fbpx
Wikipedia

Battleship

A battleship is a large armored warship with a main battery consisting of large caliber guns. It dominated naval warfare in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The firepower of a battleship demonstrated by USS Iowa (1984). The muzzle blasts distort the ocean surface.

The term battleship came into use in the late 1880s to describe a type of ironclad warship,[1] now referred to by historians as pre-dreadnought battleships. In 1906, the commissioning of HMS Dreadnought into the United Kingdom's Royal Navy heralded a revolution in the field of battleship design. Subsequent battleship designs, influenced by HMS Dreadnought, were referred to as "dreadnoughts", though the term eventually became obsolete as dreadnoughts became the only type of battleship in common use.

Battleships were a symbol of naval dominance and national might, and for decades the battleship was a major factor in both diplomacy and military strategy.[2] A global arms race in battleship construction began in Europe in the 1890s and culminated at the decisive Battle of Tsushima in 1905,[3][4][5][6] the outcome of which significantly influenced the design of HMS Dreadnought.[7][8][9] The launch of Dreadnought in 1906 commenced a new naval arms race. Three major fleet actions between steel battleships took place: the long-range gunnery duel at the Battle of the Yellow Sea[10] in 1904, the decisive Battle of Tsushima in 1905 (both during the Russo-Japanese War) and the inconclusive Battle of Jutland in 1916, during the First World War. Jutland was the largest naval battle and the only full-scale clash of dreadnoughts of the war, and it was the last major battle in naval history fought primarily by battleships.[11]

The Naval Treaties of the 1920s and 1930s limited the number of battleships, though technical innovation in battleship design continued. Both the Allied and Axis powers built battleships during World War II, though the increasing importance of the aircraft carrier meant that the battleship played a less important role than had been expected in that conflict.

The value of the battleship has been questioned, even during their heyday.[12] There were few of the decisive fleet battles that battleship proponents expected and used to justify the vast resources spent on building battlefleets. Even in spite of their huge firepower and protection, battleships were increasingly vulnerable to much smaller and relatively inexpensive weapons: initially the torpedo and the naval mine, and later aircraft and the guided missile.[13] The growing range of naval engagements led to the aircraft carrier replacing the battleship as the leading capital ship during World War II, with the last battleship to be launched being HMS Vanguard in 1944. Four battleships were retained by the United States Navy until the end of the Cold War for fire support purposes and were last used in combat during the Gulf War in 1991. The last battleships were struck from the U.S. Naval Vessel Register in the 2000s. Many World War II-era battleships remain in use today as museum ships.

History

Ships of the line

 
Napoléon (1850), the world's first steam-powered battleship

A ship of the line was a large, unarmored wooden sailing ship which mounted a battery of up to 120 smoothbore guns and carronades, which came to prominence with the adoption of line of battle tactics in the early 17th century and the end of the sailing battleship's heyday in the 1830s. From 1794, the alternative term 'line of battle ship' was contracted (informally at first) to 'battle ship' or 'battleship'.[14]

The sheer number of guns fired broadside meant a ship of the line could wreck any wooden enemy, holing her hull, knocking down masts, wrecking her rigging, and killing her crew. However, the effective range of the guns was as little as a few hundred yards, so the battle tactics of sailing ships depended in part on the wind.

Over time, ships of the line gradually became larger and carried more guns, but otherwise remained quite similar. The first major change to the ship of the line concept was the introduction of steam power as an auxiliary propulsion system. Steam power was gradually introduced to the navy in the first half of the 19th century, initially for small craft and later for frigates. The French Navy introduced steam to the line of battle with the 90-gun Napoléon in 1850[15]—the first true steam battleship.[16] Napoléon was armed as a conventional ship-of-the-line, but her steam engines could give her a speed of 12 knots (22 km/h), regardless of the wind. This was a potentially decisive advantage in a naval engagement. The introduction of steam accelerated the growth in size of battleships. France and the United Kingdom were the only countries to develop fleets of wooden steam screw battleships although several other navies operated small numbers of screw battleships, including Russia (9), the Ottoman Empire (3), Sweden (2), Naples (1), Denmark (1) and Austria (1).[17][2]

Ironclads

 
The French Gloire (1859), the first ocean-going ironclad warship

The adoption of steam power was only one of a number of technological advances which revolutionized warship design in the 19th century. The ship of the line was overtaken by the ironclad: powered by steam, protected by metal armor, and armed with guns firing high-explosive shells.

Explosive shells

Guns that fired explosive or incendiary shells were a major threat to wooden ships, and these weapons quickly became widespread after the introduction of 8-inch shell guns as part of the standard armament of French and American line-of-battle ships in 1841.[18] In the Crimean War, six line-of-battle ships and two frigates of the Russian Black Sea Fleet destroyed seven Turkish frigates and three corvettes with explosive shells at the Battle of Sinop in 1853.[19] Later in the war, French ironclad floating batteries used similar weapons against the defenses at the Battle of Kinburn.[20]

Nevertheless, wooden-hulled ships stood up comparatively well to shells, as shown in the 1866 Battle of Lissa, where the modern Austrian steam two-decker SMS Kaiser ranged across a confused battlefield, rammed an Italian ironclad and took 80 hits from Italian ironclads,[21] many of which were shells,[22] but including at least one 300-pound shot at point-blank range. Despite losing her bowsprit and her foremast, and being set on fire, she was ready for action again the very next day.[23]

Iron armor and construction

 
HMS Warrior (1860), the Royal Navy's first ocean-going iron-hulled warship.

The development of high-explosive shells made the use of iron armor plate on warships necessary. In 1859 France launched Gloire, the first ocean-going ironclad warship. She had the profile of a ship of the line, cut to one deck due to weight considerations. Although made of wood and reliant on sail for most journeys, Gloire was fitted with a propeller, and her wooden hull was protected by a layer of thick iron armor.[24] Gloire prompted further innovation from the Royal Navy, anxious to prevent France from gaining a technological lead.

The superior armored frigate Warrior followed Gloire by only 14 months, and both nations embarked on a program of building new ironclads and converting existing screw ships of the line to armored frigates.[25] Within two years, Italy, Austria, Spain and Russia had all ordered ironclad warships, and by the time of the famous clash of the USS Monitor and the CSS Virginia at the Battle of Hampton Roads at least eight navies possessed ironclad ships.[2]

 
The French Redoutable, the first battleship to use steel as the main building material[26]

Navies experimented with the positioning of guns, in turrets (like the USS Monitor), central-batteries or barbettes, or with the ram as the principal weapon. As steam technology developed, masts were gradually removed from battleship designs. By the mid-1870s steel was used as a construction material alongside iron and wood. The French Navy's Redoutable, laid down in 1873 and launched in 1876, was a central battery and barbette warship which became the first battleship in the world to use steel as the principal building material.[27]

Pre-dreadnought battleship

 
Pre-Dreadnought USS Texas, built in 1892, was the first battleship of the U.S. Navy. Photochrom print c. 1898.

The term "battleship" was officially adopted by the Royal Navy in the re-classification of 1892. By the 1890s, there was an increasing similarity between battleship designs, and the type that later became known as the 'pre-dreadnought battleship' emerged. These were heavily armored ships, mounting a mixed battery of guns in turrets, and without sails. The typical first-class battleship of the pre-dreadnought era displaced 15,000 to 17,000 tons, had a speed of 16 knots (30 km/h), and an armament of four 12-inch (305 mm) guns in two turrets fore and aft with a mixed-caliber secondary battery amidships around the superstructure.[1] An early design with superficial similarity to the pre-dreadnought is the British Devastation class of 1871.[28][29]

The slow-firing 12-inch (305 mm) main guns were the principal weapons for battleship-to-battleship combat. The intermediate and secondary batteries had two roles. Against major ships, it was thought a 'hail of fire' from quick-firing secondary weapons could distract enemy gun crews by inflicting damage to the superstructure, and they would be more effective against smaller ships such as cruisers. Smaller guns (12-pounders and smaller) were reserved for protecting the battleship against the threat of torpedo attack from destroyers and torpedo boats.[30]

The beginning of the pre-dreadnought era coincided with Britain reasserting her naval dominance. For many years previously, Britain had taken naval supremacy for granted. Expensive naval projects were criticized by political leaders of all inclinations.[2] However, in 1888 a war scare with France and the build-up of the Russian navy gave added impetus to naval construction, and the British Naval Defence Act of 1889 laid down a new fleet including eight new battleships. The principle that Britain's navy should be more powerful than the two next most powerful fleets combined was established. This policy was designed to deter France and Russia from building more battleships, but both nations nevertheless expanded their fleets with more and better pre-dreadnoughts in the 1890s.[2]

 
Diagram of HMS Agamemnon (1908), a typical late pre-dreadnought battleship

In the last years of the 19th century and the first years of the 20th, the escalation in the building of battleships became an arms race between Britain and Germany. The German naval laws of 1890 and 1898 authorized a fleet of 38 battleships, a vital threat to the balance of naval power.[2] Britain answered with further shipbuilding, but by the end of the pre-dreadnought era, British supremacy at sea had markedly weakened. In 1883, the United Kingdom had 38 battleships, twice as many as France and almost as many as the rest of the world put together. In 1897, Britain's lead was far smaller due to competition from France, Germany, and Russia, as well as the development of pre-dreadnought fleets in Italy, the United States and Japan.[31] The Ottoman Empire, Spain, Sweden, Denmark, Norway, the Netherlands, Chile and Brazil all had second-rate fleets led by armored cruisers, coastal defence ships or monitors.[32]

Pre-dreadnoughts continued the technical innovations of the ironclad. Turrets, armor plate, and steam engines were all improved over the years, and torpedo tubes were also introduced. A small number of designs, including the American Kearsarge and Virginia classes, experimented with all or part of the 8-inch intermediate battery superimposed over the 12-inch primary. Results were poor: recoil factors and blast effects resulted in the 8-inch battery being completely unusable, and the inability to train the primary and intermediate armaments on different targets led to significant tactical limitations. Even though such innovative designs saved weight (a key reason for their inception), they proved too cumbersome in practice.[33]

Dreadnought era

In 1906, the British Royal Navy launched the revolutionary HMS Dreadnought. Created as a result of pressure from Admiral Sir John ("Jackie") Fisher, HMS Dreadnought rendered existing battleships obsolete. Combining an "all-big-gun" armament of ten 12-inch (305 mm) guns with unprecedented speed (from steam turbine engines) and protection, she prompted navies worldwide to re-evaluate their battleship building programs. While the Japanese had laid down an all-big-gun battleship, Satsuma, in 1904[34] and the concept of an all-big-gun ship had been in circulation for several years, it had yet to be validated in combat. Dreadnought sparked a new arms race, principally between Britain and Germany but reflected worldwide, as the new class of warships became a crucial element of national power.[35]

Technical development continued rapidly through the dreadnought era, with steep changes in armament, armor and propulsion. Ten years after Dreadnought's commissioning, much more powerful ships, the super-dreadnoughts, were being built.

Origin

 
Vittorio Cuniberti

In the first years of the 20th century, several navies worldwide experimented with the idea of a new type of battleship with a uniform armament of very heavy guns.

Admiral Vittorio Cuniberti, the Italian Navy's chief naval architect, articulated the concept of an all-big-gun battleship in 1903. When the Regia Marina did not pursue his ideas, Cuniberti wrote an article in Jane's proposing an "ideal" future British battleship, a large armored warship of 17,000 tons, armed solely with a single calibre main battery (twelve 12-inch [305 mm] guns), carrying 300-millimetre (12 in) belt armor, and capable of 24 knots (44 km/h).[36]

The Russo-Japanese War provided operational experience to validate the "all-big-gun" concept. During the Battle of the Yellow Sea on August 10, 1904, Admiral Togo of the Imperial Japanese Navy commenced deliberate 12-inch gun fire at the Russian flagship Tzesarevich at 14,200 yards (13,000 meters).[37] At the Battle of Tsushima on May 27, 1905, Russian Admiral Rozhestvensky's flagship fired the first 12-inch guns at the Japanese flagship Mikasa at 7,000 meters.[38] It is often held that these engagements demonstrated the importance of the 12-inch (305 mm) gun over its smaller counterparts, though some historians take the view that secondary batteries were just as important as the larger weapons when dealing with smaller fast moving torpedo craft.[2] Such was the case, albeit unsuccessfully, when the Russian battleship Knyaz Suvorov at Tsushima had been sent to the bottom by destroyer launched torpedoes.[39]

 
A preliminary design for the Imperial Japanese Navy's Satsuma was an "all-big-gun" design.

When dealing with a mixed 10- and 12-inch armament. The 1903–04 design also retained traditional triple-expansion steam engines.[40]

As early as 1904, Jackie Fisher had been convinced of the need for fast, powerful ships with an all-big-gun armament. If Tsushima influenced his thinking, it was to persuade him of the need to standardise on 12-inch (305 mm) guns.[2] Fisher's concerns were submarines and destroyers equipped with torpedoes, then threatening to outrange battleship guns, making speed imperative for capital ships.[2] Fisher's preferred option was his brainchild, the battlecruiser: lightly armored but heavily armed with eight 12-inch guns and propelled to 25 knots (46 km/h) by steam turbines.[41]

It was to prove this revolutionary technology that Dreadnought was designed in January 1905, laid down in October 1905 and sped to completion by 1906. She carried ten 12-inch guns, had an 11-inch armor belt, and was the first large ship powered by turbines. She mounted her guns in five turrets; three on the centerline (one forward, two aft) and two on the wings, giving her at her launch twice the broadside of any other warship. She retained a number of 12-pound (3-inch, 76 mm) quick-firing guns for use against destroyers and torpedo-boats. Her armor was heavy enough for her to go head-to-head with any other ship in a gun battle, and conceivably win.[42]

Dreadnought was to have been followed by three Invincible-class battlecruisers, their construction delayed to allow lessons from Dreadnought to be used in their design. While Fisher may have intended Dreadnought to be the last Royal Navy battleship,[2] the design was so successful he found little support for his plan to switch to a battlecruiser navy. Although there were some problems with the ship (the wing turrets had limited arcs of fire and strained the hull when firing a full broadside, and the top of the thickest armor belt lay below the waterline at full load), the Royal Navy promptly commissioned another six ships to a similar design in the Bellerophon and St. Vincent classes.[citation needed]

An American design, South Carolina, authorized in 1905 and laid down in December 1906, was another of the first dreadnoughts, but she and her sister, Michigan, were not launched until 1908. Both used triple-expansion engines and had a superior layout of the main battery, dispensing with Dreadnought's wing turrets. They thus retained the same broadside, despite having two fewer guns.[citation needed]

Arms race

In 1897, before the revolution in design brought about by HMS Dreadnought, the Royal Navy had 62 battleships in commission or building, a lead of 26 over France and 50 over Germany.[31] From the 1906 launching of Dreadnought, an arms race with major strategic consequences was prompted. Major naval powers raced to build their own dreadnoughts. Possession of modern battleships was not only seen as vital to naval power, but also, as with nuclear weapons after World War II, represented a nation's standing in the world.[2] Germany, France, Japan,[43] Italy, Austria, and the United States all began dreadnought programmes; while the Ottoman Empire, Argentina, Russia,[43] Brazil, and Chile commissioned dreadnoughts to be built in British and American yards.

