaze aircraft flown by Japanese pilot Lt. Shunsuke Tomiyasu (note: many sources mistakenly credit the attack to Tomi Zai) [1] , which destroyed the elevator and severely damaged her hangar deck. She was still out of action on V-J Day but was subsequently fitted out for Operation Magic Carpet, ferrying over 10,000 veterans home from Europe. Stricken from the list in 1959 after multiple attempts to preserve her as a museum and memorial, ex-Enterprise met her fate in the breaker's yards at Kearny, New Jersey in 1960.
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