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Pre-dreadnought battleship

Pre-dreadnought battleships were sea-going battleships built between the mid- to late- 1880s and 1905, before the launch of HMS Dreadnought in 1906.[1] The pre-dreadnought ships replaced the ironclad battleships of the 1870s and 1880s. Built from steel, protected by case-hardened steel armour, and powered by coal-fired triple-expansion steam engines, pre-dreadnought battleships carried a main battery of very heavy guns in fully enclosed rotating turrets supported by one or more secondary batteries of lighter weapons.

USS Texas, built in 1892, was the first pre-dreadnought battleship of the United States Navy. Photochrom print c. 1898.

In contrast to the multifarious development of ironclad warships in preceding decades, the 1890s saw navies worldwide start to build battleships to a common design as dozens of ships essentially followed the design of the Royal Navy's Majestic class.[2] The similarity in appearance of battleships in the 1890s was underlined by the increasing number of ships being built. New naval powers such as Germany, Japan, the United States, and to a lesser extent Italy and Austria-Hungary, began to establish themselves with fleets of pre-dreadnoughts. Meanwhile, the battleship fleets of the United Kingdom, France, and Russia expanded to meet these new threats. The last decisive clash of pre-dreadnought fleets was between the Imperial Japanese Navy and the Imperial Russian Navy at the Battle of Tsushima on 27 May 1905.[3]

HMS Ocean was typical of pre-dreadnought battleships

These battleships were abruptly made obsolete by the arrival of HMS Dreadnought in 1906. Dreadnought followed the trend in battleship design to heavier, longer-ranged guns by adopting an "all-big-gun" armament scheme of ten 12-inch guns. Her innovative steam turbine engines also made her faster.[4] The existing pre-dreadnoughts were decisively outclassed, and new and more powerful battleships were from then on known as dreadnoughts. At the same time, the ships that had been laid down before were designated pre-dreadnoughts.

Evolution

 
HMS Dreadnought shows the low freeboard typical for early ironclad turret-ships. This ship, launched in 1875, should not be confused with her famous successor, launched in 1906, marking the end of the pre-dreadnought era.

The pre-dreadnought developed from the ironclad battleship. The first ironclads—the French Gloire and HMS Warrior—looked much like sailing frigates, with three tall masts and broadside batteries, when they were commissioned in the early 1860s. HMVS Cerberus, the first breastwork monitor, was launched in 1868, followed in 1871 by HMS Devastation, a turreted ironclad which more resembled a pre-dreadnought than the previous, and its contemporary, turretless ironclads. Both ships dispensed with masts and carried four heavy guns in two turrets fore and aft. Devastation was the first ocean-worthy breastwork monitor, built to attack enemy coasts and harbours; because of her very low freeboard, she could not fight on the high seas as her decks would be swept by water and spray, interfering with the working of her guns.[5] Navies worldwide continued to build masted, turretless battleships which had sufficient freeboard and were seaworthy enough to fight on the high seas.

The distinction between coast-assault battleship and cruising battleship became blurred with the Admiral-class ironclads, ordered in 1880. These ships reflected developments in ironclad design, being protected by iron-and-steel compound armour rather than wrought iron. Equipped with breech-loading guns of between 12-inch and 16 ¼-inch (305 mm and 413 mm) calibre, the Admirals continued the trend of ironclad warships mounting gigantic weapons. The guns were mounted in open barbettes to save weight. Some historians see these ships as a vital step towards pre-dreadnoughts; others view them as a confused and unsuccessful design.[6]

 
HMS Ramillies was the fourth ship of the influential Royal Sovereign class. The diagonal tubes are spars for torpedo nets.

The subsequent Royal Sovereign class of 1889 retained barbettes but were uniformly armed with 13.5-inch (343 mm) guns; they were also significantly larger (at 14,000 tons displacement) and faster (because of triple-expansion steam engines) than the Admirals. Just as importantly, the Royal Sovereigns had a higher freeboard, making them unequivocally capable of the high-seas battleship role.[7][8]

The pre-dreadnought design reached maturity in 1895 with the Majestic class.[9] These ships were built and armoured entirely of steel, and their guns were now mounted in fully-enclosed rotating turrets. They also adopted 12-inch (305 mm) main guns, which, because of advances in gun construction and the use of cordite propellant, were lighter and more powerful than the previous guns of larger calibre. The Majestics provided the model for battleship building in the Royal Navy and many other navies for years to come.[10]

Armament

Main battery

 
The heavy guns and forward barbette of Mikasa's main battery

Pre-dreadnoughts carried guns of several different calibres, for different roles in ship-to-ship combat. The main armament was a main battery of four heavy guns, mounted in two centre-line turrets fore and aft. Very few pre-dreadnoughts deviated from this arrangement. These guns were slow-firing, and initially of limited accuracy; but they were the only guns heavy enough to penetrate the thick armour which protected the engines, magazines, and main guns of enemy battleships.[11]

The most common calibre for the main armament was 12-inch (305 mm), although some ships used smaller guns because they could attain higher rates of fire; British battleships from the Majestic class onwards carried this calibre, as did French ships from the Charlemagne class, laid down in 1894. Japan, importing most of its guns from Britain, used 12-inch guns. The United States used both 12-inch (305 mm) and 13-inch (330 mm) guns for most of the 1890s until the Maine class, laid down in 1899 (and not to be confused with the earlier Maine of Spanish–American War notoriety), after which the 12-inch gun was universal. The Russians used both 12 and 10-inch (254 mm) as their main armament; the Petropavlovsk class, Retvizan, Tsesarevich, and Borodino class had 12-inch (305 mm) main batteries while the Peresvet class mounted 10-inch (254 mm) guns. The first German pre-dreadnought class used an 11-inch (279 mm) gun but decreased to a 9.4-inch (239 mm) gun for the two following classes and returned to 11-inch guns with the Braunschweig class.[12]

 
Mikasa, a typical pre-dreadnought in many respects; note the positioning of secondary and tertiary batteries, and the concentration of armour on turrets and engineering spaces
 
HMS Agamemnon, an example of taking the intermediate battery principle to its ultimate expression with ten 9.2-inch guns

While the calibre of the main battery remained quite constant, the performance of the guns improved as longer barrels were introduced. The introduction of slow-burning nitrocellulose and cordite propellant allowed the employment of a longer barrel, and therefore higher muzzle velocity—giving greater range and penetrating power for the same calibre of shell.[13] Between the Majestic class and Dreadnought, the length of the British 12-inch gun increased from 35 calibres to 45 and muzzle velocity increased from 706 metres (2,317 ft) per second to 770 metres (2,525 ft) per second.[14]

Secondary battery

Pre-dreadnoughts also carried a secondary battery. This consisted of smaller guns, typically 6-inch (152 mm), though any calibre from 4 to 9.4 inches (100 to 240 mm) could be used. Virtually all secondary guns were "quick firing", employing a number of innovations to increase the rate of fire. The propellant was provided in a brass cartridge, and both the breech mechanism and the mounting were suitable for rapid aiming and reloading.[15] The role of the secondary battery was to damage the less armoured parts of an enemy battleship; while unable to penetrate the main armour belt, it might score hits on lightly armoured areas like the bridge, or start fires.[11] Equally important, the secondary armament was to be used against enemy cruisers, destroyers, and even torpedo boats. A medium-calibre gun could expect to penetrate the light armour of smaller ships, while the rate of fire of the secondary battery was important in scoring a hit against a small, manoeuvrable target. Secondary guns were mounted in a variety of ways; sometimes carried in turrets, they were just as often positioned in fixed armoured casemates in the side of the hull, or in unarmoured positions on upper decks.