World War I

 

By virtue of geography, the Royal Navy was able to use her imposing battleship and battlecruiser fleet to impose a strict and successful naval blockade of Germany and kept Germany's smaller battleship fleet bottled up in the North Sea: only narrow channels led to the Atlantic Ocean and these were guarded by British forces.[44] Both sides were aware that, because of the greater number of British dreadnoughts, a full fleet engagement would be likely to result in a British victory. The German strategy was therefore to try to provoke an engagement on their terms: either to induce a part of the Grand Fleet to enter battle alone, or to fight a pitched battle near the German coastline, where friendly minefields, torpedo-boats and submarines could be used to even the odds.[45] This did not happen however, due in large part to the necessity to keep submarines for the Atlantic campaign. Submarines were the only vessels in the Imperial German Navy able to break out and raid British commerce in force, but even though they sank many merchant ships, they could not successfully counter-blockade the United Kingdom; the Royal Navy successfully adopted convoy tactics to combat Germany's submarine counter-blockade and eventually defeated it.[46] This was in stark contrast to Britain's successful blockade of Germany.

 
Britain's Grand Fleet

The first two years of war saw the Royal Navy's battleships and battlecruisers regularly "sweep" the North Sea making sure that no German ships could get in or out. Only a few German surface ships that were already at sea, such as the famous light cruiser SMS Emden, were able to raid commerce. Even some of those that did manage to get out were hunted down by battlecruisers, as in the Battle of the Falklands, December 7, 1914. The results of sweeping actions in the North Sea were battles including the Heligoland Bight and Dogger Bank and German raids on the English coast, all of which were attempts by the Germans to lure out portions of the Grand Fleet in an attempt to defeat the Royal Navy in detail. On May 31, 1916, a further attempt to draw British ships into battle on German terms resulted in a clash of the battlefleets in the Battle of Jutland.[47] The German fleet withdrew to port after two short encounters with the British fleet. Less than two months later, the Germans once again attempted to draw portions of the Grand Fleet into battle. The resulting Action of 19 August 1916 proved inconclusive. This reinforced German determination not to engage in a fleet to fleet battle.[48]

 
Warspite and Malaya at Jutland

In the other naval theatres there were no decisive pitched battles. In the Black Sea, engagement between Russian and Ottoman battleships was restricted to skirmishes. In the Baltic Sea, action was largely limited to the raiding of convoys, and the laying of defensive minefields; the only significant clash of battleship squadrons there was the Battle of Moon Sound at which one Russian pre-dreadnought was lost. The Adriatic was in a sense the mirror of the North Sea: the Austro-Hungarian dreadnought fleet remained bottled up by the British and French blockade. And in the Mediterranean, the most important use of battleships was in support of the amphibious assault on Gallipoli.[49]

In September 1914, the threat posed to surface ships by German U-boats was confirmed by successful attacks on British cruisers, including the sinking of three British armored cruisers by the German submarine SM U-9 in less than an hour. The British Super-dreadnought HMS Audacious soon followed suit as she struck a mine laid by a German U-boat in October 1914 and sank. The threat that German U-boats posed to British dreadnoughts was enough to cause the Royal Navy to change their strategy and tactics in the North Sea to reduce the risk of U-boat attack.[50] Further near-misses from submarine attacks on battleships and casualties amongst cruisers led to growing concern in the Royal Navy about the vulnerability of battleships.

As the war wore on however, it turned out that whilst submarines did prove to be a very dangerous threat to older pre-dreadnought battleships, as shown by examples such as the sinking of Mesûdiye, which was caught in the Dardanelles by a British submarine[51] and HMS Majestic and HMS Triumph were torpedoed by U-21 as well as HMS Formidable, HMS Cornwallis, HMS Britannia etc., the threat posed to dreadnought battleships proved to have been largely a false alarm. HMS Audacious turned out to be the only dreadnought sunk by a submarine in World War I.[46] While battleships were never intended for anti-submarine warfare, there was one instance of a submarine being sunk by a dreadnought battleship. HMS Dreadnought rammed and sank the German submarine U-29 on March 18, 1915, off the Moray Firth.[46]

 
The sinking of SMS Szent István, after being torpedoed by Italian motor boats

Whilst the escape of the German fleet from the superior British firepower at Jutland was effected by the German cruisers and destroyers successfully turning away the British battleships, the German attempt to rely on U-boat attacks on the British fleet failed.[52]

Torpedo boats did have some successes against battleships in World War I, as demonstrated by the sinking of the British pre-dreadnought HMS Goliath by Muâvenet-i Millîye during the Dardanelles Campaign and the destruction of the Austro-Hungarian dreadnought SMS Szent István by Italian motor torpedo boats in June 1918. In large fleet actions, however, destroyers and torpedo boats were usually unable to get close enough to the battleships to damage them.[citation needed] The only battleship sunk in a fleet action by either torpedo boats or destroyers was the obsolescent German pre-dreadnought SMS Pommern. She was sunk by destroyers during the night phase of the Battle of Jutland.[citation needed]

The German High Seas Fleet, for their part, were determined not to engage the British without the assistance of submarines; and since the submarines were needed more for raiding commercial traffic, the fleet stayed in port for much of the war.[53]

Inter-war period

For many years, Germany simply had no battleships. The Armistice with Germany required that most of the High Seas Fleet be disarmed and interned in a neutral port; largely because no neutral port could be found, the ships remained in British custody in Scapa Flow, Scotland. The Treaty of Versailles specified that the ships should be handed over to the British. Instead, most of them were scuttled by their German crews on June 21, 1919, just before the signature of the peace treaty. The treaty also limited the German Navy, and prevented Germany from building or possessing any capital ships.[54]

 
Profile drawing of HMS Nelson commissioned 1927

The inter-war period saw the battleship subjected to strict international limitations to prevent a costly arms race breaking out.[55]

 
Scrapping of battleships in the Philadelphia Navy Yard, Pennsylvania, in December 1923

While the victors were not limited by the Treaty of Versailles, many of the major naval powers were crippled after the war. Faced with the prospect of a naval arms race against the United Kingdom and Japan, which would in turn have led to a possible Pacific war, the United States was keen to conclude the Washington Naval Treaty of 1922. This treaty limited the number and size of battleships that each major nation could possess, and required Britain to accept parity with the U.S. and to abandon the British alliance with Japan.[56] The Washington treaty was followed by a series of other naval treaties, including the First Geneva Naval Conference (1927), the First London Naval Treaty (1930), the Second Geneva Naval Conference (1932), and finally the Second London Naval Treaty (1936), which all set limits on major warships. These treaties became effectively obsolete on September 1, 1939, at the beginning of World War II, but the ship classifications that had been agreed upon still apply.[57] The treaty limitations meant that fewer new battleships were launched in 1919–1939 than in 1905–1914. The treaties also inhibited development by imposing upper limits on the weights of ships. Designs like the projected British N3-class battleship, the first American South Dakota class, and the Japanese Kii class—all of which continued the trend to larger ships with bigger guns and thicker armor—never got off the drawing board. Those designs which were commissioned during this period were referred to as treaty battleships.[58]

Rise of air power

 
Bombing tests which sank SMS Ostfriesland (1909), September 1921

As early as 1914, the British Admiral Percy Scott predicted that battleships would soon be made irrelevant by aircraft.[59] By the end of World War I, aircraft had successfully adopted the torpedo as a weapon.[60] In 1921 the Italian general and air theorist Giulio Douhet completed a hugely influential treatise on strategic bombing titled The Command of the Air, which foresaw the dominance of air power over naval units.

In the 1920s, General Billy Mitchell of the United States Army Air Corps, believing that air forces had rendered navies around the world obsolete, testified in front of Congress that "1,000 bombardment airplanes can be built and operated for about the price of one battleship" and that a squadron of these bombers could sink a battleship, making for more efficient use of government funds.[61] This infuriated the U.S. Navy, but Mitchell was nevertheless allowed to conduct a careful series of bombing tests alongside Navy and Marine bombers. In 1921, he bombed and sank numerous ships, including the "unsinkable" German World War I battleship SMS Ostfriesland and the American pre-dreadnought Alabama.[62]

Although Mitchell had required "war-time conditions", the ships sunk were obsolete, stationary, defenseless and had no damage control. The sinking of Ostfriesland was accomplished by violating an agreement that would have allowed Navy engineers to examine the effects of various munitions: Mitchell's airmen disregarded the rules, and sank the ship within minutes in a coordinated attack. The stunt made headlines, and Mitchell declared, "No surface vessels can exist wherever air forces acting from land bases are able to attack them." While far from conclusive, Mitchell's test was significant because it put proponents of the battleship against naval aviation on the defensive.[2] Rear Admiral William A. Moffett used public relations against Mitchell to make headway toward expansion of the U.S. Navy's nascent aircraft carrier program.[63]

Rearmament

The Royal Navy, United States Navy, and Imperial Japanese Navy extensively upgraded and modernized their World War I–era battleships during the 1930s. Among the new features were an increased tower height and stability for the optical rangefinder equipment (for gunnery control), more armor (especially around turrets) to protect against plunging fire and aerial bombing, and additional anti-aircraft weapons. Some British ships received a large block superstructure nicknamed the "Queen Anne's castle", such as in Queen Elizabeth and Warspite, which would be used in the new conning towers of the King George V-class fast battleships. External bulges were added to improve both buoyancy to counteract weight increase and provide underwater protection against mines and torpedoes. The Japanese rebuilt all of their battleships, plus their battlecruisers, with distinctive "pagoda" structures, though the Hiei received a more modern bridge tower that would influence the new Yamato class. Bulges were fitted, including steel tube arrays to improve both underwater and vertical protection along the waterline. The U.S. experimented with cage masts and later tripod masts, though after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor some of the most severely damaged ships (such as West Virginia and California) were rebuilt with tower masts, for an appearance similar to their Iowa-class contemporaries. Radar, which was effective beyond visual range and effective in complete darkness or adverse weather, was introduced to supplement optical fire control.[64]

Even when war threatened again in the late 1930s, battleship construction did not regain the level of importance it had held in the years before World War I. The "building holiday" imposed by the naval treaties meant the capacity of dockyards worldwide had shrunk, and the strategic position had changed.[65]

In Germany, the ambitious Plan Z for naval rearmament was abandoned in favor of a strategy of submarine warfare supplemented by the use of battlecruisers and commerce raiding (in particular by Bismarck-class battleships). In Britain, the most pressing need was for air defenses and convoy escorts to safeguard the civilian population from bombing or starvation, and re-armament construction plans consisted of five ships of the King George V class. It was in the Mediterranean that navies remained most committed to battleship warfare. France intended to build six battleships of the Dunkerque and Richelieu classes, and the Italians four Littorio-class ships. Neither navy built significant aircraft carriers. The U.S. preferred to spend limited funds on aircraft carriers until the South Dakota class. Japan, also prioritising aircraft carriers, nevertheless began work on three mammoth Yamatos (although the third, Shinano, was later completed as a carrier) and a planned fourth was cancelled.[13]

At the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, the Spanish navy included only two small dreadnought battleships, España and Jaime I. España (originally named Alfonso XIII), by then in reserve at the northwestern naval base of El Ferrol, fell into Nationalist hands in July 1936. The crew aboard Jaime I remained loyal to the Republic, killed their officers, who apparently supported Franco's attempted coup, and joined the Republican Navy. Thus each side had one battleship; however, the Republican Navy generally lacked experienced officers. The Spanish battleships mainly restricted themselves to mutual blockades, convoy escort duties, and shore bombardment, rarely in direct fighting against other surface units.[66] In April 1937, España ran into a mine laid by friendly forces, and sank with little loss of life. In May 1937, Jaime I was damaged by Nationalist air attacks and a grounding incident. The ship was forced to go back to port to be repaired. There she was again hit by several aerial bombs. It was then decided to tow the battleship to a more secure port, but during the transport she suffered an internal explosion that caused 300 deaths and her total loss. Several Italian and German capital ships participated in the non-intervention blockade. On May 29, 1937, two Republican aircraft managed to bomb the German pocket battleship Deutschland outside Ibiza, causing severe damage and loss of life. Admiral Scheer retaliated two days later by bombarding Almería, causing much destruction, and the resulting Deutschland incident meant the end of German and Italian participation in non-intervention.[67]

World War II

 
Imperial Japanese Navy's Yamato, seen here under air attack in 1945, and her sister ship Musashi (1940) were the heaviest battleships in history.
 
Pennsylvania leading battleship Colorado and cruisers Louisville, Portland, and Columbia into Lingayen Gulf, Philippines, January 1945

The German battleship Schleswig-Holstein—an obsolete pre-dreadnought—fired the first shots of World War II with the bombardment of the Polish garrison at Westerplatte;[68] and the final surrender of the Japanese Empire took place aboard a United States Navy battleship, USS Missouri. Between those two events, it had become clear that aircraft carriers were the new principal ships of the fleet and that battleships now performed a secondary role.

Battleships played a part in major engagements in Atlantic, Pacific and Mediterranean theaters; in the Atlantic, the Germans used their battleships as independent commerce raiders. However, clashes between battleships were of little strategic importance. The Battle of the Atlantic was fought between destroyers and submarines, and most of the decisive fleet clashes of the Pacific war were determined by aircraft carriers.

In the first year of the war, armored warships defied predictions that aircraft would dominate naval warfare. Scharnhorst and Gneisenau surprised and sank the aircraft carrier Glorious off western Norway in June 1940.[69] This engagement marked the only time a fleet carrier was sunk by surface gunnery. In the attack on Mers-el-Kébir, British battleships opened fire on the French battleships in the harbor near Oran in Algeria with their heavy guns. The fleeing French ships were then pursued by planes from aircraft carriers.

The subsequent years of the war saw many demonstrations of the maturity of the aircraft carrier as a strategic naval weapon and its effectiveness against battleships. The British air attack on the Italian naval base at Taranto sank one Italian battleship and damaged two more. The same Swordfish torpedo bombers played a crucial role in sinking the German battleship Bismarck.

On December 7, 1941, the Japanese launched a surprise attack on Pearl Harbor. Within a short time, five of eight U.S. battleships were sunk or sinking, with the rest damaged. All three American aircraft carriers were out to sea, however, and evaded destruction. The sinking of the British battleship Prince of Wales and battlecruiser Repulse, demonstrated the vulnerability of a battleship to air attack while at sea without sufficient air cover, settling the argument begun by Mitchell in 1921. Both warships were under way and en route to attack the Japanese amphibious force that had invaded Malaya when they were caught by Japanese land-based bombers and torpedo bombers on December 10, 1941.[70]

 
Haruna attacked by U.S. Navy carrier aircraft at Kure air raid, 28 July 1945

At many of the early crucial battles of the Pacific, for instance Coral Sea and Midway, battleships were either absent or overshadowed as carriers launched wave after wave of planes into the attack at a range of hundreds of miles. In later battles in the Pacific, battleships primarily performed shore bombardment in support of amphibious landings and provided anti-aircraft defense as escort for the carriers. Even the largest battleships ever constructed, Japan's Yamato class, which carried a main battery of nine 18-inch (46 cm) guns and were designed as a principal strategic weapon, were never given a chance to show their potential in the decisive battleship action that figured in Japanese pre-war planning.[71]

The last battleship confrontation in history was the Battle of Surigao Strait, on October 25, 1944, in which a numerically and technically superior American battleship group destroyed a lesser Japanese battleship group by gunfire after it had already been devastated by destroyer torpedo attacks. All but one of the American battleships in this confrontation had previously been sunk during the attack on Pearl Harbor and subsequently raised and repaired. Mississippi fired the last major-caliber salvo of this battle.[72] In April 1945, during the battle for Okinawa, the world's most powerful battleship,[73] the Yamato, was sent out on a suicide mission against a massive U.S. force and sunk by overwhelming pressure from carrier aircraft with nearly all hands lost. After that, Japanese fleet remaining in the mainland was also destroyed by the US naval air force.

