Spain (Armada española). Crucero protegido Reina Regente (1888)
The ill-fated protected cruiser Reina Regente was the head of her class of three ships (Reina Regente, Lepanto and Alfonso XIII). Designed by John H. Biles and built at Clydebank, she was a scaled-down version of the English Orlando-class cruisers. The main difference was in the reduction of the bow and stern, which was key in her loss.
The Reina Regente was heavily armed with four 240 mm Gonzalez Hontoria guns, six 120 mm, smaller guns, and five torpedo tubes. The protec-tion reached 125 mm. She reached 20 knots.
On March 10, 1895 she was sailing from Tangier (where she had left a Moroccan embassy) to Cadiz, when disappeared during a great storm in the Strait of Gibraltar, which occurred without warning and sank a number of ships. It seems that the waves submerging the bow flooded several com-partments. The cruiser then attempted to reach the nearest Algeciras, but it is believed that the flooding reached the engines or the rudder, and the ship went through the sea, capsized and sank. The entire crew of 420 officers and sailors perished. Only the dog of an ensign was saved, which was picked up by a British merchantman. When the merchantman reached Cadiz, the dog jumped into the sea, swam to shore and then went to the door of his former owner's house.
Her two twins were refurbished to reduce the upper weights, with little result. The works were very prolonged and they were not commissioned until 1896 and 1898. By then they were outdated and, in addition, their machinery proved to be very problematic. The Lepanto was decommissioned in 1908, and the Alfonso XIII in 1900, after barely four years of service as a training ship.
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