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Protected cruiser

Protected cruisers, a type of cruising warship of the late-19th century, gained their description because an armoured deck offered protection for vital machine-spaces from fragments caused by shells exploding above them. Protected cruisers resembled armored cruisers, which had in addition a belt of armour along the sides.

The Russian protected cruiser Oleg was a Bogatyr-class protected cruiser

Evolution

 
The protected cruiser Esmeralda, built by the shipyard of the Armstrong House for the Chilean Navy, was the first warship of its kind in the world.

From the late 1850s, navies began to replace their fleets of wooden ships-of-the-line with armoured ironclad warships. However, the frigates and sloops which performed the missions of scouting, commerce raiding and trade protection remained unarmoured. For several decades, it proved difficult to design a ship which had a meaningful amount of effective armour but at the same time maintained the speed and range required of a "cruising warship". The first attempts to do so, large armored cruisers like HMS Shannon, proved unsatisfactory, generally lacking enough speed for their cruiser role. They were, along with their foreign counterparts such as the French Alma class, more like second- or third-class battleships and were very much intended to fulfil this role on foreign stations where full-scale battleships could not be spared or properly supported.

The first protective decks

During the 1870s the increasing power of armour-piercing shells made armouring the sides of a warship more and more difficult, as very thick, heavy armour plates were required. Even if armour dominated the design of the ship, it was likely that the next generation of shells would be able to pierce such armour. This problem was even more poignant where the design of cruising warships was concerned, with their requirement for long endurance needing much of their displacement to be devoted to consumable supplies - even where very powerful & space-consuming high-speed machinery was not required - leaving very little weight available for armour protection. This meant that effective side belt armour would be almost impossible to provide for smaller ships.

The alternative was to leave the sides of the ship vulnerable, but to armour a deck just below the waterline. Since this deck would be struck only very obliquely by shells, it could be less thick and heavy than belt armour. The ship could be designed so that the engines, boilers and magazines were under the armoured deck, and with hopefully enough reserve buoyancy to keep the ship afloat even in the event of flooding resulting from damage above the protective deck.[1] An armoured deck had actually been used for the first time in HMS Shannon, although she did rely principally on her vertical belt armour for defence: Her protective deck was only a partial one, extending from the forward armoured bulkhead of the citadel to the bow.

Early protected cruising ships

The first of the smaller 'unarmoured' British cruisers to incorporate an internal steel deck for protection was the Comus class of corvettes started in 1876; however the deck was again only a partial-length deck, being placed amidships over the machinery spaces. The Comus class were really designed for overseas service and were capable of only a 13-knot (24 km/h; 15 mph) speed, not fast enough for fleet duties. The following Satellite and Calypso classes were similar in performance.

A more potent & versatile balance of attributes was struck with the four Leander-class cruisers. Ordered in 1880 as modified Iris-class dispatch vessels and re-rated as second-class cruisers before completion, these ships combined an amidships protective armoured deck with the size, lean form & high performance of HMS Mercury. They also featured a heavy & well-sited armament of modern breech-loading guns. Leander and her three sisters were successful and established a basis for future Royal Navy cruiser development, through the rest of the century and beyond. Their general configuration was scaled up to the big First Class cruisers and down to the torpedo cruisers, whilst traces of the protected deck scheme can even be recognised in some sloops."[2]

The breakthrough

By the start of the 1880s ships were appearing with full-length armoured decks and no side armour, from the Italia class of very fast battleships to the torpedo ram HMS Polyphemus. In the case of the latter, the armoured deck was of sufficient thickness to defend against small-calibre guns capable of tracking such a difficult, fast target. This was very much the philosophy adopted by George Wightwick Rendel in his design of the so-called 'Rendel Cruisers' Arturo Prat, Chaoyong and Yangwei. By enlarging the flatiron gunboat concept, increasing engine power & thus speed, Rendel was able to produce a fast small vessel and still have enough tonnage to incorporate a very thin (quarter-inch thick) partial protective deck over the machinery. Still small and relatively weakly-built, these vessels were 'proto-protected cruisers' which served as the inspiration for a significantly larger ship; Esmeralda.

He believed the Esmeralda was the swiftest and most powerfully-armed cruiser in the world. Happily ... she had passed into the hands of a nation which is never likely to be at war with England, for he could conceive no more terrible scourge for our commerce than she would be in the hands of an enemy. No cruiser in the British navy was swift enough to catch her or strong enough to take her. We have seen what the Alabama could do ... what might we expect from such an incomparably superior vessel as the Esmeralda[?]