Cold War

After World War II, several navies retained their existing battleships, but they were no longer strategically dominant military assets. It soon became apparent that they were no longer worth the considerable cost of construction and maintenance and only one new battleship was commissioned after the war, HMS Vanguard. During the war it had been demonstrated that battleship-on-battleship engagements like Leyte Gulf or the sinking of HMS Hood were the exception and not the rule, and with the growing role of aircraft engagement ranges were becoming longer and longer, making heavy gun armament irrelevant. The armor of a battleship was equally irrelevant in the face of a nuclear attack as tactical missiles with a range of 100 kilometres (60 mi) or more could be mounted on the Soviet Kildin-class destroyer and Whiskey-class submarines. By the end of the 1950s, smaller vessel classes such as destroyers, which formerly offered no noteworthy opposition to battleships, now were capable of eliminating battleships from outside the range of the ship's heavy guns.

The remaining battleships met a variety of ends. USS Arkansas and Nagato were sunk during the testing of nuclear weapons in Operation Crossroads in 1946. Both battleships proved resistant to nuclear air burst but vulnerable to underwater nuclear explosions.[74] The Italian battleship Giulio Cesare was taken by the Soviets as reparations and renamed Novorossiysk; she was sunk by a leftover German mine in the Black Sea on October 29, 1955. The two Andrea Doria-class ships were scrapped in 1956.[75] The French Lorraine was scrapped in 1954, Richelieu in 1968,[76] and Jean Bart in 1970.[77]

 
United States Battleship naval fleet in 1987, during the Cold War.

The United Kingdom's four surviving King George V-class ships were scrapped in 1957,[78] and Vanguard followed in 1960.[79] All other surviving British battleships had been sold or broken up by 1949.[80] The Soviet Union's Marat was scrapped in 1953, Parizhskaya Kommuna in 1957 and Oktyabrskaya Revolutsiya (back under her original name, Gangut, since 1942)[81] in 1956–57.[81] Brazil's Minas Geraes was scrapped in Genoa in 1953,[82] and her sister ship São Paulo sank during a storm in the Atlantic en route to the breakers in Italy in 1951.[82]

Argentina kept its two Rivadavia-class ships until 1956 and Chile kept Almirante Latorre (formerly HMS Canada) until 1959.[83] The Turkish battlecruiser Yavûz (formerly SMS Goeben, launched in 1911) was scrapped in 1976 after an offer to sell her back to Germany was refused. Sweden had several small coastal-defense battleships, one of which, HSwMS Gustav V, survived until 1970.[84] The Soviets scrapped four large incomplete cruisers in the late 1950s, whilst plans to build a number of new Stalingrad-class battlecruisers were abandoned following the death of Joseph Stalin in 1953.[85] The three old German battleships Schleswig-Holstein, Schlesien, and Hessen all met similar ends. Hessen was taken over by the Soviet Union and renamed Tsel. She was scrapped in 1960. Schleswig-Holstein was renamed Borodino, and was used as a target ship until 1960. Schlesien, too, was used as a target ship. She was broken up between 1952 and 1957.[86]

The Iowa-class battleships gained a new lease of life in the U.S. Navy as fire support ships. Radar and computer-controlled gunfire could be aimed with pinpoint accuracy to target. The U.S. recommissioned all four Iowa-class battleships for the Korean War and the New Jersey for the Vietnam War. These were primarily used for shore bombardment, New Jersey firing nearly 6,000 rounds of 16 inch shells and over 14,000 rounds of 5 inch projectiles during her tour on the gunline,[87] seven times more rounds against shore targets in Vietnam than she had fired in the Second World War.[88]

As part of Navy Secretary John F. Lehman's effort to build a 600-ship Navy in the 1980s, and in response to the commissioning of Kirov by the Soviet Union, the United States recommissioned all four Iowa-class battleships. On several occasions, battleships were support ships in carrier battle groups, or led their own battleship battle group. These were modernized to carry Tomahawk (TLAM) missiles, with New Jersey seeing action bombarding Lebanon in 1983 and 1984, while Missouri and Wisconsin fired their 16-inch (406 mm) guns at land targets and launched missiles during Operation Desert Storm in 1991. Wisconsin served as the TLAM strike commander for the Persian Gulf, directing the sequence of launches that marked the opening of Desert Storm, firing a total of 24 TLAMs during the first two days of the campaign. The primary threat to the battleships were Iraqi shore-based surface-to-surface missiles; Missouri was targeted by two Iraqi Silkworm missiles, with one missing and another being intercepted by the British destroyer HMS Gloucester.[89]

End of the battleship era

 
The American Texas (1912) is the only preserved example of a Dreadnought-type battleship that dates to the time of the original HMS Dreadnought.

After Indiana was stricken in 1962, the four Iowa-class ships were the only battleships in commission or reserve anywhere in the world. There was an extended debate when the four Iowa ships were finally decommissioned in the early 1990s. USS Iowa and USS Wisconsin were maintained to a standard whereby they could be rapidly returned to service as fire support vessels, pending the development of a superior fire support vessel. These last two battleships were finally stricken from the U.S. Naval Vessel Register in 2006.[90][91][92] The Military Balance and Russian Foreign Military Review states the U.S. Navy listed one battleship in the reserve (Naval Inactive Fleet/Reserve 2nd Turn) in 2010.[93][94] The Military Balance states the U.S. Navy listed no battleships in the reserve in 2014.[95]

When the last Iowa-class ship was finally stricken from the Naval Vessel Registry, no battleships remained in service or in reserve with any navy worldwide. A number are preserved as museum ships, either afloat or in drydock. The U.S. has eight battleships on display: Massachusetts, North Carolina, Alabama, Iowa, New Jersey, Missouri, Wisconsin, and Texas. Missouri and New Jersey are museums at Pearl Harbor and Camden, New Jersey, respectively. Iowa is on display as an educational attraction at the Los Angeles Waterfront in San Pedro, California. Wisconsin now serves as a museum ship in Norfolk, Virginia.[96] Massachusetts, which has the distinction of never having lost a man during service, is on display at the Battleship Cove naval museum in Fall River, Massachusetts.[97] Texas, the first battleship turned into a museum, is normally on display at the San Jacinto Battleground State Historic Site, near Houston, but as of 2021 is closed for repairs.[98] North Carolina is on display in Wilmington, North Carolina. Alabama is on display in Mobile, Alabama. The wreck of Arizona, sunk during the Pearl Harbor attack in 1941, is designated a historical landmark and national gravesite. The wreck of Utah, also sunk during the attack, is a historic landmark.

The only other 20th-century battleship on display is the Japanese pre-dreadnought Mikasa. A replica of the ironclad battleship Dingyuan was built by the Weihai Port Bureau in 2003 and is on display in Weihai, China.

Former battleships that were previously used as museum ships included USS Oregon (BB-3), SMS Tegetthoff, and SMS Erzherzog Franz Ferdinand.

Strategy and doctrine

Doctrine

 
USS Iowa fires a full broadside of her nine 16″/50 and six 5″/38 guns during a target exercise

Battleships were the embodiment of sea power. For American naval officer Alfred Thayer Mahan and his followers, a strong navy was vital to the success of a nation, and control of the seas was vital for the projection of force on land and overseas. Mahan's theory, proposed in The Influence of Sea Power Upon History, 1660–1783 of 1890, dictated the role of the battleship was to sweep the enemy from the seas.[99] While the work of escorting, blockading, and raiding might be done by cruisers or smaller vessels, the presence of the battleship was a potential threat to any convoy escorted by any vessels other than capital ships. This concept of "potential threat" can be further generalized to the mere existence (as opposed to presence) of a powerful fleet tying the opposing fleet down. This concept came to be known as a "fleet in being"—an idle yet mighty fleet forcing others to spend time, resource and effort to actively guard against it.

Mahan went on to say victory could only be achieved by engagements between battleships, which came to be known as the decisive battle doctrine in some navies, while targeting merchant ships (commerce raiding or guerre de course, as posited by the Jeune École) could never succeed.[100]

Mahan was highly influential in naval and political circles throughout the age of the battleship,[2][101] calling for a large fleet of the most powerful battleships possible. Mahan's work developed in the late 1880s, and by the end of the 1890s it had acquired much international influence on naval strategy;[2] in the end, it was adopted by many major navies (notably the British, American, German, and Japanese). The strength of Mahanian opinion was important in the development of the battleships arms races, and equally important in the agreement of the Powers to limit battleship numbers in the interwar era.

The "fleet in being" suggested battleships could simply by their existence tie down superior enemy resources. This in turn was believed to be able to tip the balance of a conflict even without a battle. This suggested even for inferior naval powers a battleship fleet could have important strategic effect.[citation needed]

Tactics

While the role of battleships in both World Wars reflected Mahanian doctrine, the details of battleship deployment were more complex. Unlike ships of the line, the battleships of the late 19th and early 20th centuries had significant vulnerability to torpedoes and mines—because efficient mines and torpedoes did not exist before that[102]—which could be used by relatively small and inexpensive craft. The Jeune École doctrine of the 1870s and 1880s recommended placing torpedo boats alongside battleships; these would hide behind the larger ships until gun-smoke obscured visibility enough for them to dart out and fire their torpedoes.[2] While this tactic was made less effective by the development of smokeless propellant, the threat from more capable torpedo craft (later including submarines) remained. By the 1890s, the Royal Navy had developed the first destroyers, which were initially designed to intercept and drive off any attacking torpedo boats. During the First World War and subsequently, battleships were rarely deployed without a protective screen of destroyers.[103]

Battleship doctrine emphasized the concentration of the battlegroup. In order for this concentrated force to be able to bring its power to bear on a reluctant opponent (or to avoid an encounter with a stronger enemy fleet), battlefleets needed some means of locating enemy ships beyond horizon range. This was provided by scouting forces; at various stages battlecruisers, cruisers, destroyers, airships, submarines and aircraft were all used. (With the development of radio, direction finding and traffic analysis would come into play, as well, so even shore stations, broadly speaking, joined the battlegroup.[104]) So for most of their history, battleships operated surrounded by squadrons of destroyers and cruisers. The North Sea campaign of the First World War illustrates how, despite this support, the threat of mine and torpedo attack, and the failure to integrate or appreciate the capabilities of new techniques,[105] seriously inhibited the operations of the Royal Navy Grand Fleet, the greatest battleship fleet of its time.

Strategic and diplomatic impact

The presence of battleships had a great psychological and diplomatic impact. Similar to possessing nuclear weapons today, the ownership of battleships served to enhance a nation's force projection.[2]

Even during the Cold War, the psychological impact of a battleship was significant. In 1946, USS Missouri was dispatched to deliver the remains of the ambassador from Turkey, and her presence in Turkish and Greek waters staved off a possible Soviet thrust into the Balkan region.[106] In September 1983, when Druze militia in Lebanon's Shouf Mountains fired upon U.S. Marine peacekeepers, the arrival of USS New Jersey stopped the firing. Gunfire from New Jersey later killed militia leaders.[107]

Value for money

Battleships were the largest and most complex, and hence the most expensive warships of their time; as a result, the value of investment in battleships has always been contested. As the French politician Etienne Lamy wrote in 1879, "The construction of battleships is so costly, their effectiveness so uncertain and of such short duration, that the enterprise of creating an armored fleet seems to leave fruitless the perseverance of a people".[102] The Jeune École school of thought of the 1870s and 1880s sought alternatives to the crippling expense and debatable utility of a conventional battlefleet. It proposed what would nowadays be termed a sea denial strategy, based on fast, long-ranged cruisers for commerce raiding and torpedo boat flotillas to attack enemy ships attempting to blockade French ports. The ideas of the Jeune École were ahead of their time; it was not until the 20th century that efficient mines, torpedoes, submarines, and aircraft were available that allowed similar ideas to be effectively implemented.[102] The determination of powers such as Germany to build battlefleets with which to confront much stronger rivals has been criticized by historians, who emphasise the futility of investment in a battlefleet that has no chance of matching its opponent in an actual battle.[2]

