List of Captain class frigates

The Captain class was a designation given to 78 frigates of the Royal Navy, constructed in the United States of America, launched in 1942–1943 and delivered to the United Kingdom under the provisions of the Lend-Lease agreement (the program under which the United States of America supplied the United Kingdom and other Allied nations with materiel between 1941 and 1945), they were drawn from two subclasses of the American Destroyer Escort (originally British Destroyer Escort) classification; 32 from the Evarts subclass and 46 from the Buckley subclass.

Naming
It was the intention of the Admiralty that these ships were to be named after Captains that served with Vice-Admiral Horatio Nelson at the Battle of Trafalgar but as building continued, it became necessary to delve back further into history for names of Admirals and Captains of reputation.

Sixty-six of the 78 frigates bear names that had not previously been allocated earlier Royal Navy ships. Lawford, Louis, Manners, Moorsom, Mounsey, Narborough, Pasley and Seymour had been previously used for destroyers during World War I. Rupert was the fifth of that name since 1666. Torrington was the fourth of that name since 1654. Holmes had been used once before in 1671 and Fitzroy had previously been used for a survey vessel in 1919.

Evarts group (diesel-electric machinery)
The Evarts subclass had diesel-electric machinery, based on an arrangement used for submarines. There were two shafts. Four Winton 278A 16-cylinder engines, with a combined rating of 7040 bhp, driving General Electric Company (GE) generators (4,800 kW) supplied power to two GE electric motors, with an output of 6000 shp, for 20 kn. It had been intended to provide a further set of this machinery, for an output of 12000 shp to make the design speed of 24 kn, but hull production greatly outstripped that of the machinery, therefore only one set of machinery was used per ship.

Buckley group (turbo-electric machinery)
The Buckley subclass had turbo-electric machinery. Two Foster-Wheeler Express "D"-type water-tube boilers supplied steam to GE 13500 shp steam turbines and generators (9,200 kW). Electric motors for 12000 shp drove the two shafts each fitted with a three-bladed propeller of solid manganese-bronze that was 8.5 ft in diameter. This all electric drive-train was considered particularly innovative at the time (although the Catherine class minesweepers had a similar arrangement).