Summary of remarks by William Armstrong published in Valparaiso's The Record[3]

The first true mastless protected cruiser and the first of the 'Elswick cruisers', the Esmeralda was designed by Rendel and built for the Chilean Navy by the British firm of Armstrong at their Elswick yard. Esmeralda was revolutionary; she had a high speed of 18 knots (33 km/h; 21 mph) (dispensing entirely with sails), an armament of two 10-inch (254 mm) & six 6-inch (152 mm) guns and a full-length protective deck. This was up to 2 inches (51 mm) thick on the slopes, with a cork-filled cofferdam along her sides. It would not defend against fire from heavy guns, but was designed to be adequate to defeat any gun of the day considered capable of hitting so fast a ship.

With her heavy emphasis on speed & firepower, Esmeralda set the tone for competitive cruiser designs into the early 20th Century, with 'Elswick cruisers' of a similar design being constructed for Italy, China, Japan, Argentina, Austria and the United States.[4][full citation needed] Cruisers with armoured decks and no side armour - like Esmeralda - became known as "protected cruisers", and rapidly eclipsed the large & slow armoured cruisers during the 1880s and into the 1890s.[5]

The French Navy adopted the protected-cruiser concept wholeheartedly in the 1880s. The Jeune École school of thought, which proposed a navy composed of fast cruisers for commerce raiding and torpedo boats for coastal defence, became particularly influential in France. The first French protected cruiser was Sfax, laid down in 1882, and followed by six classes of protected cruiser – and no armoured cruisers.

Abandonment of side armour

The Royal Navy remained equivocal about which protection scheme to use for cruisers until 1887. The large Imperieuse class, begun in 1881 and finished in 1886, were built as armoured cruisers but were often referred to as protected cruisers due to the limited extent of their side armour - although what armour they had was admittedly very thick. Their primary role, as with the earlier Shannon and Nelsons, was still to function as small battleships on foreign stations, countering enemy stationnaire ironclads rather than chasing down swift commerce-raiding corsairs. While they carried a very thick & heavy armoured belt of great power of resistance that extended over the middle 140 feet (43 m) of the ship's 315-foot (96 m) length, the belt's upper edge was submerged at full load.[6]

Britain built one more class of armoured cruiser with the Orlando class, begun in 1885 and completed in 1889. They were affected by a similar fault to the Imperieuse regarding their belt's submergence. In 1887 an assessment of the Orlando type judged them inferior to the protected cruisers[7] and thereafter the Royal Navy built only protected cruisers, even for very large first-class cruiser designs, not returning to armoured cruisers until the introduction of new lighter and stronger armour technology (as seen in the Cressy class, laid down in 1898).

The sole major naval power to retain a preference for armoured cruisers into the 1890s was Russia. The Imperial Russian Navy laid down four armoured cruisers and one protected cruiser during the late 1880s, all large ships with sails.[8][full citation needed]

 
A schematic section of a protected cruiser illustrating the protection scheme. Red lines delineate the armoured deck and gun-shields, and grey areas represent the protective coal-bunkers. Note that the deck is thickest on the slopes, that the upper coal bunker is divided longitudinally to allow the outer layer of coal to be maintained while the inner bunker is emptied, and the watertight double-bottom.

Elswick's influence on RN designs

Following the Leander class, the next small cruisers designed for the Royal Navy were the Mersey classs of 1883. Derived from the previous class, these were also protected cruisers but with a full-length armoured deck for superior protection. The Merseys were born from a different tactical conception to their forebears and this was reflected in their armament arrangement. They were conceived as 'fleet torpedo cruisers' to carry out attacks on the enemy battle line and featured heavy guns fore &aft with excellent fields of fire. Despite public Admiralty criticism of Elswick designs, it is clear that the Mersey class was heavily influenced by the Italian 'torpedo ram cruiser' Giovanni Bausan, a design itself derived from Esmeralda. Thus, the British notion of the protected cruising warship was being shaped early on by the commercial export models coming out of Elswick. (For the following decade, practically any British cruiser which was seen to have eschewed very heavy firepower in favour of conservative design balance was subject to fierce public criticism, and this period coincided somewhat unfortunately with Sir William White's tenure as DNC.)

The protected cruiser remained a popular & economical type, rather stable in terms of its characteristics, right throughout the 1890s and into the early 1900s. During this period, protected cruiser designs of second- to third-class grew slowly in size, seeing few major changes to the common balance of design features. Perhaps the most significant paradigm shift came with the universal adoption of quick-firing guns by the world's navies in the middle of the 1890s; suddenly small & medium cruisers saw a swift increase in their fighting power for a slight reduction in gun calibre, yielding a very economical balance of attributes. This kept the protected cruiser competitive for a further decade.

Eclipse of the type

By 1910, steel armour had increased in quality, being lighter & stronger than before thanks to metallurgical advances, and steam-turbine engines, lighter and more powerful than previous reciprocating engines, were in general use. This gave rise to a new class of cruising warship, the "light armoured cruisers" which featured a side armoured belt (topped by a flat armoured deck) amidships and sloped armoured decks at the ends, instead of the single full-length curved deck of the older ships. With the introduction of Oil-fired boilers, more effective at generating a constant steam pressure to get the best performance from the turbine engines, side bunkers of coal disappeared from ships and this change removed the protection they had afforded, making the shift to side armour a practical choice.