Former operators

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Stoll, J. Steaming in the Dark?, Journal of Conflict Resolution Vol. 36 No. 2, June 1992.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Sondhaus, L. Naval Warfare 1815–1914, ISBN 0-415-21478-5.
  3. ^ Herwig pp. 35, 41, 42.
  4. ^ Mahan 1890/Dover 1987 pp. 2, 3.
  5. ^ Preston (1982) p. 24.
  6. ^ Corbett (2015) Vol. II, pp. 332, 333, "So was consummated perhaps the most decisive and complete naval victory in history"
  7. ^ Breyer p. 115.
  8. ^ Massie (1991) p. 471.
  9. ^ Friedman (2013) p. 68, Captain Pakenham, British observer at Tsushima; "...When 12 inch guns are firing, 10 inch guns go unnoticed...Everything in this war has tended to emphasise the vast importance to a ship...of carrying some of the heaviest and furthest-shooting guns that can be got into her."
  10. ^ Corbett (2015) Vol. 1, p. 380,381; the Russians turned back after Admiral Vitgeft was killed aboard his flagship, the battleship Tzesarevich; to remain bottled up in Port Arthur, pending arrival of the Russian Baltic Fleet in 1905. Known as the Battle of August 10 in Russia.
  11. ^ Jeremy Black, "Jutland's Place in History", Naval History (June 2016) 30#3 pp. 16–21.
  12. ^ O'Connell, Robert J. (1993). Sacred vessels: the cult of the battleship and the rise of the U.S. Navy. Oxford [Oxfordshire]: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-508006-3.[page needed]
  13. ^ a b Lenton, H. T.: Krigsfartyg efter 1860
  14. ^ "battleship" The Oxford English Dictionary. 2nd ed. 1989. OED Online. Oxford University Press. April 4, 2000.
  15. ^ "Napoleon (90 guns), the first purpose-designed screw line of battleships", Steam, Steel and Shellfire, Conway's History of the Ship, p. 39.
  16. ^ "Hastened to completion Le Napoleon was launched on May 16, 1850, to become the world's first true steam battleship", Steam, Steel and Shellfire, Conway's History of the Ship, p. 39.
  17. ^ Lambert, Andrew (1984). Battleships in Transition, Conway, ISBN 0-85177-315-X pp. 144–47.
    In addition, the Navy of the North Germany Confederacy (which included Prussia) bought HMS Renown from Britain in 1870 for use as a gunnery training ship.
  18. ^ "The canon-obusier [shell gun] originally constructed by Colonel Paixhans for the French Naval Service ... was subsequently designated the canon-obusier of 80, No 1 of 1841 ... the diameter of the bore is 22 centimetres (8.65 inches)." From Douglas, Sir Howard, A Treatise on Naval Gunnery 1855 (Conway Maritime Press, 1982; reprinting 1855 edition), p. 201 ISBN 0-85177-275-7. The British undertook trials with shell guns at HMS Excellent starting in 1832. A Treatise on Naval Gunnery 1855, p. 198.
    For the U.S. introduction of 8-inch shell guns into the armament of line-of-battle ships in 1841, see Spencer Tucker, Arming the Fleet, US Navy Ordnance in the Muzzle-Loading Era (U.S. Naval Institute Pres, 1989), p. 149. ISBN 0-87021-007-6.
  19. ^ Lambert, Andrew D, The Crimean War, British Grand Strategy Against Russia, 1853–56, Manchester University Press, 1990, ISBN 0-7190-3564-3, pp. 60–61.
  20. ^ Lambert, Andrew: Battleships in Transition, pp. 92–96.
  21. ^ Clowes, William Laird, Four Modern Naval Campaigns, Unit Library, 1902, republished Cornmarket Press, 1970, ISBN 0-7191-2020-9, p. 68.
  22. ^ Clowes, William Laird. Four Modern Naval Campaigns, pp. 54–55, 63.
  23. ^ Wilson, H. W. Ironclads in Action – Vol 1, London, 1898, p. 240.
  24. ^ Gibbons, Tony. The Complete Encyclopedia of Battleships, pp. 28–29.
  25. ^ Gibbons, pp. 30–31.
  26. ^ Gibbons, p. 93.
  27. ^ Conway Marine, "Steam, Steel and Shellfire", p. 96.
  28. ^ Gibbons, Tony: The Complete Encyclopedia of Battleships, p. 101.
  29. ^ Beeler, John (2001). Birth of the battleship: British capital ship design 1870–1881. Annapoli, MD: Naval Institute Press. p. 224. Retrieved October 23, 2015.
  30. ^ Hill, Richard. War at Sea in the Ironclad Age, ISBN 0-304-35273-X.[page needed]
  31. ^ a b Kennedy, p. 209.
  32. ^ Preston, Anthony. Jane's Fighting Ships of World War II[page needed]
  33. ^ Preston, Anthony. Battleships of World War I, New York: Galahad Books, 1972.[page needed]
  34. ^ Gibbons, p. 168.
  35. ^ Burgess; Heilbrun, Edwin; Margaret (January 11, 2013). "Dreadnaught: Britain, Germany, and the Coming of the Great War". Library Journal. 138 (18): 53. Retrieved October 23, 2015.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  36. ^ Cuniberti, Vittorio, "An Ideal Battleship for the British Fleet", All The World's Fighting Ships, 1903, pp. 407–09.
  37. ^ Corbett (2015) Vol. 1 pp. 380, 381
  38. ^ Corbett (2015) Vol. II p. 246
  39. ^ Corbett (2015) Vol. II p. 445.
  40. ^ Evans and Peattie, Kaigun, p. 159.
  41. ^ Burr, Lawrence (2006). British Battlecruisers 1914–18. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. pp. 4–7. ISBN 978-1-84603-008-6.
  42. ^ Gibbons, pp. 170–71.
  43. ^ a b Ireland, Bernard Janes War at Sea, p. 66.
  44. ^ Gilbert, Adrian (2000). The encyclopedia of warfare: from earliest time to the present day, Part 25. Taylor & Francis. p. 224. ISBN 978-1-57958-216-6. from the original on July 26, 2020. Retrieved April 17, 2012.
  45. ^ Keegan, p. 289.
  46. ^ a b c "Are Battleships Obsolete?". the Wells Brothers. 2001. from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved January 15, 2015.
  47. ^ Ireland, Bernard: Jane's War At Sea, pp. 88–95.
  48. ^ Padfield 1972, p. 240.
  49. ^ Andrew Marr's The Making of Modern Britain Episode 3.
  50. ^ Massie, Robert. Castles of Steel, London, 2005. pp. 127–45.
  51. ^ Compton-Hall, Richard (2004). Submarines at War 1914–18. Periscope Publishing Ltd. pp. 155–62. ISBN 978-1-904381-21-1.
  52. ^ Massie, Robert. Castles of Steel, London, 2005. pp. 675.
  53. ^ Kennedy, pp. 247–49.
  54. ^ Ireland, Bernard: Jane's War At Sea, p. 118.
  55. ^ Friedman, Norman. U.S. Battleships, pp. 181–82.
  56. ^ Kennedy, p. 277.
  57. ^ Ireland, Bernard. Jane's War at Sea, pp. 124–26, 139–42.
  58. ^ Sumrall, Robert. The Battleship and Battlecruiser, in Gardiner, R: The Eclipse of the Big Gun. Conway Maritime, London. ISBN 0-85177-607-8. pp. 25–28.
  59. ^ Kennedy, p. 199.
  60. ^ From the Guinness Book of Air Facts and Feats (3rd edition, 1977): "The first air attack using a torpedo dropped by an aeroplane was carried out by Flight Commander Charles H. K. Edmonds, flying a Short 184 seaplane from HMS Ben-my-Chree on August 12, 1915, against a 5,000 ton (5,080 tonne) Turkish supply ship in the Sea of Marmara. Although the enemy ship was hit and sunk, the captain of a British submarine claimed to have fired a torpedo simultaneously and sunk the ship. It was further stated that the British submarine E14 had attacked and immobilised the ship four days earlier. However, on August 17, 1915, another Turkish ship was sunk by a torpedo of whose origin there can be no doubt. On this occasion Flight Commander C. H. Edmonds, flying a Short 184, torpedoed a Turkish steamer a few miles north of the Dardanelles. His formation colleague, Flight Lieutenant G. B. Dacre, was forced to land on the water owing to engine trouble but, seeing an enemy tug close by, taxied up to it and released his torpedo. The tug blew up and sank. Thereafter, Dacre was able to take off and return to the Ben-my-Chree."
  61. ^ Boyne, Walter J. "The Spirit of Billy Mitchell" June 20, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. Air Force Magazine, June 1996.
  62. ^ "Vice Admiral Alfred Wilkinson Johnson, USN Ret. The Naval Bombing Experiments: Bombing Operations (1959)". History.navy.mil. Archived from the original on April 9, 2010. Retrieved January 31, 2009.
  63. ^ Jeffers, H. Paul (2006). Billy Mitchell: The Life, Times, and Battles of America's Prophet of Air Power. Zenith Press. ISBN 0-7603-2080-2.[page needed]
  64. ^ "CombinedFleet.com". Combinedfleet.com. from the original on February 3, 2009. Retrieved January 31, 2009.
  65. ^ Fuller, John (1945). Armament and history; a study of the influence of armament on history from the dawn of classical warfare to the second World War [by] Major General J.F.C. Fuller. New York: Scribner's Sons. Retrieved October 23, 2015.
  66. ^ Gibbons, p. 195.
  67. ^ Greger, René. Schlachtschiffe der Welt, p. 251.
  68. ^ Gibbons, p. 163.
  69. ^ Gibbons, pp. 246–47.
  70. ^ Axell, Albert: Kamikaze, p. 14.
  71. ^ Gibbons, pp. 262–63.
  72. ^ Samuel Eliot Morison, History of US Naval Operations in World War II Vol. 12, Leyte, p. 226.
  73. ^ Jentschura, Dieter, Mickel p. 39.
  74. ^ Operation 'Crossroads' – the Bikini A-bomb tests, in Ireland, Bernard (1996). Jane's Battleships of the 20th Century. New York: HarperCollins. pp. 186–87. ISBN 978-0-00-470997-0.
  75. ^ Fitzsimons, Bernard, ed. (technical assistance from Bill Gunston, Antony Preston, & Ian Hogg) Illustrated Encyclopedia of 20th Century Weapons and Warfare. London: Phoebus, 1978, Volume 2, p. 114.
  76. ^ Fitzsimons, Volume 20, p. 2213, "Richelieu". No mention of her sister, Jean Bart.
  77. ^ Gardiner, Robert (Ed.); (1980); Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1922–1946; ISBN 0-85177-146-7; p. 260.
  78. ^ Fitzsimons, Volume 15, p. 1636, "King George V"
  79. ^ Fitzsimons, Volume 23, p. 2554, "Vanguard"
  80. ^ Gardiner, pp. 7, 14.
  81. ^ a b Fitzsimons, Volume 10, p. 1086, "Gangut"
  82. ^ a b Fitzsimons, Volume 17, p. 1896, "Minas Gerais"
  83. ^ Fitzsimons, Volume 1, p. 84, "Almirante Latorre"
  84. ^ Gardiner, p. 368.
  85. ^ McLaughlin, Stephen (2006). Jordan, John (ed.). Project 82: The Stalingrad Class. Warship 2006. London: Conway. p. 117. ISBN 978-1-84486-030-2.
  86. ^ Gardiner, p. 222.
  87. ^ Polmar, p. 129.
  88. ^ History of World Seapower, Bernard Brett, ISBN 0-603-03723-2, p. 236.
  89. ^ . April 26, 2009. Archived from the original on April 26, 2009.
  90. ^ Naval Vessel Register for BB61. U.S. Navy, December 14, 2009. Retrieved November 19, 2013.
  91. ^ Naval Vessel Register for BB64. U.S. Navy, April 30, 2012. Retrieved November 19, 2013.
  92. ^ . Federation of American Scientists. Archived from the original on May 31, 2009. Retrieved March 18, 2007.
  93. ^ The Military Balance 2010. Routledge for The International Institute for Strategic Studies. 2010. ISBN 978-1857435573 – via Google Books.
  94. ^ "TARGET&ЗВО". from the original on December 3, 2013. Retrieved November 20, 2013.
  95. ^ The Military Balance 2014. Routledge for The International The International Institute of Strategic Studies. 2014. ISBN 978-1857437225. from the original on July 26, 2021. Retrieved July 26, 2021 – via Google Books.
  96. ^ "WCBC files lawsuit" April 16, 2010, at the Wayback Machine. Associated Press. April 14, 2010. Retrieved April 15, 2010.
  97. ^ . USS Massachusetts Memorial Committee. Archived from the original on April 2, 2013. Retrieved April 21, 2013.
  98. ^ "Battleship Updates". The Battleship Texas Foundation. October 9, 1921. from the original on October 21, 2021. Retrieved October 21, 2021.
  99. ^ Massie, Robert K. Castles of Steel, London, 2005. ISBN 1-84413-411-3.[page needed]
  100. ^ Mahan, A.T., Captain, U.S. Navy. Influence of Sea Power on History, 1660–1783. Boston: Little Brown, passim.
  101. ^ Kennedy, pp. 2, 200, 206.
  102. ^ a b c Dahl, Erik J. (Autumn 2005). . Naval War College Review. 58 (4). Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved June 29, 2015.
  103. ^ "Battleships, Mines, and Torpedoes". Canadian Magazine. 22: 501–02. March 1904. Retrieved October 23, 2015.
  104. ^ It could presage an enemy sortie, or locate an enemy over the horizon. Beesly, Patrick. Room 40 (London: Hamish Hamilton)
  105. ^ Beesly.[page needed]
  106. ^ "USS Missouri". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Naval Historical Center. Archived from the original on April 9, 2010. Retrieved March 18, 2007.
  107. ^ . Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Archived from the original on February 3, 2007. Retrieved March 18, 2007.

References

  • Appel, Erik; et al. (2001). Finland i krig 1939–1940 – första delen (in Swedish). Espoo, Finland: Schildts förlag Ab. p. 261. ISBN 978-951-50-1182-4.
  • Archibald, E. H. H. (1984). The Fighting Ship in the Royal Navy 1897–1984. Blandford. ISBN 978-0-7137-1348-0.
  • Axell, Albert; et al. (2004). Kamikaze – Japans självmordspiloter (in Swedish). Lund, Sweden: Historiska media. p. 316. ISBN 978-91-85057-09-2.
  • Brown, D. K. (2003). Warrior to Dreadnought: Warship Development 1860–1905. Book Sales. ISBN 978-1-84067-529-0.
  • Brown, D. K. (2003). The Grand Fleet: Warship Design and Development 1906–1922. Caxton Editions. p. 208. ISBN 978-1-84067-531-3.
  • Brunila, Kai; et al. (2000). Finland i krig 1940–1944 – andra delen (in Swedish). Espoo, Finland: Schildts förlag Ab. p. 285. ISBN 978-951-50-1140-4.
  • Burr, Lawrence (2006). British Battlecruisers 1914–18. New Vanguard No. 126. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84603-008-6.
  • Corbett, Sir Julian. "Maritime Operations in the Russo-Japanese War 1904–1905." (1994). Originally Classified and in two volumes. ISBN 1-55750-129-7.
  • Corbett, Sir Julian. "Maritime Operations in the Russo-Japanese War 1904–1905." Volume I (2015) Originally published in January 1914. Naval Institute Press ISBN 978-1-59114-197-6
  • Corbett, Sir Julian. "Maritime Operations in the Russo-Japanese War 1904–1905." Volume II (2015) Originally published in October 1915. Naval Institute Press ISBN 978-1-59114-198-3
  • Friedman, Norman (1984). U.S. Battleships: An Illustrated History. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-0-87021-715-9.
  • Friedman, Norman (2013). "Naval Firepower, Battleship Guns and Gunnery in the Dreadnaught Era." Seaforth Publishing, Great Britain. ISBN 978-1-84832-185-4
  • Gray, Randal (1985). Gardiner, Robert (ed.). Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1906–1921. Naval Institute Press. p. 439. ISBN 978-0-87021-907-8.
  • Gardiner, Robert, ed. (1980). Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1922–1946. Conway Maritime Press. ISBN 978-0-85177-146-5.
  • Gardiner, Robert; Lambert, Andrew, eds. (2001). Steam, Steel and Shellfire: The steam warship 1815–1905 – Conway's History of the Ship. Book Sales. p. 192. ISBN 978-0-7858-1413-9.
  • Gibbons, Tony (1983). The Complete Encyclopedia of Battleships and Battlecruisers – A Technical Directory of all the World's Capital Ships from 1860 to the Present Day. London: Salamander Books Ltd. p. 272. ISBN 978-0-517-37810-6.
  • Greger, René (1993). Schlachtschiffe der Welt (in German). Stuttgart: Motorbuch Verlag. p. 260. ISBN 978-3-613-01459-6.
  • Ireland, Bernard and Grove, Eric (1997). Jane's War at Sea 1897–1997. London: Harper Collins Publishers. p. 256. ISBN 978-0-00-472065-4.
  • Jacobsen, Alf R. (2005). Dödligt angrepp – miniubåtsräden mot slagskeppet Tirpitz (in Swedish). Stockholm: Natur & Kultur. p. 282. ISBN 978-91-27-09897-8.
  • Jentschura, Hansgeorg; Jung, Dieter; Mickel, Peter (1976). Warships of the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1869–1945. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-0-87021-893-4.
  • Keegan, John (1999). The First World War. ISBN 978-0-7126-6645-9.
  • Kennedy, Paul M. (1983). The Rise and Fall of British Naval Mastery. London. ISBN 978-0-333-35094-2.
  • Lambert, Andrew (1984). Battleships in Transition – The Creation of the Steam Battlefleet 1815–1860. London: Conway Maritime Press. p. 161. ISBN 978-0-85177-315-5.
  • Lenton, H. T. (1971). Krigsfartyg efter 1860 (in Swedish). Stockholm: Forum AB. p. 160.
  • Linder, Jan; et al. (2002). Ofredens hav – Östersjön 1939–1992 (in Swedish). Avesta, Sweden: Svenska Tryckericentralen AB. p. 224. ISBN 978-91-631-2035-0.
  • Mahan, Alfred Thayer (1987). The Influence of Sea Power Upon History, 1660–1783. New York: Dover Publications, Inc. ISBN 978-0-486-25509-5.
  • Massie, Robert (2005). Castles of Steel: Britain, Germany and the Winning of the Great War at Sea. London: Pimlico. ISBN 978-1-84413-411-3.
  • O'Connell, Robert L. (1991). Sacred Vessels: the Cult of the Battleship and the Rise of the U.S. Navy. Boulder, CO: Westview Press. ISBN 978-0-8133-1116-6.
  • Padfield, Peter (1972). The Battleship Era. London: Military Book Society. OCLC 51245970.
  • Parkes, Oscar (1990). British Battleships. first published Seeley Service & Co, 1957, published United States Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-55750-075-5.
  • Pleshakov, Constantine (2002). The Tsar's Last Armada; The Epic Voyage to the Battle of Tsushima. ISBN 978-0-465-05791-7.
  • Polmar, Norman. The Naval Institute Guide to the Ships and Aircraft of the US Fleet. 2001, Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-656-6.
  • Preston, Antony (1982). Battleships. Bison books. ISBN 978-0-86124-063-0.
  • Preston, Anthony (Foreword) (1989). Jane's Fighting Ships of World War II. London, UK: Random House Ltd. p. 320. ISBN 978-1-85170-494-1.
  • Russel, Scott J. (1861). The Fleet of the Future. London.
  • Sondhaus, Lawrence (2001). Naval Warfare 1815–1914. London. ISBN 978-0-415-21478-0.
  • Sondhaus, Lawrence (2004). Navies in Modern World History. London. ISBN 978-1-86189-202-7.
  • Stilwell, Paul (2001). Battleships. New York: MetroBooks. p. 160. ISBN 978-1-58663-044-7.
  • Tamelander, Michael; et al. (2006). Slagskeppet Tirpitz – kampen om Norra Ishavet (in Swedish). Norstedts Förlag. p. 363. ISBN 978-91-1-301554-5.
  • Taylor, A. J. P. (Red.); et al. (1975). 1900-talet: Vår tids historia i ord och bild; Part 12 (in Swedish). Helsingborg: Bokfrämjandet. p. 159.
  • Wetterholm, Claes-Göran (2002). Dödens hav – Östersjön 1945 (in Swedish). Stockholm, Sweden: Bokförlaget Prisma. p. 279. ISBN 978-91-518-3968-4.
  • Wilson, H. W. (1898). Ironclads in Action – Vol 1. London.
  • Zetterling, Niklas; et al. (2004). Bismarck – Kampen om Atlanten (in Swedish). Stockholm: Nordstedts förlag. p. 312. ISBN 978-91-1-301288-9.