 
USS Indiana, an example of the intermediate battery principle with its forward 13-inch and forward port 8-inch gun turrets

Intermediate battery

Some of the pre-dreadnoughts carried an "intermediate" battery, typically of 8-inch (203 mm) to 10-inch calibre. The intermediate battery was a method of packing more heavy firepower into the same battleship, principally of use against battleships or at long ranges. The United States Navy pioneered the intermediate battery concept in the Indiana, Iowa, and Kearsarge classes, but not in the battleships laid down between 1897 and 1901.[16] Shortly after the USN re-adopted the intermediate battery, the British, Italian, Russian, French, and Japanese navies laid down intermediate-battery ships. This later generation of intermediate-battery ships almost without exception finished building after Dreadnought, and hence were obsolete before completion.[17]

Tertiary battery

The pre-dreadnought's armament was completed by a tertiary battery of light, rapid-fire guns. These could be of any calibre from 3-inch (76 mm) down to machine guns. Their role was to give short-range protection against torpedo boats, or to rake the deck and superstructure of a battleship.[11]

Torpedoes

In addition to their gun armament, many pre-dreadnought battleships were armed with torpedoes, fired from fixed tubes located either above or below the waterline. By the pre-dreadnought era the torpedo was typically 18-inch (457 mm) in diameter and had an effective range of several thousand metres. However, it was virtually unknown for a battleship to score a hit with a torpedo.[18]

Range of combat

During the ironclad age, the range of engagements increased; in the Sino-Japanese War of 1894–95 battles were fought at around 1 mile (1.5 km), while in the Battle of the Yellow Sea in 1904, the Russian and Japanese fleets fought at ranges of 3.5 miles (5.5 km).[19] The increase in engagement range was due in part to the longer range of torpedoes, and in part to improved gunnery and fire control. In consequence, shipbuilders tended towards heavier secondary armament, of the same calibre that the "intermediate" battery had been; the Royal Navy's last pre-dreadnought class, the Lord Nelson class, carried ten 9.2-inch guns as secondary armament. Ships with a uniform, heavy secondary battery are often referred to as "semi-dreadnoughts".[20]

Protection

 
Schematic section of a typical pre-dreadnought battleship with an armoured upper and middle deck and side belt (red), lateral protective coal bunkers (grey), and a double-bottom of watertight compartments. The machinery was arranged in the protected internal void.

Pre-dreadnought battleships carried a considerable weight of steel armour. Experience showed that rather than giving the ship uniform armour protection, it was best to concentrate armour over critical areas. The central section of the hull, which housed the boilers and engines, was protected by the main belt, which ran from just below the waterline to some distance above it. This "central citadel" was intended to protect the engines from even the most powerful shells. The main armament and the magazines were protected by projections of thick armour from the main belt. The beginning of the pre-dreadnought era was marked by a move from mounting the main armament in open barbettes to an all-enclosed, turret mounting.[21]

The main belt armour would normally taper to a lesser thickness along the side of the hull towards bow and stern; it might also taper up from the central citadel towards the superstructure. The deck was typically lightly armoured with 2 to 4 inches of steel.[22] This lighter armour was to prevent high-explosive shells from wrecking the superstructure of the ship.[23]

 
Cross-section view amidships of USS Kearsarge, showing how the armour scheme relates to the innards of the ship

The battleships of the late 1880s, for instance the Royal Sovereign class, were armoured with iron and steel compound armour. This was soon replaced with more effective case-hardened steel armour made using the Harvey process developed in the United States. First tested in 1891, Harvey armour was commonplace in ships laid down from 1893 to 1895.[21] However, its reign was brief; in 1895, the German Kaiser Friedrich III pioneered the superior Krupp armour. Europe adopted Krupp plate within five years, and only the United States persisted in using Harvey steel into the 20th century. The improving quality of armour plate meant that new ships could have better protection from a thinner and lighter armour belt; 12 inches (305 mm) of compound armour provided the same protection as just 7.5 inches (190 mm) of Harvey or 5.75 inches (133 mm) of Krupp.[24]

Propulsion

 
The water-tube boiler was the most efficient method of producing high-pressure steam for pre-dreadnought engines.

Almost all pre-dreadnoughts were powered by reciprocating steam engines. Most were capable of top speeds between 16 and 18 knots (21 mph; 33 km/h).[25] The ironclads of the 1880s used compound engines, and by the end of the 1880s the even-more efficient triple expansion compound engine was in use. Some fleets, though not the British, adopted the quadruple-expansion steam engine.[26]

The main improvement in engine performance during the pre-dreadnought period came from the adoption of increasingly higher pressure steam from the boiler. Scotch marine boilers were superseded by more compact water-tube boilers, allowing higher-pressure steam to be produced with less fuel consumption. Water-tube boilers were also safer, with less risk of explosion, and more flexible than fire-tube types. The Belleville-type water-tube boiler had been introduced in the French fleet as early as 1879, but it took until 1894 for the Royal Navy to adopt it for armoured cruisers and pre-dreadnoughts; other water-tube boilers followed in navies worldwide.[27]

 
The working of a triple-expansion steam engine. High-pressure steam is used three times to produce motive power, gradually cooling as it goes.

The engines drove either two or three screw propellers. France and Germany preferred the three-screw approach, which allowed the engines to be shorter and hence more easily protected; they were also more maneuverable and had better resistance to accidental damage. Triple screws were, however, generally larger and heavier than the twin-screw arrangements preferred by most other navies.[26] The French also built the only class of turbine powered pre-dreadnought battleships, the Danton class of 1907.

Coal was the almost exclusive fuel for the pre-dreadnought period, though navies made the first experiments with oil propulsion in the late 1890s.[28] An extra knot or two of speed could be gained by applying a 'forced draught' to the furnaces, where air was pumped into the furnaces, but this risked damage to the boilers.

Pre-dreadnought fleets and battles

 
Retvizan sinks in Port Arthur, 1904

The pre-dreadnought battleship in its heyday was the core of a very diverse navy. Many older ironclads were still in service. Battleships served alongside cruisers of many descriptions: modern armoured cruisers which were essentially cut-down battleships, lighter protected cruisers, and even older unarmoured cruisers, sloops and frigates whether built out of steel, iron or wood. The battleships were threatened by torpedo boats; it was during the pre-dreadnought era that the first destroyers were constructed to deal with the torpedo-boat threat, though at the same time the first effective submarines were being constructed.[29]

The pre-dreadnought age saw the beginning of the end of the 19th century naval balance of power in which France and Russia vied for competition against the massive Royal Navy, and saw the start of the rise of the 'new naval powers' of Germany, Japan and the United States. The new ships of the Imperial Japanese Navy and to a lesser extent the U.S. Navy supported those powers' colonial expansion.

While pre-dreadnoughts were adopted worldwide, there were no clashes between pre-dreadnought battleships until the very end of their period of dominance. The First Sino-Japanese War in 1894–95 influenced pre-dreadnought development, but this had been a clash between Chinese battleships and a Japanese fleet consisting of mostly cruisers.[30][31] The Spanish–American War of 1898 was also a mismatch, with the American pre-dreadnought fleet engaging Spanish shore batteries at San Juan and then a Spanish squadron of armoured cruisers and destroyers at the Battle of Santiago de Cuba. Not until the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–05 did pre-dreadnoughts engage on an equal footing. This happened in three battles: the Russian tactical victory during the Battle of Port Arthur on 8–9 February 1904,[32] the indecisive Battle of the Yellow Sea on 10 August 1904, and the decisive Japanese victory at the Battle of Tsushima on 27 May 1905. These battles upended prevailing theories of how naval battles would be fought, as the fleets began firing at one another at much greater distances than before; naval architects realized that plunging fire (explosive shells falling on their targets largely from above, instead of from a trajectory close to horizontal) was a much greater threat than had been thought.

Gunboat diplomacy was typically conducted by cruisers or smaller warships. A British squadron of three protected cruisers and two gunboats brought about the capitulation of Zanzibar in 1896; and while battleships participated in the combined fleet Western powers deployed during the Boxer Rebellion, the naval part of the action was performed by gunboats, destroyers and sloops.[33]

Europe

European navies remained dominant in the pre-dreadnought era. The Royal Navy remained the world's largest fleet, though both Britain's traditional naval rivals and the new European powers increasingly asserted themselves against its supremacy.

 
HMS Dominion of the King Edward VII class was launched towards the end of the pre-dreadnought era, in 1903

In 1889, Britain formally adopted a 'two power standard' committing it to building enough battleships to exceed the two largest other navies combined; at the time, this meant France and Russia, who became formally allied in the early 1890s.[34] The Royal Sovereign and Majestic classes were followed by a regular programme of construction at a much quicker pace than in previous years. The Canopus, Formidable, Duncan and King Edward VII classes appeared in rapid succession from 1897 to 1905.[35] Counting two ships ordered by Chile but taken over by the British, the Royal Navy had 39 pre-dreadnought battleships ready or being built by 1904, starting the count from the Majestics. Over two dozen older battleships remained in service. The last British pre-dreadnoughts, the Lord Nelsons, appeared after Dreadnought herself.