The majority of pre-existing protected cruisers - products of the Victorian-era design generation - had now become obsolete: With their by-now old and worn engines degrading their already-eclipsed performance by this point; their older models of lower-velocity guns able to shoot accurately to a shorter distance than newer equivalent ships, in a period where long-range fire control was a rapidly-developing discipline with technology to match; and finally - most critically - being less well protected than the new generation of side-armoured ships. From this point on, practically no more protected cruisers would be built for the world's navies.

Protected cruisers in service

Austria-Hungary

The Austro-Hungarian Navy built and operated three classes of protected cruisers. These were two small ships of the Panther class, two ships of the Kaiser Franz Joseph I class and three of the Zenta class.

Britain

The Royal Navy rated cruisers as first, second and third class between the late 1880s and 1905, and built large numbers of them for trade protection requirements. For most of this time these cruisers were built with a "protected", rather than armoured, scheme of protection for their hulls. First-class protected cruisers were as large and as well-armed as armoured cruisers, and were built as an alternative to the large first-class armoured cruiser from the late 1880s till 1898. Second-class protected cruisers were smaller, displacing 3,000–5,500 long tons (3,000–5,600 t) and were of value both in trade protection duties and scouting for the fleet. Third-class cruisers were smaller, lacked a watertight double bottom, and were intended primarily for trade protection duties, though a few small cruisers were built for fleet scout roles or as "torpedo" cruisers during the "protected" era.

The introduction of Krupp armour in six-inch thickness rendered the "armoured" protection scheme more effective for the largest first class cruisers, and no large first class protected cruisers were built after 1898. The smaller cruisers unable to bear the weight of heavy armoured belts retained the "protected" scheme up to 1905, when the last units of the Challenger and Highflyer classes were completed. There was a general hiatus in British cruiser production after this time, apart from a few classes of small, fast scout cruisers for fleet duties. When the Royal Navy began building larger cruisers (less than 4,000 long tons, 4,100 t) again around 1910, they used a mix of armoured decks and/or armoured belts for protection, depending on class. These modern, turbine-powered cruisers are properly classified as light cruisers.

France

The French Navy built and operated a series large variety of protected cruisers classes starting with Sfax in 1882. The last ship built to this design was Jurien de la Gravière in 1897.

Germany

 
Hertha on a visit to the United States in 1909

The German Imperial Navy (Kaiserliche Marine) built a series of protected cruisers in the 1880s and 1890s, starting with the two ships of the Irene class in the 1880s. The Navy completed only two additional classes of protected cruisers, comprising six more ships: the unique Kaiserin Augusta, and the five Victoria Louise-class ships. The type then was superseded by the armored cruiser at the turn of the century, the first of which being Fürst Bismarck. All of these ships tended to incorporate design elements from their foreign contemporaries, though the Victoria Louise class more closely resembled German battleships of the period, which carried lighter main guns and a greater number of secondary guns.[9]

These ships were employed as fleet scouts and colonial cruisers.[10] Several of the ships served with the German East Asia Squadron, and Hertha, Irene, and Hansa took part in the Battle of Taku Forts in 1900 during the Boxer Rebellion.[11] During a deployment to American waters in 1902, Vineta participated in the Venezuelan crisis of 1902–1903, where she bombarded Fort San Carlos.[12] Long since obsolete by the outbreak of World War I, the five Victoria Louise-class vessels briefly served as training ships in the Baltic but were withdrawn by the end of 1914 for secondary duties. Kaiserin Augusta and the two Irene-class cruisers similarly served in reduced capacities for the duration of the war. All eight ships were broken up for scrap following Germany's defeat.[10]

Italy

The Italian Regia Marina (Royal Navy) ordered twenty protected cruisers between the 1880s and 1910s. The first five ships, Giovanni Bausan and the Etna class, were built as "battleship destroyers", armed with a pair of large caliber guns. Subsequent cruisers were more traditional designs, and were instead intended for reconnaissance and colonial duties. Some of the ships, like Calabria and the Campania class, were designed specifically for service in Italy's colonial empire, while others, like Quarto and the Nino Bixio class, were designed as high speed fleet scouts.

Most of these ships saw action during the Italo-Turkish War of 1911–1912, where several of them supported Italian troops fighting in Libya, and another group operated in the Red Sea. There, the cruiser Piemonte and two destroyers sank or destroyed seven Ottoman gunboats in the Battle of Kunfuda Bay in January 1912. Most of the earlier cruisers were obsolescent by the outbreak of World War I, and so had either been sold for scrap or reduced to subsidiary roles. The most modern vessels, including Quarto and the Nino Bixio class, saw limited action in the Adriatic Sea after Italy entered the war in 1915. The surviving vessels continued on in service through the 1920s, with some—Quarto, Campania, and Libia, remaining on active duty into the late 1930s.