Further reading

External links

  • Comparison of the capabilities of seven World War II battleships
  • Comparison of projected post-World War II battleship designs
  • Battleships in the Transportation Photographs Collection – University of Washington Library

battleship, other, uses, disambiguation, battleship, large, armored, warship, with, main, battery, consisting, large, caliber, guns, dominated, naval, warfare, late, 19th, early, 20th, centuries, firepower, battleship, demonstrated, iowa, 1984, muzzle, blasts,. For other uses see Battleship disambiguation A battleship is a large armored warship with a main battery consisting of large caliber guns It dominated naval warfare in the late 19th and early 20th centuries The firepower of a battleship demonstrated by USS Iowa 1984 The muzzle blasts distort the ocean surface The term battleship came into use in the late 1880s to describe a type of ironclad warship 1 now referred to by historians as pre dreadnought battleships In 1906 the commissioning of HMS Dreadnought into the United Kingdom s Royal Navy heralded a revolution in the field of battleship design Subsequent battleship designs influenced by HMS Dreadnought were referred to as dreadnoughts though the term eventually became obsolete as dreadnoughts became the only type of battleship in common use Battleships were a symbol of naval dominance and national might and for decades the battleship was a major factor in both diplomacy and military strategy 2 A global arms race in battleship construction began in Europe in the 1890s and culminated at the decisive Battle of Tsushima in 1905 3 4 5 6 the outcome of which significantly influenced the design of HMS Dreadnought 7 8 9 The launch of Dreadnought in 1906 commenced a new naval arms race Three major fleet actions between steel battleships took place the long range gunnery duel at the Battle of the Yellow Sea 10 in 1904 the decisive Battle of Tsushima in 1905 both during the Russo Japanese War and the inconclusive Battle of Jutland in 1916 during the First World War Jutland was the largest naval battle and the only full scale clash of dreadnoughts of the war and it was the last major battle in naval history fought primarily by battleships 11 The Naval Treaties of the 1920s and 1930s limited the number of battleships though technical innovation in battleship design continued Both the Allied and Axis powers built battleships during World War II though the increasing importance of the aircraft carrier meant that the battleship played a less important role than had been expected in that conflict The value of the battleship has been questioned even during their heyday 12 There were few of the decisive fleet battles that battleship proponents expected and used to justify the vast resources spent on building battlefleets Even in spite of their huge firepower and protection battleships were increasingly vulnerable to much smaller and relatively inexpensive weapons initially the torpedo and the naval mine and later aircraft and the guided missile 13 The growing range of naval engagements led to the aircraft carrier replacing the battleship as the leading capital ship during World War II with the last battleship to be launched being HMS Vanguard in 1944 Four battleships were retained by the United States Navy until the end of the Cold War for fire support purposes and were last used in combat during the Gulf War in 1991 The last battleships were struck from the U S Naval Vessel Register in the 2000s Many World War II era battleships remain in use today as museum ships Contents 1 History 1 1 Ships of the line 1 2 Ironclads 1 2 1 Explosive shells 1 2 2 Iron armor and construction 1 3 Pre dreadnought battleship 1 4 Dreadnought era 1 4 1 Origin 1 4 2 Arms race 1 5 World War I 1 6 Inter war period 1 6 1 Rise of air power 1 6 2 Rearmament 1 7 World War II 1 8 Cold War 1 9 End of the battleship era 2 Strategy and doctrine 2 1 Doctrine 2 2 Tactics 2 3 Strategic and diplomatic impact 2 4 Value for money 3 Former operators 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory EditShips of the line Edit Main article Ship of the line Napoleon 1850 the world s first steam powered battleship A ship of the line was a large unarmored wooden sailing ship which mounted a battery of up to 120 smoothbore guns and carronades which came to prominence with the adoption of line of battle tactics in the early 17th century and the end of the sailing battleship s heyday in the 1830s From 1794 the alternative term line of battle ship was contracted informally at first to battle ship or battleship 14 The sheer number of guns fired broadside meant a ship of the line could wreck any wooden enemy holing her hull knocking down masts wrecking her rigging and killing her crew However the effective range of the guns was as little as a few hundred yards so the battle tactics of sailing ships depended in part on the wind Over time ships of the line gradually became larger and carried more guns but otherwise remained quite similar The first major change to the ship of the line concept was the introduction of steam power as an auxiliary propulsion system Steam power was gradually introduced to the navy in the first half of the 19th century initially for small craft and later for frigates The French Navy introduced steam to the line of battle with the 90 gun Napoleon in 1850 15 the first true steam battleship 16 Napoleon was armed as a conventional ship of the line but her steam engines could give her a speed of 12 knots 22 km h regardless of the wind This was a potentially decisive advantage in a naval engagement The introduction of steam accelerated the growth in size of battleships France and the United Kingdom were the only countries to develop fleets of wooden steam screw battleships although several other navies operated small numbers of screw battleships including Russia 9 the Ottoman Empire 3 Sweden 2 Naples 1 Denmark 1 and Austria 1 17 2 Ironclads Edit Main article Ironclad warship The French Gloire 1859 the first ocean going ironclad warship The adoption of steam power was only one of a number of technological advances which revolutionized warship design in the 19th century The ship of the line was overtaken by the ironclad powered by steam protected by metal armor and armed with guns firing high explosive shells Explosive shells Edit Guns that fired explosive or incendiary shells were a major threat to wooden ships and these weapons quickly became widespread after the introduction of 8 inch shell guns as part of the standard armament of French and American line of battle ships in 1841 18 In the Crimean War six line of battle ships and two frigates of the Russian Black Sea Fleet destroyed seven Turkish frigates and three corvettes with explosive shells at the Battle of Sinop in 1853 19 Later in the war French ironclad floating batteries used similar weapons against the defenses at the Battle of Kinburn 20 Nevertheless wooden hulled ships stood up comparatively well to shells as shown in the 1866 Battle of Lissa where the modern Austrian steam two decker SMS Kaiser ranged across a confused battlefield rammed an Italian ironclad and took 80 hits from Italian ironclads 21 many of which were shells 22 but including at least one 300 pound shot at point blank range Despite losing her bowsprit and her foremast and being set on fire she was ready for action again the very next day 23 Iron armor and construction Edit HMS Warrior 1860 the Royal Navy s first ocean going iron hulled warship The development of high explosive shells made the use of iron armor plate on warships necessary In 1859 France launched Gloire the first ocean going ironclad warship She had the profile of a ship of the line cut to one deck due to weight considerations Although made of wood and reliant on sail for most journeys Gloire was fitted with a propeller and her wooden hull was protected by a layer of thick iron armor 24 Gloire prompted further innovation from the Royal Navy anxious to prevent France from gaining a technological lead The superior armored frigate Warrior followed Gloire by only 14 months and both nations embarked on a program of building new ironclads and converting existing screw ships of the line to armored frigates 25 Within two years Italy Austria Spain and Russia had all ordered ironclad warships and by the time of the famous clash of the USS Monitor and the CSS Virginia at the Battle of Hampton Roads at least eight navies possessed ironclad ships 2 The French Redoutable the first battleship to use steel as the main building material 26 Navies experimented with the positioning of guns in turrets like the USS Monitor central batteries or barbettes or with the ram as the principal weapon As steam technology developed masts were gradually removed from battleship designs By the mid 1870s steel was used as a construction material alongside iron and wood The French Navy s Redoutable laid down in 1873 and launched in 1876 was a central battery and barbette warship which became the first battleship in the world to use steel as the principal building material 27 Pre dreadnought battleship Edit Main article Pre dreadnought battleship Pre Dreadnought USS Texas built in 1892 was the first battleship of the U S Navy Photochrom print c 1898 The term battleship was officially adopted by the Royal Navy in the re classification of 1892 By the 1890s there was an increasing similarity between battleship designs and the type that later became known as the pre dreadnought battleship emerged These were heavily armored ships mounting a mixed battery of guns in turrets and without sails The typical first class battleship of the pre dreadnought era displaced 15 000 to 17 000 tons had a speed of 16 knots 30 km h and an armament of four 12 inch 305 mm guns in two turrets fore and aft with a mixed caliber secondary battery amidships around the superstructure 1 An early design with superficial similarity to the pre dreadnought is the British Devastation class of 1871 28 29 The slow firing 12 inch 305 mm main guns were the principal weapons for battleship to battleship combat The intermediate and secondary batteries had two roles Against major ships it was thought a hail of fire from quick firing secondary weapons could distract enemy gun crews by inflicting damage to the superstructure and they would be more effective against smaller ships such as cruisers Smaller guns 12 pounders and smaller were reserved for protecting the battleship against the threat of torpedo attack from destroyers and torpedo boats 30 The beginning of the pre dreadnought era coincided with Britain reasserting her naval dominance For many years previously Britain had taken naval supremacy for granted Expensive naval projects were criticized by political leaders of all inclinations 2 However in 1888 a war scare with France and the build up of the Russian navy gave added impetus to naval construction and the British Naval Defence Act of 1889 laid down a new fleet including eight new battleships The principle that Britain s navy should be more powerful than the two next most powerful fleets combined was established This policy was designed to deter France and Russia from building more battleships but both nations nevertheless expanded their fleets with more and better pre dreadnoughts in the 1890s 2 Diagram of HMS Agamemnon 1908 a typical late pre dreadnought battleship In the last years of the 19th century and the first years of the 20th the escalation in the building of battleships became an arms race between Britain and Germany The German naval laws of 1890 and 1898 authorized a fleet of 38 battleships a vital threat to the balance of naval power 2 Britain answered with further shipbuilding but by the end of the pre dreadnought era British supremacy at sea had markedly weakened In 1883 the United Kingdom had 38 battleships twice as many as France and almost as many as the rest of the world put together In 1897 Britain s lead was far smaller due to competition from France Germany and Russia as well as the development of pre dreadnought fleets in Italy the United States and Japan 31 The Ottoman Empire Spain Sweden Denmark Norway the Netherlands Chile and Brazil all had second rate fleets led by armored cruisers coastal defence ships or monitors 32 Pre dreadnoughts continued the technical innovations of the ironclad Turrets armor plate and steam engines were all improved over the years and torpedo tubes were also introduced A small number of designs including the American Kearsarge and Virginia classes experimented with all or part of the 8 inch intermediate battery superimposed over the 12 inch primary Results were poor recoil factors and blast effects resulted in the 8 inch battery being completely unusable and the inability to train the primary and intermediate armaments on different targets led to significant tactical limitations Even though such innovative designs saved weight a key reason for their inception they proved too cumbersome in practice 33 Dreadnought era Edit See also Dreadnought In 1906 the British Royal Navy launched the revolutionary HMS Dreadnought Created as a result of pressure from Admiral Sir John Jackie Fisher HMS Dreadnought rendered existing battleships obsolete Combining an all big gun armament of ten 12 inch 305 mm guns with unprecedented speed from steam turbine engines and protection she prompted navies worldwide to re evaluate their battleship building programs While the Japanese had laid down an all big gun battleship Satsuma in 1904 34 and the concept of an all big gun ship had been in circulation for several years it had yet to be validated in combat Dreadnought sparked a new arms race principally between Britain and Germany but reflected worldwide as the new class of warships became a crucial element of national power 35 Technical development continued rapidly through the dreadnought era with steep changes in armament armor and propulsion Ten years after Dreadnought s commissioning much more powerful ships the super dreadnoughts were being built Origin Edit Vittorio Cuniberti In the first years of the 20th century several navies worldwide experimented with the idea of a new type of battleship with a uniform armament of very heavy guns Admiral Vittorio Cuniberti the Italian Navy s chief naval architect articulated the concept of an all big gun battleship in 1903 When the Regia Marina did not pursue his ideas Cuniberti wrote an article in Jane s proposing an ideal future British battleship a large armored warship of 17 000 tons armed solely with a single calibre main battery twelve 12 inch 305 mm guns carrying 300 millimetre 12 in belt armor and capable of 24 knots 44 km h 36 The Russo Japanese War provided operational experience to validate the all big gun concept During the Battle of the Yellow Sea on August 10 1904 Admiral Togo of the Imperial Japanese Navy commenced deliberate 12 inch gun fire at the Russian flagship Tzesarevich at 14 200 yards 13 000 meters 37 At the Battle of Tsushima on May 27 1905 Russian Admiral Rozhestvensky s flagship fired the first 12 inch guns at the Japanese flagship Mikasa at 7 000 meters 38 It is often held that these engagements demonstrated the importance of the 12 inch 305 mm gun over its smaller counterparts though some historians take the view that secondary batteries were just as important as the larger weapons when dealing with smaller fast moving torpedo craft 2 Such was the case albeit unsuccessfully when the Russian battleship Knyaz Suvorov at Tsushima had been sent to the bottom by destroyer launched torpedoes 39 A preliminary design for the Imperial Japanese Navy s Satsuma was an all big gun design When dealing with a mixed 10 and 12 inch armament The 1903 04 design also retained traditional triple expansion steam engines 40 As early as 1904 Jackie Fisher had been convinced of the need for fast powerful ships with an all big gun armament If Tsushima influenced his thinking it was to persuade him of the need to standardise on 12 inch 305 mm guns 2 Fisher s concerns were submarines and destroyers equipped with torpedoes then threatening to outrange battleship guns making speed imperative for capital ships 2 Fisher s preferred option was his brainchild the battlecruiser lightly armored but heavily armed with eight 12 inch guns and propelled to 25 knots 46 km h by steam turbines 41 It was to prove this revolutionary technology that Dreadnought was designed in January 1905 laid down in October 1905 and sped to completion by 1906 She carried ten 12 inch guns had an 11 inch armor belt and was the first large ship powered by turbines She mounted her guns in five turrets three on the centerline one forward two aft and two on the wings giving her at her launch twice the broadside of any other warship She retained a number of 12 pound 3 inch 76 mm quick firing guns for use against destroyers and torpedo boats Her armor was heavy enough for her to go head to head with any other ship in a gun battle and conceivably win 42 HMS Dreadnought 1906 Dreadnought was to have been followed by three Invincible class battlecruisers their construction delayed to allow lessons from Dreadnought to be used in their design While Fisher may have intended Dreadnought to be the last Royal Navy battleship 2 the design was so successful he found little support for his plan to switch to a battlecruiser navy Although there were some problems with the ship the wing turrets had limited arcs of fire and strained the hull when firing a full broadside and the top of the thickest armor belt lay below the waterline at full load the Royal Navy promptly commissioned another six ships to a similar design in the