Powerful-class cruiser
Template:Short description Template:Good article Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English
Template:Infobox ship imageTemplate:Infobox ship class overviewTemplate:Infobox ship characteristicsThe Powerful class were a pair of first-class protected cruisers built for the Royal Navy (RN) in the 1890s, designed to hunt down enemy commerce raiders. Both ships served on the China Station and participated in the Second Boer War of 1899–1900. Template:HMS went on to help suppress the Boxer Rebellion a few months later. Template:HMS served as the flagship of the Australia Station in 1905–1912; shortly after her return home, she became a training ship and remained in that role until she was sold for scrap in 1929. Terrible was mostly in reserve after she returned home in 1902 and was often used as an accommodation ship. During the First World War she was disarmed and made one voyage as a troop transport in 1915. The ship became a depot ship when she returned home and then became a training ship in 1918. Terrible was sold for scrap in 1932.
Background
The impetus for the construction of the Powerful class began with the laying down the Russian armoured cruiser Script error: No such module "WPSHIPS utilities".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". in 1890 that was intended to be used as a commerce raider, although the Admiralty was fully occupied with the extensive naval construction mandated by the Naval Defence Act 1889 and could do nothing in response at that time. Some preliminary discussions occurred in November 1891, but it was not until the following year that William White, the Director of Naval Construction, was told to prepare sketch designs for a ship more heavily armed, at least as well armoured, faster and with greater endurance than Rurik and her successors. Russian attempts to seize fast ocean liners in 1885 and convert them into armed merchant cruisers also dictated that the new ships needed to be fast enough to catch them.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
White's preliminary studies had led him to the conclusion a very large amount of coal would be needed to permit a high-speed pursuit of a commerce raider without losing time to re-coal, coupled with the large number of boilers needed to achieve the speed required, which meant that a very large ship was necessary, more than Template:Convert longer than the Template:Sclasss then under construction. To ensure that the cruisers could maintain high speed in bad weather, White gave them a high freeboard which made them very seaworthy. White believed that the design required lightweight, efficient Belleville water-tube boilers if it was to achieve its requirements, but conservatives in Parliament and the Admiralty resisted the idea, given the RN's failures with water-tube boilers in the past, until extensive trials were conducted by the torpedo gunboat Template:HMS and proved to be a complete success. The Admiralty approved the design on 23 October 1893 and they were ordered in the 1893–1894 Naval Estimates.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Observers criticised these ships for their light armament given their size in the magazine The Engineer. White rebutted their arguments by pointing out that it was impossible to add additional ammunition which made the addition of more guns pointless. He added that the armament of the Powerfuls "accounted for 27 per cent more of the displacement than the preceding Template:Sclass, and was protected by Template:Convert of armour, as against Template:Convert in the Edgars."Template:Sfn The Admiralty did not find the ships satisfactory as they required a crew 64 per cent larger than the Edgars, cost 61 per cent more and had very nearly the same armament. Naval historian Antony Preston commented: "The Powerful and Terrible also mark the extreme folly of building cruisers to match specific opponents. In practice the intended opponents never meet, and it is always wiser to build affordable ships in large numbers. No navy could afford to build large numbers of the Powerful type, and even the British Empire at the height of its power found them too expensive."Template:Sfn
Description
The Powerful class displaced Template:Convert at normal load. They had an overall length of Template:Convert, a beam of Template:Convert and a draught of Template:Convert.Template:Sfn As they were intended for overseas service their steel hulls were sheathed in wood to prevent biofouling. The hull had a double bottom and was subdivided into 236 watertight compartments. At deep load, Terrible had a metacentric height of Template:Convert while PowerfulTemplate:'s was Template:Convert.Template:Sfn Their designed complement consisted of 894 officers and ratings, the largest crew in the RN at that time.Template:Sfn
The ships were propelled by a pair of vertical inverted four-cylinder triple-expansion steam engines, each driving one Template:Convert propeller, using steam provided by 48 Belleville boilers with a working pressure of Template:Convert.Template:Sfn These were the first cruisers in the Royal Navy with four funnels.Template:Sfn Their engines were designed to produce a total of Template:Convert using forced draughtTemplate:Sfn for a maximum speed of Template:Convert. The ships reached a maximum speeds of Template:Convert from Template:Cvt during their sea trials.Template:Sfn They normally carried Template:Convert of coal which gave them a range of Template:Cvt at Template:Convert, but they had a maximum capacity of Template:Convert, the largest coal bunkers of any ship in the RN at that time.Template:Sfn
Armament and protection
The main armament of the Powerful-class cruisers consisted of two 40-calibre BL [[BL 9.2-inch Mk VIII naval gun|Template:Convert Mk VIII guns]] in single gun turrets, one each fore and aft of the superstructure.Template:Sfn The mounts could elevate up to +15° and the guns fired a Template:Convert projectile with a muzzle velocity of Template:Convert to a maximum range of Template:Convert.Template:Sfn Their secondary armament of a dozen 40-calibre quick-firing (QF) [[QF 6 inch /40 naval gun|Template:Convert Mk I or II guns]] was arranged in casemates amidships. The end casemates were the first two-storey (guns on the main and upper decks) casemates in the RN.Template:Sfn The guns had a maximum range of Template:ConvertTemplate:Sfn at an elevation of 15° from their Template:Convert shell at a muzzle velocity of Template:Convert.Template:Sfn