Netherlands

 
Dutch protected cruiser Noord-Brabant as an accommodation ship

The Royal Netherlands Navy built several protected cruisers between 1880 and 1900.[13] The first protected cruiser was launched in 1890 and called HNLMS Sumatra. It was a small cruiser with a heavy main gun; four years later a larger and more heavily armed protected cruiser was commissioned, which was called HNLMS Koningin Wilhelmina der Nederlanden. In addition to these two cruisers, the Dutch also built six protected cruisers of the Holland class. The Holland-class cruisers were commissioned between 1898 and 1901, and featured, besides other armaments, two 15 cm SK L/40 single naval guns.

The Dutch protected cruisers have played a role in several international events. For example, during the Boxer Rebellion two protected cruisers (Holland and Koningin Wilhelmina der Nederlanden) were sent to Shanghai to protect European citizens and defend Dutch interests.[14][15]

Russia

The Imperial Russian Navy operated a series of protected cruisers classes (Russian: Бронепалубный крейсер, Armored deck cruiser). The last ships built to this design where the Izumrud class in 1901.

Spain

The Spanish Navy operated a series of protected cruisers classes starting with Reina Regente class. The last ship built to this design was Reina Regente in 1899.

United States

 
USS Atlanta in 1891

The first protected cruiser of the United States Navy's "New Navy" was USS Atlanta,[16] launched in October 1884, soon followed by USS Boston in December, and USS Chicago a year later. A numbered series of cruisers began with Newark (Cruiser No. 1), although Charleston (Cruiser No. 2) was the first to be launched, in July 1888, and ending with another Charleston, Cruiser No. 22, launched in 1904. The last survivor of this series is USS Olympia, preserved as a museum ship in Philadelphia.

The reclassification of 17 July 1920 put an end to the U.S. usage of the term "protected cruiser", the existing ships were classified as light or heavy cruisers with new numbers, depending on their level of armor.[16]

Surviving examples

A few protected cruisers have survived as museum ships, while others were used as breakwaters, some of which can still be seen today.

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Beeler, pp. 42–44
  2. ^ Brown, Warrior to Dreadnought, Warship Development 1860–1905, page 111.
  3. ^ "The 'Esmeralda,'" The Record (Valparaiso) 13, no. 183 (4 December 1884): 5.
  4. ^ Roberts, p. 107
  5. ^ Parkinson, p. 149
  6. ^ Parkes, pp. 309–312
  7. ^ Parkinson, p. 151
  8. ^ Roberts, p. 109
  9. ^ Gardiner, pp. 249–254
  10. ^ a b Gröner, pp. 47–53, 95
  11. ^ Perry, p. 29
  12. ^ "German Commander Blames Venezuelans; Commodore Scheder Says That Fort San Carlos Fired First". The New York Times. 23 January 1903.
  13. ^ Kimenai, Peter (5 August 2012). "Nederlandse pantser – en pantserdekschepen". p. 3.
  14. ^ Ministerie van Buitenlandsche Zaken. Diplomatieke bescheiden – behoorende bij de Staatsbegroting voor het dienstjaar 1901, p. 11.
  15. ^ Nordholt, J. W. Schulte; van Arkel, D., eds. (1970). Acta historiae Neerlandica: Historical studies in the Netherlands. Vol. IV. Brill Publishers. pp. 160–161, 163–164.
  16. ^ a b Early American cruisers 7 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine from the Naval Historical Center. Excluding the larger armored cruiser type, these warships were "protected cruisers", with a steel armored deck covering machinery and ammunition magazines.

References

  • Beeler, John, Birth of the Battleship: British Capital Ship Design 1870–1881. Caxton, London, 2003. ISBN 1-84067-534-9
  • Gardiner, Robert, ed. (1979). Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860–1905. Greenwich: Conway Maritime Press. ISBN 0-8317-0302-4.
  • Gröner, Erich (1990). German Warships 1815–1945. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-790-9.
  • Parkes, Oscar (1990). British Battleships. first published Seeley Service & Co, 1957, published United States Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-075-4.
  • Perry, Michael (2001). Peking 1900: the Boxer Rebellion. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84176-181-7.
  • Parkinson, Roger (2008). The late Victorian Navy: the pre-dreadnought era and the origins of the First World War. Boydell Press. ISBN 978-1-84383-372-7.

Further reading

  • Gardiner, Robert; Lambert, Andrew (2001). Steam, Steel and Shellfire: The Steam Warship, 1815–1905. Book Sales. ISBN 0-7858-1413-2.
  • Sondhaus, Lawrence (2001). Naval Warfare 1815–1914. London. ISBN 0-415-21478-5.