France, Britain's traditional naval rival, had paused its battleship building during the 1880s because of the influence of the Jeune École doctrine, which favoured torpedo boats to battleships. After the Jeune École's influence faded, the first French battleship laid down was Brennus, in 1889. Brennus and the ships which followed her were individual, as opposed to the large classes of British ships; they also carried an idiosyncratic arrangement of heavy guns, with Brennus carrying three 13.4-inch (340 mm) guns and the ships which followed carrying two 12-inch and two 10.8-inch guns in single turrets. The Charlemagne class, laid down 1894–1896, were the first to adopt the standard four 12-inch (305 mm) gun heavy armament.[36] The Jeune École retained a strong influence on French naval strategy, and by the end of the 19th century France had abandoned competition with Britain in battleship numbers.[37] The French suffered the most from the dreadnought revolution, with four ships of the Liberté class still building when Dreadnought launched, and a further six of the Danton class begun afterwards.

 
Cross section of a German pre-dreadnought Wittelsbach-class battleship, circa 1914

Germany's first pre-dreadnoughts, the Brandenburg class, were laid down in 1890. By 1905, a further 19 battleships were built or under construction, thanks to the sharp increase in naval expenditure justified by the 1898 and 1900 Navy Laws.[38] This increase was due to the determination of the navy chief Alfred von Tirpitz and the growing sense of national rivalry with the UK. Besides the Brandenburg class, German pre-dreadnoughts include the ships of the Kaiser Friedrich III, Wittelsbach, and Braunschweig classes—culminating in the Deutschland class, which served in both world wars. On the whole, the German ships were less powerful than their British equivalents but equally robust.[39]

 
Radetzky-class battleship, a pre-dreadnought class of the Austro-Hungarian Navy

Russia equally entered into a programme of naval expansion in the 1890s; one of Russia's main objectives was to maintain its interests against Japanese expansion in the Far East. The Petropavlovsk class begun in 1892 took after the British Royal Sovereigns; later ships showed more French influence on their designs, such as the Borodino class. The weakness of Russian shipbuilding meant that many ships were built overseas for Russia; the best ship, the Retvizan, being largely constructed in the United States.[40] The Russo-Japanese War of 1904–05 was a disaster for the Russian pre-dreadnoughts; of the 15 battleships completed since Petropavlovsk, eleven were sunk or captured during the war. One of these, the famous Potemkin, mutinied and was briefly taken over by Romania at the end of the mutiny. However, she was soon recovered and recommissioned as Panteleimon. After the war, Russia completed four more pre-dreadnoughts after 1905.

Between 1893 and 1904, Italy laid down eight battleships; the later two classes of ship were remarkably fast, though the Regina Margherita class was poorly protected and the Regina Elena class lightly armed. In some ways, these ships presaged the concept of the battlecruiser.[41] The Austro-Hungarian Empire also saw a naval renaissance during the 1890s, though of the nine pre-dreadnought battleships ordered only the three of the Habsburg class arrived before Dreadnought herself made them obsolete.

America and the Pacific

 
USS Massachusetts, a pre-dreadnought battleship launched in 1893

The United States started building its first battleships in 1891. These ships were short-range coast-defence battleships that were similar to the British HMS Hood except for an innovative intermediate battery of 8-inch guns. The US Navy continued to build ships that were relatively short-range and poor in heavy seas, until the Virginia class laid down in 1901–02.[16] Nevertheless, it was these earlier ships that ensured American naval dominance against the antiquated Spanish fleet—which included no pre-dreadnoughts—in the Spanish–American War, most notably at the Battle of Santiago de Cuba. The final two classes of American pre-dreadnoughts (the Connecticuts and Mississippis) were completed after the completion of the Dreadnought and after the start of design work on the USN's own initial class of dreadnoughts. The US Great White Fleet of 16 pre-dreadnought battleships circumnavigated the world from 16 December 1907, to 22 February 1909.[42]

 
Japan's Admiral Togo on the bridge of Mikasa just before the Battle of Tsushima

Japan was involved in two of the three major naval wars of the pre-dreadnought era. The first Japanese pre-dreadnought battleships, the Fuji class, were still being built at the outbreak of the First Sino-Japanese War of 1894–95,[43] which saw Japanese armoured cruisers and protected cruisers defeat the Chinese Beiyang Fleet, composed of a mixture of old ironclad battleships and cruisers, at the Battle of the Yalu River. Following their victory, and facing Russian pressure in the region, the Japanese placed orders for four more pre-dreadnoughts; along with the two Fujis these battleships formed the core of the fleet which twice engaged the numerically superior Russian fleets at the Battle of the Yellow Sea and the Battle of Tsushima. After capturing eight Russian battleships of various ages, Japan built several more classes of pre-dreadnoughts after the Russo-Japanese War.

Obsolescence

 
The appearance of HMS Dreadnought in 1906 rendered every other battleship obsolete

In 1906, the commissioning of HMS Dreadnought brought about the obsolescence of all existing battleships. Dreadnought, by scrapping the secondary battery, was able to carry ten 12-inch (305 mm) guns rather than four. She could fire eight heavy guns broadside, as opposed to four from a pre-dreadnought; and six guns ahead, as opposed to two.[44] The move to an 'all-big-gun' design was a logical conclusion of the increasingly long engagement ranges and heavier secondary batteries of the last pre-dreadnoughts; Japan and the United States had designed ships with a similar armament before Dreadnought, but were unable to complete them before the British ship.[45] It was felt that because of the longer distances at which battles could be fought, only the largest guns were effective in battle, and by mounting more 12-inch guns Dreadnought was two to three times more effective in combat than an existing battleship.[46]

The armament of the new breed of ships was not their only crucial advantage. Dreadnought used steam turbines for propulsion, giving her a top speed of 21 knots, against the 18 knots typical of the pre-dreadnought battleships. Able both to outgun and outmaneuver their opponents, the dreadnought battleships decisively outclassed earlier battleship designs.[4]

Nevertheless, pre-dreadnoughts continued in active service and saw significant combat use even when obsolete. Dreadnoughts and battlecruisers were believed vital for the decisive naval battles which at the time all nations expected, hence they were jealously guarded against the risk of damage by mines or submarine attack, and kept close to home as much as possible. The obsolescence and consequent expendability of the pre-dreadnoughts meant that they could be deployed into more dangerous situations and more far-flung areas.[47]

World War I

 
HMS Canopus fires her 12-inch main guns at a Turkish shore battery (1915). Photo by Ernest Brooks.
 
Postcard of USS Connecticut being used for troop transport in 1919

During World War I, a large number of pre-dreadnoughts remained in service. The advances in machinery and armament meant that a pre-dreadnought was not necessarily the equal of even a modern armoured cruiser, and was totally outclassed by a modern dreadnought battleship or battlecruiser. Nevertheless, the pre-dreadnought played a major role in the war.

This was first illustrated in the skirmishes between British and German navies around South America in 1914. While two German cruisers menaced British shipping, the Admiralty insisted that no battlecruisers could be spared from the main fleet and sent to the other side of the world to deal with them. Instead the British dispatched a pre-dreadnought of 1896 vintage, HMS Canopus. Intended to stiffen the British cruisers in the area, in fact her slow speed meant that she was left behind at the disastrous Battle of Coronel. Canopus redeemed herself at the Battle of the Falkland Islands, but only when grounded to act as a harbour-defence vessel; she fired at extreme range (13,500 yards, 12,300 m) on the German cruiser SMS Gneisenau, and while the only hit was from an inert practice shell which had been left loaded from the previous night (the 'live' shells of the salvo broke up on contact with water; one inert shell ricocheted into one of Gneisenau's funnels), this certainly deterred Gneisenau. The subsequent battle was decided by the two Invincible-class battlecruisers which had been dispatched after Coronel.[48] This appears to have been the only meaningful engagement of an enemy ship by a British pre-dreadnought.