Bellerophon and St Vincent classes citation needed An American design South Carolina authorized in 1905 and laid down in December 1906 was another of the first dreadnoughts but she and her sister Michigan were not launched until 1908 Both used triple expansion engines and had a superior layout of the main battery dispensing with Dreadnought s wing turrets They thus retained the same broadside despite having two fewer guns citation needed Arms race Edit See also World War I naval arms race In 1897 before the revolution in design brought about by HMS Dreadnought the Royal Navy had 62 battleships in commission or building a lead of 26 over France and 50 over Germany 31 From the 1906 launching of Dreadnought an arms race with major strategic consequences was prompted Major naval powers raced to build their own dreadnoughts Possession of modern battleships was not only seen as vital to naval power but also as with nuclear weapons after World War II represented a nation s standing in the world 2 Germany France Japan 43 Italy Austria and the United States all began dreadnought programmes while the Ottoman Empire Argentina Russia 43 Brazil and Chile commissioned dreadnoughts to be built in British and American yards World War I Edit See also Naval warfare of World War I German High Seas Fleet during World War I By virtue of geography the Royal Navy was able to use her imposing battleship and battlecruiser fleet to impose a strict and successful naval blockade of Germany and kept Germany s smaller battleship fleet bottled up in the North Sea only narrow channels led to the Atlantic Ocean and these were guarded by British forces 44 Both sides were aware that because of the greater number of British dreadnoughts a full fleet engagement would be likely to result in a British victory The German strategy was therefore to try to provoke an engagement on their terms either to induce a part of the Grand Fleet to enter battle alone or to fight a pitched battle near the German coastline where friendly minefields torpedo boats and submarines could be used to even the odds 45 This did not happen however due in large part to the necessity to keep submarines for the Atlantic campaign Submarines were the only vessels in the Imperial German Navy able to break out and raid British commerce in force but even though they sank many merchant ships they could not successfully counter blockade the United Kingdom the Royal Navy successfully adopted convoy tactics to combat Germany s submarine counter blockade and eventually defeated it 46 This was in stark contrast to Britain s successful blockade of Germany Britain s Grand Fleet The first two years of war saw the Royal Navy s battleships and battlecruisers regularly sweep the North Sea making sure that no German ships could get in or out Only a few German surface ships that were already at sea such as the famous light cruiser SMS Emden were able to raid commerce Even some of those that did manage to get out were hunted down by battlecruisers as in the Battle of the Falklands December 7 1914 The results of sweeping actions in the North Sea were battles including the Heligoland Bight and Dogger Bank and German raids on the English coast all of which were attempts by the Germans to lure out portions of the Grand Fleet in an attempt to defeat the Royal Navy in detail On May 31 1916 a further attempt to draw British ships into battle on German terms resulted in a clash of the battlefleets in the Battle of Jutland 47 The German fleet withdrew to port after two short encounters with the British fleet Less than two months later the Germans once again attempted to draw portions of the Grand Fleet into battle The resulting Action of 19 August 1916 proved inconclusive This reinforced German determination not to engage in a fleet to fleet battle 48 Warspite and Malaya at Jutland In the other naval theatres there were no decisive pitched battles In the Black Sea engagement between Russian and Ottoman battleships was restricted to skirmishes In the Baltic Sea action was largely limited to the raiding of convoys and the laying of defensive minefields the only significant clash of battleship squadrons there was the Battle of Moon Sound at which one Russian pre dreadnought was lost The Adriatic was in a sense the mirror of the North Sea the Austro Hungarian dreadnought fleet remained bottled up by the British and French blockade And in the Mediterranean the most important use of battleships was in support of the amphibious assault on Gallipoli 49 In September 1914 the threat posed to surface ships by German U boats was confirmed by successful attacks on British cruisers including the sinking of three British armored cruisers by the German submarine SM U 9 in less than an hour The British Super dreadnought HMS Audacious soon followed suit as she struck a mine laid by a German U boat in October 1914 and sank The threat that German U boats posed to British dreadnoughts was enough to cause the Royal Navy to change their strategy and tactics in the North Sea to reduce the risk of U boat attack 50 Further near misses from submarine attacks on battleships and casualties amongst cruisers led to growing concern in the Royal Navy about the vulnerability of battleships As the war wore on however it turned out that whilst submarines did prove to be a very dangerous threat to older pre dreadnought battleships as shown by examples such as the sinking of Mesudiye which was caught in the Dardanelles by a British submarine 51 and HMS Majestic and HMS Triumph were torpedoed by U 21 as well as HMS Formidable HMS Cornwallis HMS Britannia etc the threat posed to dreadnought battleships proved to have been largely a false alarm HMS Audacious turned out to be the only dreadnought sunk by a submarine in World War I 46 While battleships were never intended for anti submarine warfare there was one instance of a submarine being sunk by a dreadnought battleship HMS Dreadnought rammed and sank the German submarine U 29 on March 18 1915 off the Moray Firth 46 The sinking of SMS Szent Istvan after being torpedoed by Italian motor boats Whilst the escape of the German fleet from the superior British firepower at Jutland was effected by the German cruisers and destroyers successfully turning away the British battleships the German attempt to rely on U boat attacks on the British fleet failed 52 Torpedo boats did have some successes against battleships in World War I as demonstrated by the sinking of the British pre dreadnought HMS Goliath by Muavenet i Milliye during the Dardanelles Campaign and the destruction of the Austro Hungarian dreadnought SMS Szent Istvan by Italian motor torpedo boats in June 1918 In large fleet actions however destroyers and torpedo boats were usually unable to get close enough to the battleships to damage them citation needed The only battleship sunk in a fleet action by either torpedo boats or destroyers was the obsolescent German pre dreadnought SMS Pommern She was sunk by destroyers during the night phase of the Battle of Jutland citation needed The German High Seas Fleet for their part were determined not to engage the British without the assistance of submarines and since the submarines were needed more for raiding commercial traffic the fleet stayed in port for much of the war 53 Inter war period Edit For many years Germany simply had no battleships The Armistice with Germany required that most of the High Seas Fleet be disarmed and interned in a neutral port largely because no neutral port could be found the ships remained in British custody in Scapa Flow Scotland The Treaty of Versailles specified that the ships should be handed over to the British Instead most of them were scuttled by their German crews on June 21 1919 just before the signature of the peace treaty The treaty also limited the German Navy and prevented Germany from building or possessing any capital ships 54 Profile drawing of HMS Nelson commissioned 1927 The inter war period saw the battleship subjected to strict international limitations to prevent a costly arms race breaking out 55 Scrapping of battleships in the Philadelphia Navy Yard Pennsylvania in December 1923 While the victors were not limited by the Treaty of Versailles many of the major naval powers were crippled after the war Faced with the prospect of a naval arms race against the United Kingdom and Japan which would in turn have led to a possible Pacific war the United States was keen to conclude the Washington Naval Treaty of 1922 This treaty limited the number and size of battleships that each major nation could possess and required Britain to accept parity with the U S and to abandon the British alliance with Japan 56 The Washington treaty was followed by a series of other naval treaties including the First Geneva Naval Conference 1927 the First London Naval Treaty 1930 the Second Geneva Naval Conference 1932 and finally the Second London Naval Treaty 1936 which all set limits on major warships These treaties became effectively obsolete on September 1 1939 at the beginning of World War II but the ship classifications that had been agreed upon still apply 57 The treaty limitations meant that fewer new battleships were launched in 1919 1939 than in 1905 1914 The treaties also inhibited development by imposing upper limits on the weights of ships Designs like the projected British N3 class battleship the first American South Dakota class and the Japanese Kii class all of which continued the trend to larger ships with bigger guns and thicker armor never got off the drawing board Those designs which were commissioned during this period were referred to as treaty battleships 58 Rise of air power Edit Bombing tests which sank SMS Ostfriesland 1909 September 1921 As early as 1914 the British Admiral Percy Scott predicted that battleships would soon be made irrelevant by aircraft 59 By the end of World War I aircraft had successfully adopted the torpedo as a weapon 60 In 1921 the Italian general and air theorist Giulio Douhet completed a hugely influential treatise on strategic bombing titled The Command of the Air which foresaw the dominance of air power over naval units In the 1920s General Billy Mitchell of the United States Army Air Corps believing that air forces had rendered navies around the world obsolete testified in front of Congress that 1 000 bombardment airplanes can be built and operated for about the price of one battleship and that a squadron of these bombers could sink a battleship making for more efficient use of government funds 61 This infuriated the U S Navy but Mitchell was nevertheless allowed to conduct a careful series of bombing tests alongside Navy and Marine bombers In 1921 he bombed and sank numerous ships including the unsinkable German World War I battleship SMS Ostfriesland and the American pre dreadnought Alabama 62 Although Mitchell had required war time conditions the ships sunk were obsolete stationary defenseless and had no damage control The sinking of Ostfriesland was accomplished by violating an agreement that would have allowed Navy engineers to examine the effects of various munitions Mitchell s airmen disregarded the rules and sank the ship within minutes in a coordinated attack The stunt made headlines and Mitchell declared No surface vessels can exist wherever air forces acting from land bases are able to attack them While far from conclusive Mitchell s test was significant because it put proponents of the battleship against naval aviation on the defensive 2 Rear Admiral William A Moffett used public relations against Mitchell to make headway toward expansion of the U S Navy s nascent aircraft carrier program 63 Rearmament Edit The Royal Navy United States Navy and Imperial Japanese Navy extensively upgraded and modernized their World War I era battleships during the 1930s Among the new features were an increased tower height and stability for the optical rangefinder equipment for gunnery control more armor especially around turrets to protect against plunging fire and aerial bombing and additional anti aircraft weapons Some British ships received a large block superstructure nicknamed the Queen Anne s castle such as in Queen Elizabeth and Warspite which would be used in the new conning towers of the King George V class fast battleships External bulges were added to improve both buoyancy to counteract weight increase and provide underwater protection against mines and torpedoes The Japanese rebuilt all of their battleships plus their battlecruisers with distinctive pagoda structures though the Hiei received a more modern bridge tower that would influence the new Yamato class Bulges were fitted including steel tube arrays to improve both underwater and vertical protection along the waterline The U S experimented with cage masts and later tripod masts though after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor some of the most severely damaged ships such as West Virginia and California were rebuilt with tower masts for an appearance similar to their Iowa class contemporaries Radar which was effective beyond visual range and effective in complete darkness or adverse weather was introduced to supplement optical fire control 64 Even when war threatened again in the late 1930s battleship construction did not regain the level of importance it had held in the years before World War I The building holiday imposed by the naval treaties meant the capacity of dockyards worldwide had shrunk and the strategic position had changed 65 In Germany the ambitious Plan Z for naval rearmament was abandoned in favor of a strategy of submarine warfare supplemented by the use of battlecruisers and commerce raiding in particular by Bismarck class battleships In Britain the most pressing need was for air defenses and convoy escorts to safeguard the civilian population from bombing or starvation and re armament construction plans consisted of five ships of the King George V class It was in the Mediterranean that navies remained most committed to battleship warfare France intended to build six battleships of the Dunkerque and Richelieu classes and the Italians four Littorio class ships Neither navy built significant aircraft carriers The U S preferred to spend limited funds on aircraft carriers until the South Dakota class Japan also prioritising aircraft carriers nevertheless began work on three mammoth Yamatos although the third Shinano was later completed as a carrier and a planned fourth was cancelled 13 At the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War the Spanish navy included only two small dreadnought battleships Espana and Jaime I Espana originally named Alfonso XIII by then in reserve at the northwestern naval base of El Ferrol fell into Nationalist hands in July 1936 The crew aboard Jaime I remained loyal to the Republic killed their officers who apparently supported Franco s attempted coup and joined the Republican Navy Thus each side had one battleship however the Republican Navy generally lacked experienced officers The Spanish battleships mainly restricted themselves to mutual blockades convoy escort duties and shore bombardment rarely in direct fighting against other surface units 66 In April 1937 Espana ran into a mine laid by friendly forces and sank with little loss of life In May 1937 Jaime I was damaged by Nationalist air attacks and a grounding incident The ship was forced to go back to port to be repaired There she was again hit by several aerial bombs It was then decided to tow the battleship to a more secure port but during the transport she suffered an internal explosion that caused 300 deaths and her total loss Several Italian and German capital ships participated in the non intervention blockade On May 29 1937 two Republican aircraft managed to bomb the German pocket battleship Deutschland outside Ibiza causing severe damage and loss of life Admiral Scheer retaliated two days later by bombarding Almeria causing much destruction and the resulting Deutschland incident meant the end of German and Italian participation in non intervention 67 World War II Edit Main article Battleships in World War II See also List of battleships of the Second World War Imperial Japanese Navy s Yamato seen here under air attack in 1945 and her sister ship Musashi 1940 were the heaviest battleships in history Pennsylvania leading battleship Colorado and cruisers Louisville Portland and Columbia into Lingayen Gulf Philippines January 1945 The German battleship Schleswig Holstein an obsolete pre dreadnought fired the first shots of World War II with the bombardment of the Polish garrison at Westerplatte 68 and the final surrender of the Japanese Empire took place aboard a United States Navy battleship USS Missouri Between those two events it had become clear that aircraft carriers were the new principal ships of the fleet and that battleships now performed a secondary role Battleships played a part in major engagements in Atlantic Pacific and Mediterranean theaters in the Atlantic the Germans used their battleships as independent commerce raiders However clashes between battleships were of little strategic importance The Battle of the Atlantic was fought between destroyers and submarines and most of the decisive fleet clashes of the Pacific war were determined by aircraft carriers In the first year of the war armored warships defied predictions that aircraft would dominate naval warfare Scharnhorst and Gneisenau surprised and sank the aircraft carrier Glorious off western Norway in June 1940 69 This engagement marked the only time a fleet carrier was sunk by surface gunnery In the attack on Mers el Kebir British battleships