External links

protected, cruiser, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, july, 2. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Protected cruiser news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Protected cruisers a type of cruising warship of the late 19th century gained their description because an armoured deck offered protection for vital machine spaces from fragments caused by shells exploding above them Protected cruisers resembled armored cruisers which had in addition a belt of armour along the sides The Russian protected cruiser Oleg was a Bogatyr class protected cruiser Contents 1 Evolution 1 1 The first protective decks 1 2 Early protected cruising ships 1 3 The breakthrough 1 4 Abandonment of side armour 1 5 Elswick s influence on RN designs 2 Eclipse of the type 3 Protected cruisers in service 3 1 Austria Hungary 3 2 Britain 3 3 France 3 4 Germany 3 5 Italy 3 6 Netherlands 3 7 Russia 3 8 Spain 3 9 United States 4 Surviving examples 5 See also 6 Footnotes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEvolution Edit The protected cruiser Esmeralda built by the shipyard of the Armstrong House for the Chilean Navy was the first warship of its kind in the world From the late 1850s navies began to replace their fleets of wooden ships of the line with armoured ironclad warships However the frigates and sloops which performed the missions of scouting commerce raiding and trade protection remained unarmoured For several decades it proved difficult to design a ship which had a meaningful amount of effective armour but at the same time maintained the speed and range required of a cruising warship The first attempts to do so large armored cruisers like HMS Shannon proved unsatisfactory generally lacking enough speed for their cruiser role They were along with their foreign counterparts such as the French Alma class more like second or third class battleships and were very much intended to fulfil this role on foreign stations where full scale battleships could not be spared or properly supported The first protective decks Edit During the 1870s the increasing power of armour piercing shells made armouring the sides of a warship more and more difficult as very thick heavy armour plates were required Even if armour dominated the design of the ship it was likely that the next generation of shells would be able to pierce such armour This problem was even more poignant where the design of cruising warships was concerned with their requirement for long endurance needing much of their displacement to be devoted to consumable supplies even where very powerful amp space consuming high speed machinery was not required leaving very little weight available for armour protection This meant that effective side belt armour would be almost impossible to provide for smaller ships The alternative was to leave the sides of the ship vulnerable but to armour a deck just below the waterline Since this deck would be struck only very obliquely by shells it could be less thick and heavy than belt armour The ship could be designed so that the engines boilers and magazines were under the armoured deck and with hopefully enough reserve buoyancy to keep the ship afloat even in the event of flooding resulting from damage above the protective deck 1 An armoured deck had actually been used for the first time in HMS Shannon although she did rely principally on her vertical belt armour for defence Her protective deck was only a partial one extending from the forward armoured bulkhead of the citadel to the bow Early protected cruising ships Edit The first of the smaller unarmoured British cruisers to incorporate an internal steel deck for protection was the Comus class of corvettes started in 1876 however the deck was again only a partial length deck being placed amidships over the machinery spaces The Comus class were really designed for overseas service and were capable of only a 13 knot 24 km h 15 mph speed not fast enough for fleet duties The following Satellite and Calypso classes were similar in performance A more potent amp versatile balance of attributes was struck with the four Leander class cruisers Ordered in 1880 as modified Iris class dispatch vessels and re rated as second class cruisers before completion these ships combined an amidships protective armoured deck with the size lean form amp high performance of HMS Mercury They also featured a heavy amp well sited armament of modern breech loading guns Leander and her three sisters were successful and established a basis for future Royal Navy cruiser development through the rest of the century and beyond Their general configuration was scaled up to the big First Class cruisers and down to the torpedo cruisers whilst traces of the protected deck scheme can even be recognised in some sloops 2 The breakthrough Edit By the start of the 1880s ships were appearing with full length armoured decks and no side armour from the Italia class of very fast battleships to the torpedo ram HMS Polyphemus In the case of the latter the armoured deck was of sufficient thickness to defend against small calibre guns capable of tracking such a difficult fast target This was very much the philosophy adopted by George Wightwick Rendel in his design of the so called Rendel Cruisers Arturo Prat Chaoyong and Yangwei By enlarging the flatiron gunboat concept increasing engine power amp thus speed Rendel was able to produce a fast small vessel and still have enough tonnage to incorporate a very thin quarter inch thick partial protective deck over the machinery Still small and relatively weakly built these vessels were proto protected cruisers which served as the inspiration for a significantly larger ship Esmeralda He believed the Esmeralda was the swiftest and most powerfully armed cruiser in the world Happily she had passed into the hands of a nation which is never likely