In the Black Sea five Russian pre-dreadnoughts saw brief action against the Ottoman battlecruiser Yavuz during the Battle of Cape Sarych in November 1914.

The principle that disposable pre-dreadnoughts could be used where no modern ship could be risked was affirmed by British, French and German navies in subsidiary theatres of war. The German navy used its pre-dreadnoughts frequently in the Baltic campaign. However, the largest number of pre-dreadnoughts was engaged at the Gallipoli campaign. Twelve British and French pre-dreadnoughts formed the bulk of the force which attempted to 'force the Dardanelles' in March 1915. The role of the pre-dreadnoughts was to support the brand-new dreadnought HMS Queen Elizabeth engaging the Turkish shore defences. Three of the pre-dreadnoughts were sunk by mines, and several more badly damaged. However, it was not the damage to the pre-dreadnoughts which led to the operation being called off. The two battlecruisers were also damaged; since Queen Elizabeth could not be risked in the minefield, and the pre-dreadnoughts would be unable to deal with the Turkish battlecruiser lurking on the other side of the straits, the operation had failed.[49] Pre-dreadnoughts were also used to support the Gallipoli landings, with the loss of three more: HMS Goliath, HMS Triumph and HMS Majestic.[50]

A squadron of German pre-dreadnoughts was present at the Battle of Jutland in 1916; German sailors called them the "five-minute ships", which was the amount of time they were expected to survive in a pitched battle.[51] In spite of their limitations, the pre-dreadnought squadron played a useful role. As the German fleet disengaged from the battle, the pre-dreadnoughts risked themselves by turning on the British battlefleet as dark set.[52] Nevertheless, only one of the pre-dreadnoughts was sunk: SMS Pommern went down in the confused night action as the battlefleets disengaged.[53]

Following the November 1918 Armistice, the U.S. Navy converted fifteen older battleships, eight armoured cruisers and two larger protected cruisers for temporary service as transports. These ships made one to six trans-Atlantic round-trips each, bringing home a total of more than 145,000 passengers.[54]

World War II

 
Schlesien and Schleswig-Holstein in port around 1930. Both ships served into World War II.

After World War I, most battleships, dreadnought and pre-dreadnought alike, were disarmed under the terms of the Washington Naval Treaty.[55] Largely this meant the ships being broken up for scrap; others were destroyed in target practice or relegated to training and supply duties. One, Mikasa, was given a special exemption to the Washington Treaty and was maintained as a museum and memorial ship.

Germany, which lost most of its fleet under the terms of the Versailles treaty, was allowed to keep eight pre-dreadnoughts (of which only six could be in active service at any one time) which were counted as armoured coast-defence ships;[56] two of these were still in use at the beginning of World War II. One of these, Schleswig-Holstein, shelled the Polish Westerplatte peninsula, opening the German invasion of Poland and firing the first shots of the Second World War. Schleswig-Holstein served for most of the war as a training ship; she was sunk while under refit in December 1944, and broken up in situ in January 1945. The other, Schlesien, was mined and then scuttled in March 1945.[57]

A number of the inactive or disarmed pre-dreadnoughts were nevertheless sunk in action during World War II, such as the Greek pre-dreadnoughts Kilkis and Lemnos, bought from the U.S. Navy in 1914. While neither of the ships was in active service, they were both sunk by German dive bombers after the German invasion in 1941.[58] In the Pacific, the U.S. Navy submarine USS Salmon sank the disarmed Japanese pre-dreadnought Asahi in May 1942. A veteran of the Battle of Tsushima, she was serving as a repair ship.[59]

Post World War II

No pre-dreadnoughts served post–World War II as armed ships; the last serving pre-dreadnought was the former SMS Hessen, which was used as a target ship by the Soviet Union into the early 1960s as the Tsel. The hull of the former USS Kearsarge served as a crane ship from 1920 until its scrapping in 1955. The hulk of the ex-USS Oregon was used as an ammunition barge at Guam until 1948, after which she was scrapped in 1956.[60]

Lone survivor

 
Mikasa as a museum ship

The only pre-dreadnought preserved today is the Imperial Japanese Navy's flagship at the Battle of Tsushima, Mikasa, which is now located in Yokosuka, where she has been a museum ship since 1925.[61][62][63]

See also

References

  1. ^ The name is also spelled with a capital D: "pre-Dreadnought" (see Bergantín, pp. 267, 273; Beeler, p. 10), and occasionally "pre-Dreadnaught" or some other variation.
  2. ^ Roberts, p. 112.
  3. ^ Forczyk p. 7 and back cover
  4. ^ a b Massie, Dreadnought, pp. 474–475.
  5. ^ Beeler, pp. 93–95; also see p. 169 for a graphic illustration of the problem.
  6. ^ Beeler, pp. 167–168: he cites Oscar Parkes as seeing the similarities between the Admirals and Royal Sovereigns, but disagrees.
  7. ^ Beeler, p. 168.
  8. ^ Gardiner, p. 116.
  9. ^ Roberts, p. 117: "Many regard them as the first true pre-dreadnoughts ..."
  10. ^ Gardiner, p. 117.
  11. ^ a b c Sumrall, p. 14.
  12. ^ Roberts, pp. 117–125.
  13. ^ Roberts, p. 113.
  14. ^ Campbell, p. 169.
  15. ^ Campbell, p. 163.
  16. ^ a b Roberts, p. 122.
  17. ^ Roberts, pp. 125–126.
  18. ^ Hill, p. 155.
  19. ^ Sondhaus, pp. 170, 171, 189.
  20. ^ Roberts, pp. 125–126.
  21. ^ a b Roberts, p. 117.
  22. ^ Roberts, pp. 132–133.
  23. ^ The Eclipse of the Big Gun, p. 8.
  24. ^ Sondhaus, p. 166.
  25. ^ Roberts, p. 132.
  26. ^ a b Roberts, p. 114.
  27. ^ Griffiths, pp. 176–177.
  28. ^ Griffiths, p. 177.
  29. ^ Sondhaus, pp. 155–156, 182–183.
  30. ^ Forczyk p. 21.
  31. ^ Sondhaus, pp. 170–171.
  32. ^ Forczyk p. 43.
  33. ^ Sondhaus, p. 186.
  34. ^ Sondhaus, p. 161.
  35. ^ Sondhaus, pp. 168, 182.
  36. ^ Sondhaus, p. 167.
  37. ^ Sondhaus, p. 181.
  38. ^ Sondhaus, pp. 180–181.
  39. ^ Roberts, p. 125.
  40. ^ Roberts, pp. 120–121.
  41. ^ Roberts, p. 126.
  42. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 August 2009. Retrieved 5 March 2008.
  43. ^ Roberts, p. 123.
  44. ^ Massie, Dreadnought, p. 473.
  45. ^ Sumrall, p. 15; Jentschura, Jung, Mickel p. 23.
  46. ^ Massie, Dreadnought, pp. 471–473.
  47. ^ Massie, Castles of Steel, p. 433.
  48. ^ Bennett, G, Naval Battles of the First World War, p. 114.
  49. ^ Massie, Castles of Steel, pp. 466–467.
  50. ^ Massie, Castles of Steel, pp. 483, 492–493.
  51. ^ Massie, Castles of Steel, p. 564.
  52. ^ Massie, Castles of Steel, p. 634.
  53. ^ Massie, Castles of Steel, p. 648.
  54. ^ . History.Navy.Mil. Archived from the original on 17 April 2009. Retrieved 6 March 2008.
  55. ^ Kennedy, p. 275.
  56. ^ Lenton 1975, p.13.
  57. ^ Chesneau, p. 200.
  58. ^ Chesneau, p. 404.
  59. ^ Jentschura, Jung, Mickel p. 18.
  60. ^ "Oregon" 5 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Washington DC, Naval Historical Center. Retrieved 5 April 2014.
  61. ^ Chesneau and Kolesnik, p. 222.
  62. ^ Chesneau, p. 224.
  63. ^ Corkill, Ednan. "How The Japan Times Saved a Foundering Battleship, Twice". 13 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Japan Times, 18 December 2011. Retrieved 2 August 2012.