opened fire on the French battleships in the harbor near Oran in Algeria with their heavy guns The fleeing French ships were then pursued by planes from aircraft carriers The subsequent years of the war saw many demonstrations of the maturity of the aircraft carrier as a strategic naval weapon and its effectiveness against battleships The British air attack on the Italian naval base at Taranto sank one Italian battleship and damaged two more The same Swordfish torpedo bombers played a crucial role in sinking the German battleship Bismarck On December 7 1941 the Japanese launched a surprise attack on Pearl Harbor Within a short time five of eight U S battleships were sunk or sinking with the rest damaged All three American aircraft carriers were out to sea however and evaded destruction The sinking of the British battleship Prince of Wales and battlecruiser Repulse demonstrated the vulnerability of a battleship to air attack while at sea without sufficient air cover settling the argument begun by Mitchell in 1921 Both warships were under way and en route to attack the Japanese amphibious force that had invaded Malaya when they were caught by Japanese land based bombers and torpedo bombers on December 10 1941 70 Haruna attacked by U S Navy carrier aircraft at Kure air raid 28 July 1945 At many of the early crucial battles of the Pacific for instance Coral Sea and Midway battleships were either absent or overshadowed as carriers launched wave after wave of planes into the attack at a range of hundreds of miles In later battles in the Pacific battleships primarily performed shore bombardment in support of amphibious landings and provided anti aircraft defense as escort for the carriers Even the largest battleships ever constructed Japan s Yamato class which carried a main battery of nine 18 inch 46 cm guns and were designed as a principal strategic weapon were never given a chance to show their potential in the decisive battleship action that figured in Japanese pre war planning 71 The last battleship confrontation in history was the Battle of Surigao Strait on October 25 1944 in which a numerically and technically superior American battleship group destroyed a lesser Japanese battleship group by gunfire after it had already been devastated by destroyer torpedo attacks All but one of the American battleships in this confrontation had previously been sunk during the attack on Pearl Harbor and subsequently raised and repaired Mississippi fired the last major caliber salvo of this battle 72 In April 1945 during the battle for Okinawa the world s most powerful battleship 73 the Yamato was sent out on a suicide mission against a massive U S force and sunk by overwhelming pressure from carrier aircraft with nearly all hands lost After that Japanese fleet remaining in the mainland was also destroyed by the US naval air force Cold War Edit Operation Crossroads After World War II several navies retained their existing battleships but they were no longer strategically dominant military assets It soon became apparent that they were no longer worth the considerable cost of construction and maintenance and only one new battleship was commissioned after the war HMS Vanguard During the war it had been demonstrated that battleship on battleship engagements like Leyte Gulf or the sinking of HMS Hood were the exception and not the rule and with the growing role of aircraft engagement ranges were becoming longer and longer making heavy gun armament irrelevant The armor of a battleship was equally irrelevant in the face of a nuclear attack as tactical missiles with a range of 100 kilometres 60 mi or more could be mounted on the Soviet Kildin class destroyer and Whiskey class submarines By the end of the 1950s smaller vessel classes such as destroyers which formerly offered no noteworthy opposition to battleships now were capable of eliminating battleships from outside the range of the ship s heavy guns The remaining battleships met a variety of ends USS Arkansas and Nagato were sunk during the testing of nuclear weapons in Operation Crossroads in 1946 Both battleships proved resistant to nuclear air burst but vulnerable to underwater nuclear explosions 74 The Italian battleship Giulio Cesare was taken by the Soviets as reparations and renamed Novorossiysk she was sunk by a leftover German mine in the Black Sea on October 29 1955 The two Andrea Doria class ships were scrapped in 1956 75 The French Lorraine was scrapped in 1954 Richelieu in 1968 76 and Jean Bart in 1970 77 United States Battleship naval fleet in 1987 during the Cold War The United Kingdom s four surviving King George V class ships were scrapped in 1957 78 and Vanguard followed in 1960 79 All other surviving British battleships had been sold or broken up by 1949 80 The Soviet Union s Marat was scrapped in 1953 Parizhskaya Kommuna in 1957 and Oktyabrskaya Revolutsiya back under her original name Gangut since 1942 81 in 1956 57 81 Brazil s Minas Geraes was scrapped in Genoa in 1953 82 and her sister ship Sao Paulo sank during a storm in the Atlantic en route to the breakers in Italy in 1951 82 Argentina kept its two Rivadavia class ships until 1956 and Chile kept Almirante Latorre formerly HMS Canada until 1959 83 The Turkish battlecruiser Yavuz formerly SMS Goeben launched in 1911 was scrapped in 1976 after an offer to sell her back to Germany was refused Sweden had several small coastal defense battleships one of which HSwMS Gustav V survived until 1970 84 The Soviets scrapped four large incomplete cruisers in the late 1950s whilst plans to build a number of new Stalingrad class battlecruisers were abandoned following the death of Joseph Stalin in 1953 85 The three old German battleships Schleswig Holstein Schlesien and Hessen all met similar ends Hessen was taken over by the Soviet Union and renamed Tsel She was scrapped in 1960 Schleswig Holstein was renamed Borodino and was used as a target ship until 1960 Schlesien too was used as a target ship She was broken up between 1952 and 1957 86 USS Missouri launches a Tomahawk missile during Operation Desert Storm The Iowa class battleships gained a new lease of life in the U S Navy as fire support ships Radar and computer controlled gunfire could be aimed with pinpoint accuracy to target The U S recommissioned all four Iowa class battleships for the Korean War and the New Jersey for the Vietnam War These were primarily used for shore bombardment New Jersey firing nearly 6 000 rounds of 16 inch shells and over 14 000 rounds of 5 inch projectiles during her tour on the gunline 87 seven times more rounds against shore targets in Vietnam than she had fired in the Second World War 88 As part of Navy Secretary John F Lehman s effort to build a 600 ship Navy in the 1980s and in response to the commissioning of Kirov by the Soviet Union the United States recommissioned all four Iowa class battleships On several occasions battleships were support ships in carrier battle groups or led their own battleship battle group These were modernized to carry Tomahawk TLAM missiles with New Jersey seeing action bombarding Lebanon in 1983 and 1984 while Missouri and Wisconsin fired their 16 inch 406 mm guns at land targets and launched missiles during Operation Desert Storm in 1991 Wisconsin served as the TLAM strike commander for the Persian Gulf directing the sequence of launches that marked the opening of Desert Storm firing a total of 24 TLAMs during the first two days of the campaign The primary threat to the battleships were Iraqi shore based surface to surface missiles Missouri was targeted by two Iraqi Silkworm missiles with one missing and another being intercepted by the British destroyer HMS Gloucester 89 End of the battleship era Edit The American Texas 1912 is the only preserved example of a Dreadnought type battleship that dates to the time of the original HMS Dreadnought After Indiana was stricken in 1962 the four Iowa class ships were the only battleships in commission or reserve anywhere in the world There was an extended debate when the four Iowa ships were finally decommissioned in the early 1990s USS Iowa and USS Wisconsin were maintained to a standard whereby they could be rapidly returned to service as fire support vessels pending the development of a superior fire support vessel These last two battleships were finally stricken from the U S Naval Vessel Register in 2006 90 91 92 The Military Balance and Russian Foreign Military Review states the U S Navy listed one battleship in the reserve Naval Inactive Fleet Reserve 2nd Turn in 2010 93 94 The Military Balance states the U S Navy listed no battleships in the reserve in 2014 95 When the last Iowa class ship was finally stricken from the Naval Vessel Registry no battleships remained in service or in reserve with any navy worldwide A number are preserved as museum ships either afloat or in drydock The U S has eight battleships on display Massachusetts North Carolina Alabama Iowa New Jersey Missouri Wisconsin and Texas Missouri and New Jersey are museums at Pearl Harbor and Camden New Jersey respectively Iowa is on display as an educational attraction at the Los Angeles Waterfront in San Pedro California Wisconsin now serves as a museum ship in Norfolk Virginia 96 Massachusetts which has the distinction of never having lost a man during service is on display at the Battleship Cove naval museum in Fall River Massachusetts 97 Texas the first battleship turned into a museum is normally on display at the San Jacinto Battleground State Historic Site near Houston but as of 2021 is closed for repairs 98 North Carolina is on display in Wilmington North Carolina Alabama is on display in Mobile Alabama The wreck of Arizona sunk during the Pearl Harbor attack in 1941 is designated a historical landmark and national gravesite The wreck of Utah also sunk during the attack is a historic landmark The only other 20th century battleship on display is the Japanese pre dreadnought Mikasa A replica of the ironclad battleship Dingyuan was built by the Weihai Port Bureau in 2003 and is on display in Weihai China Former battleships that were previously used as museum ships included USS Oregon BB 3 SMS Tegetthoff and SMS Erzherzog Franz Ferdinand Strategy and doctrine EditDoctrine Edit USS Iowa fires a full broadside of her nine 16 50 and six 5 38 guns during a target exercise Battleships were the embodiment of sea power For American naval officer Alfred Thayer Mahan and his followers a strong navy was vital to the success of a nation and control of the seas was vital for the projection of force on land and overseas Mahan s theory proposed in The Influence of Sea Power Upon History 1660 1783 of 1890 dictated the role of the battleship was to sweep the enemy from the seas 99 While the work of escorting blockading and raiding might be done by cruisers or smaller vessels the presence of the battleship was a potential threat to any convoy escorted by any vessels other than capital ships This concept of potential threat can be further generalized to the mere existence as opposed to presence of a powerful fleet tying the opposing fleet down This concept came to be known as a fleet in being an idle yet mighty fleet forcing others to spend time resource and effort to actively guard against it Mahan went on to say victory could only be achieved by engagements between battleships which came to be known as the decisive battle doctrine in some navies while targeting merchant ships commerce raiding or guerre de course as posited by the Jeune Ecole could never succeed 100 Mahan was highly influential in naval and political circles throughout the age of the battleship 2 101 calling for a large fleet of the most powerful battleships possible Mahan s work developed in the late 1880s and by the end of the 1890s it had acquired much international influence on naval strategy 2 in the end it was adopted by many major navies notably the British American German and Japanese The strength of Mahanian opinion was important in the development of the battleships arms races and equally important in the agreement of the Powers to limit battleship numbers in the interwar era The fleet in being suggested battleships could simply by their existence tie down superior enemy resources This in turn was believed to be able to tip the balance of a conflict even without a battle This suggested even for inferior naval powers a battleship fleet could have important strategic effect citation needed Tactics Edit While the role of battleships in both World Wars reflected Mahanian doctrine the details of battleship deployment were more complex Unlike ships of the line the battleships of the late 19th and early 20th centuries had significant vulnerability to torpedoes and mines because efficient mines and torpedoes did not exist before that 102 which could be used by relatively small and inexpensive craft The Jeune Ecole doctrine of the 1870s and 1880s recommended placing torpedo boats alongside battleships these would hide behind the larger ships until gun smoke obscured visibility enough for them to dart out and fire their torpedoes 2 While this tactic was made less effective by the development of smokeless propellant the threat from more capable torpedo craft later including submarines remained By the 1890s the Royal Navy had developed the first destroyers which were initially designed to intercept and drive off any attacking torpedo boats During the First World War and subsequently battleships were rarely deployed without a protective screen of destroyers 103 Battleship doctrine emphasized the concentration of the battlegroup In order for this concentrated force to be able to bring its power to bear on a reluctant opponent or to avoid an encounter with a stronger enemy fleet battlefleets needed some means of locating enemy ships beyond horizon range This was provided by scouting forces at various stages battlecruisers cruisers destroyers airships submarines and aircraft were all used With the development of radio direction finding and traffic analysis would come into play as well so even shore stations broadly speaking joined the battlegroup 104 So for most of their history battleships operated surrounded by squadrons of destroyers and cruisers The North Sea campaign of the First World War illustrates how despite this support the threat of mine and torpedo attack and the failure to integrate or appreciate the capabilities of new techniques 105 seriously inhibited the operations of the Royal Navy Grand Fleet the greatest battleship fleet of its time Strategic and diplomatic impact Edit The presence of battleships had a great psychological and diplomatic impact Similar to possessing nuclear weapons today the ownership of battleships served to enhance a nation s force projection 2 Even during the Cold War the psychological impact of a battleship was significant In 1946 USS Missouri was dispatched to deliver the remains of the ambassador from Turkey and her presence in Turkish and Greek waters staved off a possible Soviet thrust into the Balkan region 106 In September 1983 when Druze militia in Lebanon s Shouf Mountains fired upon U S Marine peacekeepers the arrival of USS New Jersey stopped the firing Gunfire from New Jersey later killed militia leaders 107 Value for money Edit Battleships were the largest and most complex and hence the most expensive warships of their time as a result the value of investment in battleships has always been contested As the French politician Etienne Lamy wrote in 1879 The construction of battleships is so costly their effectiveness so uncertain and of such short duration that the enterprise of creating an armored fleet seems to leave fruitless the perseverance of a people 102 The Jeune Ecole school of thought of the 1870s and 1880s sought alternatives to the crippling expense and debatable utility of a conventional battlefleet It proposed what would nowadays be termed a sea denial strategy based on fast long ranged cruisers for commerce raiding and torpedo boat flotillas to attack enemy ships attempting to blockade French ports The ideas of the Jeune Ecole were ahead of their time it was not until the 20th century that efficient mines torpedoes submarines and aircraft were available that allowed similar ideas to be effectively implemented 102 The determination of powers such as Germany to build battlefleets with which to confront much stronger rivals has been criticized by historians who emphasise the futility of investment in a battlefleet that has no chance of matching its opponent in an actual battle 2 Former operators EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Imperial Chinese Navy lost its two Dingyuan class battleships Dingyuan and Zhenyuan during the Battle of Weihaiwei in 1895 Austro Hungarian Navy lost its entire navy following the collapse of the Empire at the end of World War I Royal Yugoslav Navy its only battleship KB Jugoslavija was sunk by Italian frogmen during the 1918 Raid on Pula Navy of the Ukrainian People s Republic lost its entire navy upon its conquest by the Bolsheviks in 1921 Turkish Navy sole surviving battleship TCG Turgut Reis was decommissioned in 1933 Spanish Navy lost its two surviving Espana class battleships during the Spanish Civil War both in 1937 Hellenic Navy lost its two Mississippi class battleships during the German bombing of Salamis in 1941 Kriegsmarine scuttled its two surviving Deutschland class battleships in 1945 during the closing months of World War II Imperial Japanese Navy surrendered its sole surviving battleship Nagato to the United States following World War II Brazilian Navy decommissioned its last battleship Minas Geraes