to be at war with England for he could conceive no more terrible scourge for our commerce than she would be in the hands of an enemy No cruiser in the British navy was swift enough to catch her or strong enough to take her We have seen what the Alabama could do what might we expect from such an incomparably superior vessel as the Esmeralda Summary of remarks by William Armstrong published in Valparaiso s The Record 3 The first true mastless protected cruiser and the first of the Elswick cruisers the Esmeralda was designed by Rendel and built for the Chilean Navy by the British firm of Armstrong at their Elswick yard Esmeralda was revolutionary she had a high speed of 18 knots 33 km h 21 mph dispensing entirely with sails an armament of two 10 inch 254 mm amp six 6 inch 152 mm guns and a full length protective deck This was up to 2 inches 51 mm thick on the slopes with a cork filled cofferdam along her sides It would not defend against fire from heavy guns but was designed to be adequate to defeat any gun of the day considered capable of hitting so fast a ship With her heavy emphasis on speed amp firepower Esmeralda set the tone for competitive cruiser designs into the early 20th Century with Elswick cruisers of a similar design being constructed for Italy China Japan Argentina Austria and the United States 4 full citation needed Cruisers with armoured decks and no side armour like Esmeralda became known as protected cruisers and rapidly eclipsed the large amp slow armoured cruisers during the 1880s and into the 1890s 5 The French Navy adopted the protected cruiser concept wholeheartedly in the 1880s The Jeune Ecole school of thought which proposed a navy composed of fast cruisers for commerce raiding and torpedo boats for coastal defence became particularly influential in France The first French protected cruiser was Sfax laid down in 1882 and followed by six classes of protected cruiser and no armoured cruisers Abandonment of side armour Edit The Royal Navy remained equivocal about which protection scheme to use for cruisers until 1887 The large Imperieuse class begun in 1881 and finished in 1886 were built as armoured cruisers but were often referred to as protected cruisers due to the limited extent of their side armour although what armour they had was admittedly very thick Their primary role as with the earlier Shannon and Nelsons was still to function as small battleships on foreign stations countering enemy stationnaire ironclads rather than chasing down swift commerce raiding corsairs While they carried a very thick amp heavy armoured belt of great power of resistance that extended over the middle 140 feet 43 m of the ship s 315 foot 96 m length the belt s upper edge was submerged at full load 6 Britain built one more class of armoured cruiser with the Orlando class begun in 1885 and completed in 1889 They were affected by a similar fault to the Imperieuse regarding their belt s submergence In 1887 an assessment of the Orlando type judged them inferior to the protected cruisers 7 and thereafter the Royal Navy built only protected cruisers even for very large first class cruiser designs not returning to armoured cruisers until the introduction of new lighter and stronger armour technology as seen in the Cressy class laid down in 1898 The sole major naval power to retain a preference for armoured cruisers into the 1890s was Russia The Imperial Russian Navy laid down four armoured cruisers and one protected cruiser during the late 1880s all large ships with sails 8 full citation needed A schematic section of a protected cruiser illustrating the protection scheme Red lines delineate the armoured deck and gun shields and grey areas represent the protective coal bunkers Note that the deck is thickest on the slopes that the upper coal bunker is divided longitudinally to allow the outer layer of coal to be maintained while the inner bunker is emptied and the watertight double bottom Elswick s influence on RN designs Edit Following the Leander class the next small cruisers designed for the Royal Navy were the Mersey classs of 1883 Derived from the previous class these were also protected cruisers but with a full length armoured deck for superior protection The Merseys were born from a different tactical conception to their forebears and this was reflected in their armament arrangement They were conceived as fleet torpedo cruisers to carry out attacks on the enemy battle line and featured heavy guns fore amp aft with excellent fields of fire Despite public Admiralty criticism of Elswick designs it is clear that the Mersey class was heavily influenced by the Italian torpedo ram cruiser Giovanni Bausan a design itself derived from Esmeralda Thus the British notion of the protected cruising warship was being shaped early on by the commercial export models coming out of Elswick For the following decade practically any British cruiser which was seen to have eschewed very heavy firepower in favour of conservative design balance was subject to fierce public criticism and this period coincided somewhat unfortunately with Sir William White s tenure as DNC The protected cruiser remained a popular amp economical type rather stable in terms of its characteristics right throughout the 1890s and into the early 1900s During this period protected cruiser designs of second to third class grew slowly in size seeing few major changes to the common balance of design features Perhaps the most significant paradigm shift came with the universal adoption of quick firing guns by the world s navies in the middle of the 1890s suddenly small amp medium cruisers saw a swift increase in their fighting power for a slight reduction in gun calibre yielding a very economical balance of attributes This kept the protected cruiser competitive for a further decade Eclipse of the type EditBy 1910 steel armour had increased in quality being lighter