Sources

External links

  • British and German Pre-Dreadnoughts
  • US Pre-Dreadnoughts
  • Save the Cerberus

dreadnought, battleship, were, going, battleships, built, between, late, 1880s, 1905, before, launch, dreadnought, 1906, dreadnought, ships, replaced, ironclad, battleships, 1870s, 1880s, built, from, steel, protected, case, hardened, steel, armour, powered, c. Pre dreadnought battleships were sea going battleships built between the mid to late 1880s and 1905 before the launch of HMS Dreadnought in 1906 1 The pre dreadnought ships replaced the ironclad battleships of the 1870s and 1880s Built from steel protected by case hardened steel armour and powered by coal fired triple expansion steam engines pre dreadnought battleships carried a main battery of very heavy guns in fully enclosed rotating turrets supported by one or more secondary batteries of lighter weapons USS Texas built in 1892 was the first pre dreadnought battleship of the United States Navy Photochrom print c 1898 In contrast to the multifarious development of ironclad warships in preceding decades the 1890s saw navies worldwide start to build battleships to a common design as dozens of ships essentially followed the design of the Royal Navy s Majestic class 2 The similarity in appearance of battleships in the 1890s was underlined by the increasing number of ships being built New naval powers such as Germany Japan the United States and to a lesser extent Italy and Austria Hungary began to establish themselves with fleets of pre dreadnoughts Meanwhile the battleship fleets of the United Kingdom France and Russia expanded to meet these new threats The last decisive clash of pre dreadnought fleets was between the Imperial Japanese Navy and the Imperial Russian Navy at the Battle of Tsushima on 27 May 1905 3 HMS Ocean was typical of pre dreadnought battleships These battleships were abruptly made obsolete by the arrival of HMS Dreadnought in 1906 Dreadnought followed the trend in battleship design to heavier longer ranged guns by adopting an all big gun armament scheme of ten 12 inch guns Her innovative steam turbine engines also made her faster 4 The existing pre dreadnoughts were decisively outclassed and new and more powerful battleships were from then on known as dreadnoughts At the same time the ships that had been laid down before were designated pre dreadnoughts Contents 1 Evolution 2 Armament 2 1 Main battery 2 2 Secondary battery 2 3 Intermediate battery 2 4 Tertiary battery 2 5 Torpedoes 2 6 Range of combat 3 Protection 4 Propulsion 5 Pre dreadnought fleets and battles 5 1 Europe 5 2 America and the Pacific 6 Obsolescence 6 1 World War I 6 2 World War II 6 3 Post World War II 7 Lone survivor 8 See also 9 References 10 Sources 11 External linksEvolution Edit HMS Dreadnought shows the low freeboard typical for early ironclad turret ships This ship launched in 1875 should not be confused with her famous successor launched in 1906 marking the end of the pre dreadnought era The pre dreadnought developed from the ironclad battleship The first ironclads the French Gloire and HMS Warrior looked much like sailing frigates with three tall masts and broadside batteries when they were commissioned in the early 1860s HMVS Cerberus the first breastwork monitor was launched in 1868 followed in 1871 by HMS Devastation a turreted ironclad which more resembled a pre dreadnought than the previous and its contemporary turretless ironclads Both ships dispensed with masts and carried four heavy guns in two turrets fore and aft Devastation was the first ocean worthy breastwork monitor built to attack enemy coasts and harbours because of her very low freeboard she could not fight on the high seas as her decks would be swept by water and spray interfering with the working of her guns 5 Navies worldwide continued to build masted turretless battleships which had sufficient freeboard and were seaworthy enough to fight on the high seas The distinction between coast assault battleship and cruising battleship became blurred with the Admiral class ironclads ordered in 1880 These ships reflected developments in ironclad design being protected by iron and steel compound armour rather than wrought iron Equipped with breech loading guns of between 12 inch and 16 inch 305 mm and 413 mm calibre the Admirals continued the trend of ironclad warships mounting gigantic weapons The guns were mounted in open barbettes to save weight Some historians see these ships as a vital step towards pre dreadnoughts others view them as a confused and unsuccessful design 6 HMS Ramillies was the fourth ship of the influential Royal Sovereign class The diagonal tubes are spars for torpedo nets The subsequent Royal Sovereign class of 1889 retained barbettes but were uniformly armed with 13 5 inch 343 mm guns they were also significantly larger at 14 000 tons displacement and faster because of triple expansion steam engines than the Admirals Just as importantly the Royal Sovereigns had a higher freeboard making them unequivocally capable of the high seas battleship role 7 8 The pre dreadnought design reached maturity in 1895 with the Majestic class 9 These ships were built and armoured entirely of steel and their guns were now mounted in fully enclosed rotating turrets They also adopted 12 inch 305 mm main guns which because of advances in gun construction and the use of cordite propellant were lighter and more powerful than the previous guns of larger calibre The Majestics provided the model for battleship building in the Royal Navy and many other navies for years to come 10 Armament EditMain battery Edit The heavy guns and forward barbette of Mikasa s main battery Pre dreadnoughts carried guns of several different calibres for different roles in ship to ship combat The main armament was a main battery of four heavy guns mounted in two centre line turrets fore and aft Very few pre dreadnoughts deviated from this arrangement These guns were slow firing and initially of limited accuracy but they were the only guns heavy enough to penetrate the thick armour which protected the engines magazines and main guns of enemy battleships 11 The most common calibre for the main armament was 12 inch 305 mm although some ships used smaller guns because they could attain higher rates of fire British battleships from the Majestic class onwards carried this calibre as did French ships from the Charlemagne class laid down in 1894 Japan importing most of its guns from Britain used 12 inch guns The United States used both 12 inch 305 mm and 13 inch 330 mm guns for most of the 1890s until the Maine class laid down in 1899 and not to be confused with the earlier Maine of Spanish American War notoriety after which the 12 inch gun was universal The Russians used both 12 and 10 inch 254 mm as their main armament the Petropavlovsk class Retvizan Tsesarevich and Borodino class had 12 inch 305 mm main batteries while the Peresvet class mounted 10 inch 254 mm guns The first German pre dreadnought class used an 11 inch 279 mm gun but decreased to a 9 4 inch 239 mm gun for the two following classes and returned to 11 inch guns with the Braunschweig class 12 Mikasa a typical pre dreadnought in many respects note the positioning of secondary and tertiary batteries and the concentration of armour on turrets and engineering spaces HMS Agamemnon an example of taking the intermediate battery principle to its ultimate expression with ten 9 2 inch guns While the calibre of the main battery remained quite constant the performance of the guns improved as longer barrels were introduced The introduction of slow burning nitrocellulose and cordite propellant allowed the employment of a longer barrel and therefore higher muzzle velocity giving greater range and penetrating power for the same calibre of shell 13 Between the Majestic class and Dreadnought the length of the British 12 inch gun increased from 35 calibres to 45 and muzzle velocity increased from 706 metres 2 317 ft per second to 770 metres 2 525 ft per second 14 Secondary battery Edit Pre dreadnoughts also carried a secondary battery This consisted of smaller guns typically 6 inch 152 mm though any calibre from 4 to 9 4 inches 100 to 240 mm could be used Virtually all secondary guns were quick firing employing a number of innovations to increase the rate of fire The propellant was provided in a brass cartridge and both the breech mechanism and the mounting were suitable for rapid aiming and reloading 15 The role of the secondary battery was to damage the less armoured parts of an enemy battleship while unable to penetrate the main armour belt it might score hits on lightly armoured areas like the bridge or start fires 11 Equally important the secondary armament was to be used against enemy cruisers destroyers and even torpedo boats A medium calibre gun could expect to penetrate the light armour of smaller ships while the rate of fire of the secondary battery was important in scoring a hit against a small manoeuvrable target Secondary guns were mounted in a variety of ways sometimes carried in turrets they were just as often positioned in fixed armoured casemates in the side of the hull or in unarmoured positions on upper decks USS Indiana an example of the intermediate battery principle with its forward 13 inch and forward port 8 inch gun turrets Intermediate battery Edit Some of the pre dreadnoughts carried an intermediate battery typically of 8 inch 203 mm to 10 inch calibre The