in 1952 Italian Navy decommissioned its two Andrea Doria class battleships in 1953 Soviet Navy decommissioned its last two Gangut class battleships in 1956 Argentine Navy decommissioned its last battleship ARA Rivadavia in 1957 Chilean Navy decommissioned its last battleship Almirante Latorre in 1958 Royal Navy decommissioned its last battleship HMS Vanguard in 1960 French Navy decommissioned its last battleship Jean Bart in 1970 United States Navy decommissioned its last battleship USS Missouri in 1992 She was the last active battleship of any navy See also Edit Battleships portalArsenal ship List of battleships List of sunken battleships List of ships of the Second World War List of battleships of the Second World WarNotes Edit a b Stoll J Steaming in the Dark Journal of Conflict Resolution Vol 36 No 2 June 1992 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Sondhaus L Naval Warfare 1815 1914 ISBN 0 415 21478 5 Herwig pp 35 41 42 Mahan 1890 Dover 1987 pp 2 3 Preston 1982 p 24 Corbett 2015 Vol II pp 332 333 So was consummated perhaps the most decisive and complete naval victory in history Breyer p 115 Massie 1991 p 471 Friedman 2013 p 68 Captain Pakenham British observer at Tsushima When 12 inch guns are firing 10 inch guns go unnoticed Everything in this war has tended to emphasise the vast importance to a ship of carrying some of the heaviest and furthest shooting guns that can be got into her Corbett 2015 Vol 1 p 380 381 the Russians turned back after Admiral Vitgeft was killed aboard his flagship the battleship Tzesarevich to remain bottled up in Port Arthur pending arrival of the Russian Baltic Fleet in 1905 Known as the Battle of August 10 in Russia Jeremy Black Jutland s Place in History Naval History June 2016 30 3 pp 16 21 O Connell Robert J 1993 Sacred vessels the cult of the battleship and the rise of the U S Navy Oxford Oxfordshire Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 508006 3 page needed a b Lenton H T Krigsfartyg efter 1860 battleship The Oxford English Dictionary 2nd ed 1989 OED Online Oxford University Press April 4 2000 Napoleon 90 guns the first purpose designed screw line of battleships Steam Steel and Shellfire Conway s History of the Ship p 39 Hastened to completion Le Napoleon was launched on May 16 1850 to become the world s first true steam battleship Steam Steel and Shellfire Conway s History of the Ship p 39 Lambert Andrew 1984 Battleships in Transition Conway ISBN 0 85177 315 X pp 144 47 In addition the Navy of the North Germany Confederacy which included Prussia bought HMS Renown from Britain in 1870 for use as a gunnery training ship The canon obusier shell gun originally constructed by Colonel Paixhans for the French Naval Service was subsequently designated the canon obusier of 80 No 1 of 1841 the diameter of the bore is 22 centimetres 8 65 inches From Douglas Sir Howard A Treatise on Naval Gunnery 1855 Conway Maritime Press 1982 reprinting 1855 edition p 201 ISBN 0 85177 275 7 The British undertook trials with shell guns at HMS Excellent starting in 1832 A Treatise on Naval Gunnery 1855 p 198 For the U S introduction of 8 inch shell guns into the armament of line of battle ships in 1841 see Spencer Tucker Arming the Fleet US Navy Ordnance in the Muzzle Loading Era U S Naval Institute Pres 1989 p 149 ISBN 0 87021 007 6 Lambert Andrew D The Crimean War British Grand Strategy Against Russia 1853 56 Manchester University Press 1990 ISBN 0 7190 3564 3 pp 60 61 Lambert Andrew Battleships in Transition pp 92 96 Clowes William Laird Four Modern Naval Campaigns Unit Library 1902 republished Cornmarket Press 1970 ISBN 0 7191 2020 9 p 68 Clowes William Laird Four Modern Naval Campaigns pp 54 55 63 Wilson H W Ironclads in Action Vol 1 London 1898 p 240 Gibbons Tony The Complete Encyclopedia of Battleships pp 28 29 Gibbons pp 30 31 Gibbons p 93 Conway Marine Steam Steel and Shellfire p 96 Gibbons Tony The Complete Encyclopedia of Battleships p 101 Beeler John 2001 Birth of the battleship British capital ship design 1870 1881 Annapoli MD Naval Institute Press p 224 Retrieved October 23 2015 Hill Richard War at Sea in the Ironclad Age ISBN 0 304 35273 X page needed a b Kennedy p 209 Preston Anthony Jane s Fighting Ships of World War II page needed Preston Anthony Battleships of World War I New York Galahad Books 1972 page needed Gibbons p 168 Burgess Heilbrun Edwin Margaret January 11 2013 Dreadnaught Britain Germany and the Coming of the Great War Library Journal 138 18 53 Retrieved October 23 2015 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Cuniberti Vittorio An Ideal Battleship for the British Fleet All The World s Fighting Ships 1903 pp 407 09 Corbett 2015 Vol 1 pp 380 381 Corbett 2015 Vol II p 246 Corbett 2015 Vol II p 445 Evans and Peattie Kaigun p 159 Burr Lawrence 2006 British Battlecruisers 1914 18 Oxford Osprey Publishing pp 4 7 ISBN 978 1 84603 008 6 Gibbons pp 170 71 a b Ireland Bernard Janes War at Sea p 66 Gilbert Adrian 2000 The encyclopedia of warfare from earliest time to the present day Part 25 Taylor amp Francis p 224 ISBN 978 1 57958 216 6 Archived from the original on July 26 2020 Retrieved April 17 2012 Keegan p 289 a b c Are Battleships Obsolete the Wells Brothers 2001 Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved January 15 2015 Ireland Bernard Jane s War At Sea pp 88 95 Padfield 1972 p 240 Andrew Marr s The Making of Modern Britain Episode 3 Massie Robert Castles of Steel London 2005 pp 127 45 Compton Hall Richard 2004 Submarines at War 1914 18 Periscope Publishing Ltd pp 155 62 ISBN 978 1 904381 21 1 Massie Robert Castles of Steel London 2005 pp 675 Kennedy pp 247 49 Ireland Bernard Jane s War At Sea p 118 Friedman Norman U S Battleships pp 181 82 Kennedy p 277 Ireland Bernard Jane s War at Sea pp 124 26 139 42 Sumrall Robert The Battleship and Battlecruiser in Gardiner R The Eclipse of the Big Gun Conway Maritime London ISBN 0 85177 607 8 pp 25 28 Kennedy p 199 From the Guinness Book of Air Facts and Feats 3rd edition 1977 The first air attack using a torpedo dropped by an aeroplane was carried out by Flight Commander Charles H K Edmonds flying a Short 184 seaplane from HMS Ben my Chree on August 12 1915 against a 5 000 ton 5 080 tonne Turkish supply ship in the Sea of Marmara Although the enemy ship was hit and sunk the captain of a British submarine claimed to have fired a torpedo simultaneously and sunk the ship It was further stated that the British submarine E14 had attacked and immobilised the ship four days earlier However on August 17 1915 another Turkish ship was sunk by a torpedo of whose origin there can be no doubt On this occasion Flight Commander C H Edmonds flying a Short 184 torpedoed a Turkish steamer a few miles north of the Dardanelles His formation colleague Flight Lieutenant G B Dacre was forced to land on the water owing to engine trouble but seeing an enemy tug close by taxied up to it and released his torpedo The tug blew up and sank Thereafter Dacre was able to take off and return to the Ben my Chree Boyne Walter J The Spirit of Billy Mitchell Archived June 20 2009 at the Wayback Machine Air Force Magazine June 1996 Vice Admiral Alfred Wilkinson Johnson USN Ret The Naval Bombing Experiments Bombing Operations 1959 History navy mil Archived from the original on April 9 2010 Retrieved January 31 2009 Jeffers H Paul 2006 Billy Mitchell The Life Times and Battles of America s Prophet of Air Power Zenith Press ISBN 0 7603 2080 2 page needed CombinedFleet com Combinedfleet com Archived from the original on February 3 2009 Retrieved January 31 2009 Fuller John 1945 Armament and history a study of the influence of armament on history from the dawn of classical warfare to the second World War by Major General J F C Fuller New York Scribner s Sons Retrieved October 23 2015 Gibbons p 195 Greger Rene Schlachtschiffe der Welt p 251 Gibbons p 163 Gibbons pp 246 47 Axell Albert Kamikaze p 14 Gibbons pp 262 63 Samuel Eliot Morison History of US Naval Operations in World War II Vol 12 Leyte p 226 Jentschura Dieter Mickel p 39 Operation Crossroads the Bikini A bomb tests in Ireland Bernard 1996 Jane s Battleships of the 20th Century New York HarperCollins pp 186 87 ISBN 978 0 00 470997 0 Fitzsimons Bernard ed technical assistance from Bill Gunston Antony Preston amp Ian Hogg Illustrated Encyclopedia of 20th Century Weapons and Warfare London Phoebus 1978 Volume 2 p 114 Fitzsimons Volume 20 p 2213 Richelieu No mention of her sister Jean Bart Gardiner Robert Ed 1980 Conway s All the World s Fighting Ships 1922 1946 ISBN 0 85177 146 7 p 260 Fitzsimons Volume 15 p 1636 King George V Fitzsimons Volume 23 p 2554 Vanguard Gardiner pp 7 14 a b Fitzsimons Volume 10 p 1086 Gangut a b Fitzsimons Volume 17 p 1896 Minas Gerais Fitzsimons Volume 1 p 84 Almirante Latorre Gardiner p 368 McLaughlin Stephen 2006 Jordan John ed Project 82 The Stalingrad Class Warship 2006 London Conway p 117 ISBN 978 1 84486 030 2 Gardiner p 222 Polmar p 129 History of World Seapower Bernard Brett ISBN 0 603 03723 2 p 236 Global Defence Review Defence Power April 26 2009 Archived from the original on April 26 2009 Naval Vessel Register for BB61 U S Navy December 14 2009 Retrieved November 19 2013 Naval Vessel Register for BB64 U S Navy April 30 2012 Retrieved November 19 2013 Iowa Class Battleship Federation of American Scientists Archived from the original on May 31 2009 Retrieved March 18 2007 The Military Balance 2010 Routledge for The International Institute for Strategic Studies 2010 ISBN 978 1857435573 via Google Books TARGET amp ZVO Archived from the original on December 3 2013 Retrieved November 20 2013 The Military Balance 2014 Routledge for The International The International Institute of Strategic Studies 2014 ISBN 978 1857437225 Archived from the original on July 26 2021 Retrieved July 26 2021 via Google Books WCBC files lawsuit Archived April 16 2010 at the Wayback Machine Associated Press April 14 2010 Retrieved April 15 2010 Battleship Cove Exhibits USS Massachusetts Memorial Committee Archived from the original on April 2 2013 Retrieved April 21 2013 Battleship Updates The Battleship Texas Foundation October 9 1921 Archived from the original on October 21 2021 Retrieved October 21 2021 Massie Robert K Castles of Steel London 2005 ISBN 1 84413 411 3 page needed Mahan A T Captain U S Navy Influence of Sea Power on History 1660 1783 Boston Little Brown passim Kennedy pp 2 200 206 a b c Dahl Erik J Autumn 2005 Net Centric before its time The Jeune Ecole and Its Lessons for Today Naval War College Review 58 4 Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved June 29 2015 Battleships Mines and Torpedoes Canadian Magazine 22 501 02 March 1904 Retrieved October 23 2015 It could presage an enemy sortie or locate an enemy over the horizon Beesly Patrick Room 40 London Hamish Hamilton Beesly page needed USS Missouri Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships Naval Historical Center Archived from the original on April 9 2010 Retrieved March 18 2007 USS New Jersey Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships Archived from the original on February 3 2007 Retrieved March 18 2007 References EditAppel Erik et al 2001 Finland i krig 1939 1940 forsta delen in Swedish Espoo Finland Schildts forlag Ab p 261 ISBN 978 951 50 1182 4 Archibald E H H 1984 The Fighting Ship in the Royal Navy 1897 1984 Blandford ISBN 978 0 7137 1348 0 Axell Albert et al 2004 Kamikaze Japans sjalvmordspiloter in Swedish Lund Sweden Historiska media p 316 ISBN 978 91 85057 09 2 Brown D K 2003 Warrior to Dreadnought Warship Development 1860 1905 Book Sales ISBN 978 1 84067 529 0 Brown D K 2003 The Grand Fleet Warship Design and Development 1906 1922 Caxton Editions p 208 ISBN 978 1 84067 531 3 Brunila Kai et al 2000 Finland i krig 1940 1944 andra delen in Swedish Espoo Finland Schildts forlag Ab p 285 ISBN 978 951 50 1140 4 Burr Lawrence 2006 British Battlecruisers 1914 18 New Vanguard No 126 Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84603 008 6 Corbett Sir Julian Maritime Operations in the Russo Japanese War 1904 1905 1994 Originally Classified and in two volumes ISBN 1 55750 129 7 Corbett Sir Julian Maritime Operations in the Russo Japanese War 1904 1905 Volume I 2015 Originally published in January 1914 Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 59114 197 6 Corbett Sir Julian Maritime Operations in the Russo Japanese War 1904 1905 Volume II 2015 Originally published in October 1915 Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 59114 198 3 Friedman Norman 1984 U S Battleships An Illustrated History Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 0 87021 715 9 Friedman Norman 2013 Naval Firepower Battleship Guns and Gunnery in the Dreadnaught Era Seaforth Publishing Great Britain ISBN 978 1 84832 185 4 Gray Randal 1985 Gardiner Robert ed Conway s All the World s Fighting Ships 1906 1921 Naval Institute Press p 439 ISBN 978 0 87021 907 8 Gardiner Robert ed 1980 Conway s All the World s Fighting Ships 1922 1946 Conway Maritime Press ISBN 978 0 85177 146 5 Gardiner Robert Lambert Andrew eds 2001 Steam Steel and Shellfire The steam warship 1815 1905 Conway s History of the Ship Book Sales p 192 ISBN 978 0 7858 1413 9 Gibbons Tony 1983 The Complete Encyclopedia of Battleships and Battlecruisers A Technical Directory of all the World s Capital Ships from 1860 to the Present Day London Salamander Books Ltd p 272 ISBN 978 0 517 37810 6 Greger Rene 1993 Schlachtschiffe der Welt in German Stuttgart Motorbuch Verlag p 260 ISBN 978 3 613 01459 6 Ireland Bernard and Grove Eric 1997 Jane s War at Sea 1897 1997 London Harper Collins Publishers p 256 ISBN 978 0 00 472065 4 Jacobsen Alf R 2005 Dodligt angrepp miniubatsraden mot slagskeppet Tirpitz in Swedish Stockholm Natur amp Kultur p 282 ISBN 978 91 27 09897 8 Jentschura Hansgeorg Jung Dieter Mickel Peter 1976 Warships of the Imperial Japanese Navy 1869 1945 Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 0 87021 893 4 Keegan John 1999 The First World War ISBN 978 0 7126 6645 9 Kennedy Paul M 1983 The Rise and Fall of British Naval Mastery London ISBN 978 0 333 35094 2 Lambert Andrew 1984 Battleships in Transition The Creation of the Steam Battlefleet 1815 1860 London Conway Maritime Press p 161 ISBN 978 0 85177 315 5 Lenton H T 1971 Krigsfartyg efter 1860 in Swedish Stockholm Forum AB p 160 Linder Jan et al 2002 Ofredens hav Ostersjon 1939 1992 in Swedish Avesta Sweden Svenska Tryckericentralen AB p 224 ISBN 978 91 631 2035 0 Mahan Alfred Thayer 1987 The Influence of Sea Power Upon History 1660 1783 New York Dover Publications Inc ISBN 978 0 486 25509 5 Massie Robert 2005 Castles of Steel Britain Germany and the Winning of the Great War at Sea London Pimlico ISBN 978 1 84413 411 3 O Connell Robert L 1991 Sacred Vessels the Cult of the Battleship and the Rise of the U S Navy Boulder CO Westview Press ISBN 978 0 8133 1116 6 Padfield Peter 1972 The Battleship Era London Military Book Society OCLC 51245970 Parkes Oscar 1990 British Battleships first published Seeley Service amp Co 1957 published United States Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 55750 075 5 Pleshakov Constantine 2002 The Tsar s Last Armada The Epic Voyage to the Battle of Tsushima ISBN 978 0 465 05791 7 Polmar Norman The Naval Institute Guide to the Ships and Aircraft of the US Fleet 2001 Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 55750 656 6 Preston Antony 1982 Battleships Bison books ISBN 978 0 86124 063 0 Preston Anthony Foreword 1989 Jane s Fighting Ships of World War II London UK Random House Ltd p 320 ISBN 978 1 85170 494 1 Russel Scott J 1861 The Fleet of the Future London Sondhaus Lawrence 2001 Naval Warfare 1815 1914 London ISBN 978 0 415 21478 0 Sondhaus Lawrence 2004 Navies in Modern World History London ISBN 978 1 86189 202 7 Stilwell Paul 2001 Battleships New York MetroBooks p 160 ISBN 978 1 58663 044 7 Tamelander Michael et al 2006 Slagskeppet Tirpitz kampen om Norra Ishavet in Swedish Norstedts Forlag p 363 ISBN 978 91 1 301554 5 Taylor A J P Red et al 1975 1900 talet Var tids historia i ord och bild Part 12 in Swedish Helsingborg Bokframjandet p 159 Wetterholm Claes Goran 2002 Dodens hav Ostersjon 1945 in Swedish Stockholm Sweden Bokforlaget Prisma p 279 ISBN 978 91 518 3968 4 Wilson H W 1898 Ironclads in Action Vol 1 London Zetterling Niklas et al 2004 Bismarck Kampen om Atlanten in Swedish Stockholm Nordstedts forlag p 312 ISBN 978 91 1 301288 9 Further reading EditBreyer Siegfried 1973 Battleships and Battlecruisers of the world 1905 1970 London Macdonald Jane s ISBN 978 0 356 04191 9 Herwig Holger 1980 Luxury Fleet The Imperial German Navy 1888 1918 Ashfield Press ISBN 978 0 948660 03 0 Mahan Alred Thayer Reflections Historic and Other Suggested by the Battle of the Japan Sea By Captain A T Mahan US Navy US Naval Proceedings magazine June 1906 volume XXXIV number 2 United States Naval Institute Press Massie Robert 1991 Dreadnought Britain Germany and the Coming of the Great War Random House NY ISBN 978 0 394 52833 5 Taylor Bruce ed The world of the battleship The design and careers of capital ships of the world s navies 1900 1950 US Naval Institute Press 2017 224 ppExternal links EditBattleship at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity Comparison of the capabilities of seven World War II battleships Comparison of projected post World War II battleship designs Development of U S battleships with timeline graph Battleships in the Transportation Photographs Collection University of Washington Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battleship amp oldid 1140808150, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.