amp stronger than before thanks to metallurgical advances and steam turbine engines lighter and more powerful than previous reciprocating engines were in general use This gave rise to a new class of cruising warship the light armoured cruisers which featured a side armoured belt topped by a flat armoured deck amidships and sloped armoured decks at the ends instead of the single full length curved deck of the older ships With the introduction of Oil fired boilers more effective at generating a constant steam pressure to get the best performance from the turbine engines side bunkers of coal disappeared from ships and this change removed the protection they had afforded making the shift to side armour a practical choice The majority of pre existing protected cruisers products of the Victorian era design generation had now become obsolete With their by now old and worn engines degrading their already eclipsed performance by this point their older models of lower velocity guns able to shoot accurately to a shorter distance than newer equivalent ships in a period where long range fire control was a rapidly developing discipline with technology to match and finally most critically being less well protected than the new generation of side armoured ships From this point on practically no more protected cruisers would be built for the world s navies Protected cruisers in service EditAustria Hungary Edit See also List of cruisers of Austria Hungary Protected cruisers The Austro Hungarian Navy built and operated three classes of protected cruisers These were two small ships of the Panther class two ships of the Kaiser Franz Joseph I class and three of the Zenta class Britain Edit See also List of cruiser classes of the Royal Navy Protected cruisers The Royal Navy rated cruisers as first second and third class between the late 1880s and 1905 and built large numbers of them for trade protection requirements For most of this time these cruisers were built with a protected rather than armoured scheme of protection for their hulls First class protected cruisers were as large and as well armed as armoured cruisers and were built as an alternative to the large first class armoured cruiser from the late 1880s till 1898 Second class protected cruisers were smaller displacing 3 000 5 500 long tons 3 000 5 600 t and were of value both in trade protection duties and scouting for the fleet Third class cruisers were smaller lacked a watertight double bottom and were intended primarily for trade protection duties though a few small cruisers were built for fleet scout roles or as torpedo cruisers during the protected era The introduction of Krupp armour in six inch thickness rendered the armoured protection scheme more effective for the largest first class cruisers and no large first class protected cruisers were built after 1898 The smaller cruisers unable to bear the weight of heavy armoured belts retained the protected scheme up to 1905 when the last units of the Challenger and Highflyer classes were completed There was a general hiatus in British cruiser production after this time apart from a few classes of small fast scout cruisers for fleet duties When the Royal Navy began building larger cruisers less than 4 000 long tons 4 100 t again around 1910 they used a mix of armoured decks and or armoured belts for protection depending on class These modern turbine powered cruisers are properly classified as light cruisers France Edit See also List of cruisers of France Protected cruisers and light cruisers The French Navy built and operated a series large variety of protected cruisers classes starting with Sfax in 1882 The last ship built to this design was Jurien de la Graviere in 1897 Germany Edit Hertha on a visit to the United States in 1909 Main article List of protected cruisers of Germany The German Imperial Navy Kaiserliche Marine built a series of protected cruisers in the 1880s and 1890s starting with the two ships of the Irene class in the 1880s The Navy completed only two additional classes of protected cruisers comprising six more ships the unique Kaiserin Augusta and the five Victoria Louise class ships The type then was superseded by the armored cruiser at the turn of the century the first of which being Furst Bismarck All of these ships tended to incorporate design elements from their foreign contemporaries though the Victoria Louise class more closely resembled German battleships of the period which carried lighter main guns and a greater number of secondary guns 9 These ships were employed as fleet scouts and colonial cruisers 10 Several of the ships served with the German East Asia Squadron and Hertha Irene and Hansa took part in the Battle of Taku Forts in 1900 during the Boxer Rebellion 11 During a deployment to American waters in 1902 Vineta participated in the Venezuelan crisis of 1902 1903 where she bombarded Fort San Carlos 12 Long since obsolete by the outbreak of World War I the five Victoria Louise class vessels briefly served as training ships in the Baltic but were withdrawn by the end of 1914 for secondary duties Kaiserin Augusta and the two Irene class cruisers similarly served in reduced capacities for the duration of the war All eight ships were broken up for scrap following Germany s defeat 10 Italy Edit Main article List of protected cruisers of Italy The Italian Regia Marina Royal Navy ordered twenty protected cruisers between the 1880s and 1910s The first five ships Giovanni Bausan and the Etna class were built as battleship destroyers armed with a pair of large caliber guns Subsequent cruisers were more traditional designs and were instead intended for reconnaissance and colonial duties Some of the ships like Calabria and the Campania class were designed specifically for service in Italy s colonial empire while others like Quarto and the Nino Bixio class were designed as high speed fleet scouts