intermediate battery was a method of packing more heavy firepower into the same battleship principally of use against battleships or at long ranges The United States Navy pioneered the intermediate battery concept in the Indiana Iowa and Kearsarge classes but not in the battleships laid down between 1897 and 1901 16 Shortly after the USN re adopted the intermediate battery the British Italian Russian French and Japanese navies laid down intermediate battery ships This later generation of intermediate battery ships almost without exception finished building after Dreadnought and hence were obsolete before completion 17 Tertiary battery Edit The pre dreadnought s armament was completed by a tertiary battery of light rapid fire guns These could be of any calibre from 3 inch 76 mm down to machine guns Their role was to give short range protection against torpedo boats or to rake the deck and superstructure of a battleship 11 Torpedoes Edit In addition to their gun armament many pre dreadnought battleships were armed with torpedoes fired from fixed tubes located either above or below the waterline By the pre dreadnought era the torpedo was typically 18 inch 457 mm in diameter and had an effective range of several thousand metres However it was virtually unknown for a battleship to score a hit with a torpedo 18 Range of combat Edit During the ironclad age the range of engagements increased in the Sino Japanese War of 1894 95 battles were fought at around 1 mile 1 5 km while in the Battle of the Yellow Sea in 1904 the Russian and Japanese fleets fought at ranges of 3 5 miles 5 5 km 19 The increase in engagement range was due in part to the longer range of torpedoes and in part to improved gunnery and fire control In consequence shipbuilders tended towards heavier secondary armament of the same calibre that the intermediate battery had been the Royal Navy s last pre dreadnought class the Lord Nelson class carried ten 9 2 inch guns as secondary armament Ships with a uniform heavy secondary battery are often referred to as semi dreadnoughts 20 Protection Edit Schematic section of a typical pre dreadnought battleship with an armoured upper and middle deck and side belt red lateral protective coal bunkers grey and a double bottom of watertight compartments The machinery was arranged in the protected internal void Pre dreadnought battleships carried a considerable weight of steel armour Experience showed that rather than giving the ship uniform armour protection it was best to concentrate armour over critical areas The central section of the hull which housed the boilers and engines was protected by the main belt which ran from just below the waterline to some distance above it This central citadel was intended to protect the engines from even the most powerful shells The main armament and the magazines were protected by projections of thick armour from the main belt The beginning of the pre dreadnought era was marked by a move from mounting the main armament in open barbettes to an all enclosed turret mounting 21 The main belt armour would normally taper to a lesser thickness along the side of the hull towards bow and stern it might also taper up from the central citadel towards the superstructure The deck was typically lightly armoured with 2 to 4 inches of steel 22 This lighter armour was to prevent high explosive shells from wrecking the superstructure of the ship 23 Cross section view amidships of USS Kearsarge showing how the armour scheme relates to the innards of the ship The battleships of the late 1880s for instance the Royal Sovereign class were armoured with iron and steel compound armour This was soon replaced with more effective case hardened steel armour made using the Harvey process developed in the United States First tested in 1891 Harvey armour was commonplace in ships laid down from 1893 to 1895 21 However its reign was brief in 1895 the German Kaiser Friedrich III pioneered the superior Krupp armour Europe adopted Krupp plate within five years and only the United States persisted in using Harvey steel into the 20th century The improving quality of armour plate meant that new ships could have better protection from a thinner and lighter armour belt 12 inches 305 mm of compound armour provided the same protection as just 7 5 inches 190 mm of Harvey or 5 75 inches 133 mm of Krupp 24 Propulsion Edit The water tube boiler was the most efficient method of producing high pressure steam for pre dreadnought engines Almost all pre dreadnoughts were powered by reciprocating steam engines Most were capable of top speeds between 16 and 18 knots 21 mph 33 km h 25 The ironclads of the 1880s used compound engines and by the end of the 1880s the even more efficient triple expansion compound engine was in use Some fleets though not the British adopted the quadruple expansion steam engine 26 The main improvement in engine performance during the pre dreadnought period came from the adoption of increasingly higher pressure steam from the boiler Scotch marine boilers were superseded by more compact water tube boilers allowing higher pressure steam to be produced with less fuel consumption Water tube boilers were also safer with less risk of explosion and more flexible than fire tube types The Belleville type water tube boiler had been introduced in the French fleet as early as 1879 but it took until 1894 for the Royal Navy to adopt it for armoured cruisers and pre dreadnoughts other water tube boilers followed in navies worldwide 27 The working of a triple expansion steam engine High pressure steam is used three times to produce motive power gradually cooling as it goes The engines drove either two or three screw propellers France and Germany preferred the three screw approach which allowed the engines to be shorter and hence more easily protected they were also more maneuverable and had better resistance to accidental damage Triple screws were however generally larger and heavier than the twin screw arrangements preferred by most other navies 26 The French also built the only class of turbine powered pre dreadnought battleships the Danton class of 1907 Coal was the almost exclusive fuel for the pre dreadnought period though navies made the first experiments with oil propulsion in the late 1890s 28 An extra knot or two of speed could be gained by applying a forced draught to the furnaces where air was pumped into the furnaces but this risked damage to the boilers Pre dreadnought fleets and battles Edit Retvizan sinks in Port Arthur 1904 The pre dreadnought battleship in its heyday was the core of a very diverse navy Many older ironclads were still in service Battleships served alongside cruisers of many descriptions modern armoured cruisers which were essentially cut down battleships lighter protected cruisers and even older unarmoured cruisers sloops and frigates whether built out of steel iron or wood The battleships were threatened by torpedo boats it was during the pre dreadnought era that the first destroyers were constructed to deal with the torpedo boat threat though at the same time the first effective submarines were being constructed 29 The pre dreadnought age saw the beginning of the end of the 19th century naval balance of power in which France and Russia vied for competition against the massive Royal Navy and saw the start of the rise of the new naval powers of Germany Japan and the United States The new ships of the Imperial Japanese Navy and to a lesser extent the U S Navy supported those powers colonial expansion While pre dreadnoughts were adopted worldwide there were no clashes between pre dreadnought battleships until the very end of their period of dominance The First Sino Japanese War in 1894 95 influenced pre dreadnought development but this had been a clash between Chinese battleships and a Japanese fleet consisting of mostly cruisers 30 31 The Spanish American War of 1898 was also a mismatch with the American pre dreadnought fleet engaging Spanish shore batteries at San Juan and then a Spanish squadron of armoured cruisers and destroyers at the Battle of Santiago de Cuba Not until the Russo Japanese War of 1904 05 did pre dreadnoughts engage on an equal footing This happened in three battles the Russian tactical victory during the Battle of Port Arthur on 8 9 February 1904 32 the indecisive Battle of the Yellow Sea on 10 August 1904 and the decisive Japanese victory at the Battle of Tsushima on 27 May 1905 These battles upended prevailing theories of how naval battles would be fought as the fleets began firing at one another at much greater distances than before naval architects realized that plunging fire explosive shells falling on their targets largely from above instead of from a trajectory close to horizontal was a much greater threat than had been thought Gunboat diplomacy was typically conducted by cruisers or smaller warships A British squadron of three protected cruisers and two gunboats brought about the capitulation of Zanzibar in 1896 and while battleships participated in the combined fleet Western powers deployed during the Boxer Rebellion the naval part of the action was performed by gunboats destroyers and sloops 33 Europe Edit The French battleship Justice at speed European navies remained dominant in the pre dreadnought era The Royal Navy remained the world s largest fleet though both Britain s traditional naval rivals and the new European powers increasingly asserted themselves against