For defence against torpedo boats, sixteen [[QF 12 pounder 12 cwt naval gun|12-pounder (Template:Convert) 12-cwt]][Note 1] guns were fitted. Eight of these guns were mounted in embrasures at the ships' bow and stern on the main and upper decks and the remaining eight guns were placed amidships on the upper deck.Template:Sfn Their Template:Convert shells had a range of Template:Convert at an elevation of 20° at a muzzle velocity of Template:Convert.Template:Sfn The ships were equipped with a dozen [[QF 3-pounder Hotchkiss|3-pounder (Template:Cvt)]] Hotchkiss guns mounted in the pair of fighting tops on the military fore and mainmasts. Two additional 12-pounder 8-cwt guns could be dismounted for service ashore. The ships also mounted four submerged 18-inch (450 mm) torpedo tubes, a pair on each broadside.Template:Sfn
The ships generally used Harvey armour. The gun turrets were 6 inches thick on their face and sides, with a Template:Convert roof. Their barbettes and the casemates were protected by 6-inch armour plates and the latter had Template:Convert rear plates. The conning tower was protected by Template:Convert plates.Template:Sfn They had a curved armoured deck that had its crown in the middle of the ship Template:Convert above the waterline, and the edges were Template:Convert below the waterline. The deck was Template:Convert thick over the machinery, Template:Convert thick over the magazines, and Template:Convert thick in the middle of the ship. The bottom Template:Convert of the protective deck was only 2.5 inches thick.Template:Sfn
Modifications
After completing their sea trials, the funnels were heightened by Template:Convert to improve the draught of the boilers. Mark I Wireless Telegraph (radio) sets were installed in each ship in 1900–1901. The ships were refitted in 1902–1903 and four more six-inch guns were added in casemates amidships at that time, although no additional ammunition could be accommodated. The three-pounders were removed from PowerfulTemplate:'s upper fighting tops in 1904–1905 and both ships were fitted with fire-control equipment in the upper fore and lower main tops in 1905–1906. All of TerribleTemplate:'s three-pounders had been removed by 1910, but Powerful retained her remaining guns as late as February 1912. The torpedo tubes were removed from both ships in 1914.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Ships
The following table gives the build details and purchase cost of the members of the Powerful class. Standard British practice at that time was for these costs to exclude armament and stores.Template:Refn
| Ship | Builder | Laid down | Launched | Completed | Cost according to | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (BNA 1902)Template:Sfn | (BNA 1906)Template:Sfn | |||||
| Template:HMS | Vickers, Barrow-in-Furness | 10 March 1894 | 24 July 1895 | 8 June 1897 | £674,879 | £705,335 |
| Template:HMS | J & G Thompson, Clydebank | 21 February 1894 | 27 May 1895 | 24 March 1898 | £681,419 | £708,619 |
Careers
Both ships participated in the fleet review commemorating Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee in 1897. They both served on the China Station, and Powerful went out later that year. Terrible had engine problems and was not commissioned until the following year. She set a record ferrying relief crews for the Mediterranean Fleet from Portsmouth to Malta in only 121 hours in late 1898. The ship was ordered to relieve Powerful in the Far East in late 1899, but they were both diverted to South Africa in light of rising tensions between the British and the Boers.Template:Sfn
The ships arrived in mid-October, a few days after the Second Boer War began. TerribleTemplate:'s captain, Percy Scott, then improvised field carriages for some naval guns to satisfy a request for more long-range artillery. PowerfulTemplate:'s captain, the Hon. Hedworth Lambton led a naval brigade and some of Percy's guns to reinforce the garrison of Ladysmith in late November. Terrible contributed a naval brigade and guns of her own during the Relief of Ladysmith in December 1899–March 1900.Template:Sfn The performance of the gun crews from both ships inspired the RN's field gun competition.[1] The ships continued on their respective voyages after Ladysmith was succored in March, Powerful to much acclaim in England and Terrible to China where her crew and guns helped to suppress the Boxer Rebellion a few months later. They were part of the relief force that reached the foreign quarter of Tianjin in June as well as the expedition that defeated the Chinese forces in the city of Tianjin in mid-July. They then participated in the second relief expedition to Peking in August before returning to the ship in September. Afterwards Scott devoted himself and his crew to gunnery training and later had his methods adopted by the entire Royal Navy.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Upon returning home both ships paid off and received long refits in 1902–1903. They spent the next several years in reserve. Powerful became the flagship of the Australia Station in 1905 until her return home in 1912 and then became a training ship until 1929 when she was sold for scrap. Terrible was principally in reserve after her return from China in 1902 and then served as an accommodation ship. During the First World War, she had most of her armament removed and briefly served as a troop transport before becoming a depot ship. Terrible then served as a training ship from 1918 until 1932 when, in her turn, she was sold for scrap.Template:Sfn
Notes
Citations
References
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External links
Template:Powerful class cruiser Template:WWI British ships
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