Most of these ships saw action during the Italo Turkish War of 1911 1912 where several of them supported Italian troops fighting in Libya and another group operated in the Red Sea There the cruiser Piemonte and two destroyers sank or destroyed seven Ottoman gunboats in the Battle of Kunfuda Bay in January 1912 Most of the earlier cruisers were obsolescent by the outbreak of World War I and so had either been sold for scrap or reduced to subsidiary roles The most modern vessels including Quarto and the Nino Bixio class saw limited action in the Adriatic Sea after Italy entered the war in 1915 The surviving vessels continued on in service through the 1920s with some Quarto Campania and Libia remaining on active duty into the late 1930s Netherlands Edit Dutch protected cruiser Noord Brabant as an accommodation ship The Royal Netherlands Navy built several protected cruisers between 1880 and 1900 13 The first protected cruiser was launched in 1890 and called HNLMS Sumatra It was a small cruiser with a heavy main gun four years later a larger and more heavily armed protected cruiser was commissioned which was called HNLMS Koningin Wilhelmina der Nederlanden In addition to these two cruisers the Dutch also built six protected cruisers of the Holland class The Holland class cruisers were commissioned between 1898 and 1901 and featured besides other armaments two 15 cm SK L 40 single naval guns The Dutch protected cruisers have played a role in several international events For example during the Boxer Rebellion two protected cruisers Holland and Koningin Wilhelmina der Nederlanden were sent to Shanghai to protect European citizens and defend Dutch interests 14 15 Russia Edit See also List of cruisers of the Russian Navy Cruisers of the Russian Imperial Navy 1873 1917 The Imperial Russian Navy operated a series of protected cruisers classes Russian Bronepalubnyj krejser Armored deck cruiser The last ships built to this design where the Izumrud class in 1901 Spain Edit See also List of cruisers of Spain Protected cruisers The Spanish Navy operated a series of protected cruisers classes starting with Reina Regente class The last ship built to this design was Reina Regente in 1899 United States Edit See also List of cruisers of the United States Navy Protected and Peace cruisers USS Atlanta in 1891 The first protected cruiser of the United States Navy s New Navy was USS Atlanta 16 launched in October 1884 soon followed by USS Boston in December and USS Chicago a year later A numbered series of cruisers began with Newark Cruiser No 1 although Charleston Cruiser No 2 was the first to be launched in July 1888 and ending with another Charleston Cruiser No 22 launched in 1904 The last survivor of this series is USS Olympia preserved as a museum ship in Philadelphia The reclassification of 17 July 1920 put an end to the U S usage of the term protected cruiser the existing ships were classified as light or heavy cruisers with new numbers depending on their level of armor 16 Surviving examples EditA few protected cruisers have survived as museum ships while others were used as breakwaters some of which can still be seen today Aurora St Petersburg Russia USS Olympia Philadelphia Pennsylvania Chinese cruiser Zhiyuan replica is on display in Dandong China Bow section and bridge of Puglia La Spezia Italy Bow section of HMS Vindictive is on display at Ostend Belgium The hulk of USS Charleston serves as a breakwater in Kelsey Bay on the north coast of Vancouver Island See also EditBattlecruiser Unprotected cruiserFootnotes Edit Beeler pp 42 44 Brown Warrior to Dreadnought Warship Development 1860 1905 page 111 The Esmeralda The Record Valparaiso 13 no 183 4 December 1884 5 Roberts p 107 Parkinson p 149 Parkes pp 309 312 Parkinson p 151 Roberts p 109 Gardiner pp 249 254 a b Groner pp 47 53 95 Perry p 29 German Commander Blames Venezuelans Commodore Scheder Says That Fort San Carlos Fired First The New York Times 23 January 1903 Kimenai Peter 5 August 2012 Nederlandse pantser en pantserdekschepen p 3 Ministerie van Buitenlandsche Zaken Diplomatieke bescheiden behoorende bij de Staatsbegroting voor het dienstjaar 1901 p 11 Nordholt J W Schulte van Arkel D eds 1970 Acta historiae Neerlandica Historical studies in the Netherlands Vol IV Brill Publishers pp 160 161 163 164 a b Early American cruisers Archived 7 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine from the Naval Historical Center Excluding the larger armored cruiser type these warships were protected cruisers with a steel armored deck covering machinery and ammunition magazines References EditBeeler John Birth of the Battleship British Capital Ship Design 1870 1881 Caxton London 2003 ISBN 1 84067 534 9 Gardiner Robert ed 1979 Conway s All the World s Fighting Ships 1860 1905 Greenwich Conway Maritime Press ISBN 0 8317 0302 4 Groner Erich 1990 German Warships 1815 1945 Annapolis MD Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 790 9 Parkes Oscar 1990 British Battleships first published Seeley Service amp Co 1957 published United States Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 55750 075 4 Perry Michael 2001 Peking 1900 the Boxer Rebellion Oxford UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84176 181 7 Parkinson Roger 2008 The late Victorian Navy the pre dreadnought era and the origins of the First World War Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 84383 372 7 Further reading EditGardiner Robert Lambert Andrew 2001 Steam Steel and Shellfire The Steam Warship 1815 1905 Book Sales ISBN 0 7858 1413 2 Sondhaus Lawrence 2001 Naval Warfare 1815 1914 London ISBN 0 415 21478 5 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Protected cruisers Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Protected cruiser amp oldid 1143932621, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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