its supremacy HMS Dominion of the King Edward VII class was launched towards the end of the pre dreadnought era in 1903 In 1889 Britain formally adopted a two power standard committing it to building enough battleships to exceed the two largest other navies combined at the time this meant France and Russia who became formally allied in the early 1890s 34 The Royal Sovereign and Majestic classes were followed by a regular programme of construction at a much quicker pace than in previous years The Canopus Formidable Duncan and King Edward VII classes appeared in rapid succession from 1897 to 1905 35 Counting two ships ordered by Chile but taken over by the British the Royal Navy had 39 pre dreadnought battleships ready or being built by 1904 starting the count from the Majestics Over two dozen older battleships remained in service The last British pre dreadnoughts the Lord Nelsons appeared after Dreadnought herself France Britain s traditional naval rival had paused its battleship building during the 1880s because of the influence of the Jeune Ecole doctrine which favoured torpedo boats to battleships After the Jeune Ecole s influence faded the first French battleship laid down was Brennus in 1889 Brennus and the ships which followed her were individual as opposed to the large classes of British ships they also carried an idiosyncratic arrangement of heavy guns with Brennus carrying three 13 4 inch 340 mm guns and the ships which followed carrying two 12 inch and two 10 8 inch guns in single turrets The Charlemagne class laid down 1894 1896 were the first to adopt the standard four 12 inch 305 mm gun heavy armament 36 The Jeune Ecole retained a strong influence on French naval strategy and by the end of the 19th century France had abandoned competition with Britain in battleship numbers 37 The French suffered the most from the dreadnought revolution with four ships of the Liberte class still building when Dreadnought launched and a further six of the Danton class begun afterwards Cross section of a German pre dreadnought Wittelsbach class battleship circa 1914 Germany s first pre dreadnoughts the Brandenburg class were laid down in 1890 By 1905 a further 19 battleships were built or under construction thanks to the sharp increase in naval expenditure justified by the 1898 and 1900 Navy Laws 38 This increase was due to the determination of the navy chief Alfred von Tirpitz and the growing sense of national rivalry with the UK Besides the Brandenburg class German pre dreadnoughts include the ships of the Kaiser Friedrich III Wittelsbach and Braunschweig classes culminating in the Deutschland class which served in both world wars On the whole the German ships were less powerful than their British equivalents but equally robust 39 Radetzky class battleship a pre dreadnought class of the Austro Hungarian Navy Russia equally entered into a programme of naval expansion in the 1890s one of Russia s main objectives was to maintain its interests against Japanese expansion in the Far East The Petropavlovsk class begun in 1892 took after the British Royal Sovereigns later ships showed more French influence on their designs such as the Borodino class The weakness of Russian shipbuilding meant that many ships were built overseas for Russia the best ship the Retvizan being largely constructed in the United States 40 The Russo Japanese War of 1904 05 was a disaster for the Russian pre dreadnoughts of the 15 battleships completed since Petropavlovsk eleven were sunk or captured during the war One of these the famous Potemkin mutinied and was briefly taken over by Romania at the end of the mutiny However she was soon recovered and recommissioned as Panteleimon After the war Russia completed four more pre dreadnoughts after 1905 Between 1893 and 1904 Italy laid down eight battleships the later two classes of ship were remarkably fast though the Regina Margherita class was poorly protected and the Regina Elena class lightly armed In some ways these ships presaged the concept of the battlecruiser 41 The Austro Hungarian Empire also saw a naval renaissance during the 1890s though of the nine pre dreadnought battleships ordered only the three of the Habsburg class arrived before Dreadnought herself made them obsolete America and the Pacific Edit USS Massachusetts a pre dreadnought battleship launched in 1893 The United States started building its first battleships in 1891 These ships were short range coast defence battleships that were similar to the British HMS Hood except for an innovative intermediate battery of 8 inch guns The US Navy continued to build ships that were relatively short range and poor in heavy seas until the Virginia class laid down in 1901 02 16 Nevertheless it was these earlier ships that ensured American naval dominance against the antiquated Spanish fleet which included no pre dreadnoughts in the Spanish American War most notably at the Battle of Santiago de Cuba The final two classes of American pre dreadnoughts the Connecticuts and Mississippis were completed after the completion of the Dreadnought and after the start of design work on the USN s own initial class of dreadnoughts The US Great White Fleet of 16 pre dreadnought battleships circumnavigated the world from 16 December 1907 to 22 February 1909 42 Japan s Admiral Togo on the bridge of Mikasa just before the Battle of Tsushima Japan was involved in two of the three major naval wars of the pre dreadnought era The first Japanese pre dreadnought battleships the Fuji class were still being built at the outbreak of the First Sino Japanese War of 1894 95 43 which saw Japanese armoured cruisers and protected cruisers defeat the Chinese Beiyang Fleet composed of a mixture of old ironclad battleships and cruisers at the Battle of the Yalu River Following their victory and facing Russian pressure in the region the Japanese placed orders for four more pre dreadnoughts along with the two Fujis these battleships formed the core of the fleet which twice engaged the numerically superior Russian fleets at the Battle of the Yellow Sea and the Battle of Tsushima After capturing eight Russian battleships of various ages Japan built several more classes of pre dreadnoughts after the Russo Japanese War Obsolescence EditMain article Dreadnought The appearance of HMS Dreadnought in 1906 rendered every other battleship obsolete In 1906 the commissioning of HMS Dreadnought brought about the obsolescence of all existing battleships Dreadnought by scrapping the secondary battery was able to carry ten 12 inch 305 mm guns rather than four She could fire eight heavy guns broadside as opposed to four from a pre dreadnought and six guns ahead as opposed to two 44 The move to an all big gun design was a logical conclusion of the increasingly long engagement ranges and heavier secondary batteries of the last pre dreadnoughts Japan and the United States had designed ships with a similar armament before Dreadnought but were unable to complete them before the British ship 45 It was felt that because of the longer distances at which battles could be fought only the largest guns were effective in battle and by mounting more 12 inch guns Dreadnought was two to three times more effective in combat than an existing battleship 46 The armament of the new breed of ships was not their only crucial advantage Dreadnought used steam turbines for propulsion giving her a top speed of 21 knots against the 18 knots typical of the pre dreadnought battleships Able both to outgun and outmaneuver their opponents the dreadnought battleships decisively outclassed earlier battleship designs 4 Nevertheless pre dreadnoughts continued in active service and saw significant combat use even when obsolete Dreadnoughts and battlecruisers were believed vital for the decisive naval battles which at the time all nations expected hence they were jealously guarded against the risk of damage by mines or submarine attack and kept close to home as much as possible The obsolescence and consequent expendability of the pre dreadnoughts meant that they could be deployed into more dangerous situations and more far flung areas 47 World War I Edit HMS Canopus fires her 12 inch main guns at a Turkish shore battery 1915 Photo by Ernest Brooks Postcard of USS Connecticut being used for troop transport in 1919 During World War I a large number of pre dreadnoughts remained in service The advances in machinery and armament meant that a pre dreadnought was not necessarily the equal of even a modern armoured cruiser and was totally outclassed by a modern dreadnought battleship or battlecruiser Nevertheless the pre dreadnought played a major role in the war This was first illustrated in the skirmishes between British and German navies around South America in 1914 While two German cruisers menaced British shipping the Admiralty insisted that no battlecruisers could be spared from the main fleet and sent to the other side of the world to deal with them Instead the British dispatched a pre dreadnought of 1896 vintage HMS Canopus Intended to stiffen the British cruisers in the area in fact her slow speed meant that she was left behind at the disastrous Battle of Coronel Canopus redeemed herself at the Battle of the Falkland Islands but only when grounded to act as a harbour defence vessel she fired at extreme range 13 500 yards 12 300 m on the German cruiser SMS Gneisenau and while the only hit was from an inert practice shell which had been left loaded from the previous night the live shells of the salvo broke up on contact with water one inert shell ricocheted into one of Gneisenau s funnels this certainly deterred Gneisenau The subsequent battle was decided by the two Invincible class battlecruisers which had been dispatched after Coronel 48 This appears to have been the only meaningful engagement of an enemy ship by a British pre dreadnought In the Black Sea five Russian pre dreadnoughts saw brief action against the Ottoman battlecruiser Yavuz during the Battle of Cape Sarych in November 1914 The principle that disposable pre dreadnoughts could be used where no modern ship could be risked was affirmed by British French and German navies in subsidiary theatres of war The German navy used its pre dreadnoughts frequently in the Baltic campaign However the largest number of pre dreadnoughts was engaged at the Gallipoli campaign Twelve British and French pre dreadnoughts formed the bulk of the force which attempted to force the Dardanelles in March 1915 The role of the pre dreadnoughts was to support the brand new dreadnought HMS Queen Elizabeth engaging the Turkish shore defences Three of the pre dreadnoughts were sunk by mines and several more badly damaged However it was not the damage to the pre dreadnoughts which led to the operation being called off The two battlecruisers were also damaged since Queen Elizabeth could not be risked in the minefield and the pre dreadnoughts would be unable to deal with the Turkish battlecruiser lurking on the other side of the straits the operation had failed 49 Pre dreadnoughts were also used to support the Gallipoli landings with the loss of three more HMS Goliath HMS Triumph and HMS Majestic 50 A squadron of German pre dreadnoughts was present at the Battle of Jutland in 1916 German sailors called them the five minute ships which was the amount of time they were expected to survive in a pitched battle 51 In spite of their limitations the pre dreadnought squadron played a useful role As the German fleet disengaged from the battle the pre dreadnoughts risked themselves by turning on the British battlefleet as dark set 52 Nevertheless only one of the pre dreadnoughts was sunk SMS Pommern went down in the confused night action as the battlefleets disengaged 53 Following the November 1918 Armistice the U S Navy converted fifteen older battleships eight armoured cruisers and two larger protected cruisers for temporary service as transports These ships made one to six trans Atlantic round trips each bringing home a total of more than 145 000 passengers 54 World War II Edit See also List of battleships of the Second World War Schlesien and Schleswig Holstein in port around 1930 Both ships served into World War II After World War I most battleships dreadnought and pre dreadnought alike were disarmed under the terms of the Washington Naval Treaty 55 Largely this meant the ships being broken up for scrap others were destroyed in target practice or relegated to training and supply duties One Mikasa was given a special exemption to the Washington Treaty and was maintained as a museum and memorial ship Germany which lost most of its fleet under the terms of the Versailles treaty was allowed to keep eight pre dreadnoughts of which only six could be in active service at any one time which were counted as armoured coast defence ships 56 two of these were still in use at the beginning of World War II One of these Schleswig Holstein shelled the Polish Westerplatte peninsula opening the German invasion of Poland and firing the first shots of the Second World War Schleswig Holstein served for most of the war as a training ship she was sunk while under refit in December 1944 and broken up in situ in January 1945 The other Schlesien was mined and then scuttled in March 1945 57 A number of the inactive or disarmed pre dreadnoughts were nevertheless sunk in action during World War II such as the Greek pre dreadnoughts Kilkis and Lemnos bought from the U S Navy in 1914 While neither of the ships was in active service they were both sunk by German dive bombers after the German invasion in 1941 58 In the Pacific the U S Navy submarine USS Salmon sank the disarmed Japanese pre dreadnought Asahi in May 1942 A veteran of the Battle of Tsushima she was serving as a repair ship 59 Post World War II Edit No pre dreadnoughts served post World War II as armed ships the last serving pre dreadnought was the former SMS Hessen which was used as a target ship by the Soviet Union into the early 1960s as the Tsel The hull of the former USS Kearsarge served as a crane ship from 1920 until its scrapping in 1955 The hulk of the ex USS Oregon was used as an ammunition barge at Guam until 1948 after which she was scrapped in 1956 60 Lone survivor Edit Mikasa as a museum ship The only pre dreadnought preserved today is the Imperial Japanese Navy s flagship at the Battle of Tsushima Mikasa which is now located in Yokosuka where she has been a museum ship since 1925 61 62 63 See also Edit Battleships portalReferences Edit The name is also spelled with a capital D pre Dreadnought see Bergantin pp 267 273 Beeler p 10 and occasionally pre Dreadnaught or some other variation Roberts p 112 Forczyk p 7 and back cover a b Massie Dreadnought pp 474 475 Beeler pp 93 95 also see p 169 for a graphic illustration of the problem Beeler pp 167 168 he cites Oscar Parkes as seeing the similarities between the Admirals and Royal Sovereigns but disagrees Beeler p 168 Gardiner p 116 Roberts p 117 Many regard them as the first true pre dreadnoughts Gardiner p 117 a b c Sumrall p 14 Roberts pp 117 125 Roberts p 113 Campbell p 169 Campbell p 163 a b Roberts p 122 Roberts pp 125 126 Hill p 155 Sondhaus pp 170 171 189 Roberts pp 125 126 a b Roberts p 117 Roberts pp 132 133 The Eclipse of the Big Gun p 8 Sondhaus p 166 Roberts p 132 a b Roberts p 114 Griffiths pp 176 177 Griffiths p 177 Sondhaus pp 155 156 182 183 Forczyk p 21 Sondhaus pp 170 171 Forczyk p 43 Sondhaus p 186 Sondhaus p 161 Sondhaus pp 168 182 Sondhaus p 167 Sondhaus p 181 Sondhaus pp 180 181 Roberts p 125 Roberts pp 120 121 Roberts p 126 Great White Fleet USS Vermont BB 20 Archived from the original on 8 August 2009 Retrieved 5 March 2008 Roberts p 123 Massie Dreadnought p 473 Sumrall p 15 Jentschura Jung Mickel p 23 Massie Dreadnought pp 471 473 Massie Castles of Steel p 433 Bennett G Naval Battles of the First World War p 114 Massie Castles of Steel pp 466 467 Massie Castles of Steel pp 483 492 493 Massie Castles of Steel p 564 Massie Castles of Steel p 634 Massie Castles of Steel p 648 USN Ship Types World War I Transports Combat Warships employed as Transports History Navy Mil Archived from the original on 17 April 2009 Retrieved 6 March 2008 Kennedy p 275 Lenton 1975 p 13 Chesneau p 200 Chesneau p 404 Jentschura Jung Mickel p 18 Oregon Archived 5 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships Washington DC Naval Historical Center Retrieved 5 April 2014 Chesneau and Kolesnik p 222 Chesneau p 224 Corkill Ednan How The Japan Times Saved a Foundering Battleship Twice Archived 13 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Japan Times 18 December 2011 Retrieved 2 August 2012 Sources EditBeeler John Birth of the Battleship British Capital Ship Design 1870 1881 Caxton London 2003 ISBN 1 84067 534 9 Burt R A British Battleships 1889 1904 Annapolis MD Naval Institute Press 1988 ISBN 0 87021 061 0 Chesneau Roger and Kolesnik Eugene M eds Conway s All the World s Fighting Ships 1860 1905 Greenwich UK Conway Maritime Press 1979 ISBN 0 8317 0302 4 Chesneau Roger ed Conway s All the World s Fighting Ships 1922 1946 London Conway 1980 ISBN 0 85177 146 7 Forczyk Robert Russian Battleship vs Japanese Battleship Yellow Sea 1904 05 Osprey 2009 ISBN 978 1 84603 330 8 Gardiner Robert and Lambert Andrew Steam Steel and Shellfire The Steam Warship 1815 1905 Conways London 2001 ISBN 0 7858 1413 2 Roberts J The Pre Dreadnought Age in Gardiner Steam Steel and Shellfire Campbell J Naval Armaments and Armour in Gardiner Steam Steel and Shellfire Griffiths D Warship Machinery in Gardiner Steam Steel and Shellfire Gardiner Robert The Eclipse of the Big Gun The Warship 1906 45 Conways London 1992 ISBN 0 85177 607 8 Sumrall R The Battleship and Battlecruiser in Gardiner Eclipse of the Big Gun Hill Robert War at Sea in the Ironclad Age Cassell London 2000 ISBN 0 304 35273 X Jentschura Jung amp Mickel Warships of the Imperial Japanese Navy 1869 1946 ISBN 0 85368 151 1 Keegan J The First World War Pimlico London 1999 ISBN 0 7126 6645 1 Kennedy Paul M The Rise and Fall of British Naval Mastery Macmillan London 1983 ISBN 0 333 35094 4 Lenton H T German Warships of the Second World War London Macdonald and Jane s 1975 ISBN 0 356 04661 3 Massie Robert K Dreadnought Britain Germany and the Coming of the Great War Pimlico London 2004 ISBN 978 1 84413 528 8 Massie Robert K Castles of Steel Britain Germany and the Winning of the Great War at Sea Pimlico London 2005 ISBN 1 84413 411 3 Sondhaus Lawrence Naval Warfare 1815 1914 Routledge London 2001 ISBN 0 415 21478 5External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pre dreadnought battleships British and German Pre Dreadnoughts Pre Dreadnoughts in WWII US Pre Dreadnoughts Save the Cerberus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pre dreadnought battleship amp oldid 1137024141, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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