The last of the ironclads:
Missouri class
After the US commissioned the
Wisconsin class in 1883-84, the Confederate Navy realized its
Virginia class monitors were severely outclassed and naturally wanted to respond with more powerful ships, but unfortunately, the Confederate Congress refused to fund any new construction for the next five years.
When the new class of battleships was finally authorized in 1886, the CSN again went to the British for assistance. At the time, the British were well into construction on the
Admiral class and were willing to build two additional ships of this design for the Confederates. The ships;
Missouri and
Kentucky, were laid down the following year and commissioned in 1890.
Although virtually identical to the four
Admirals’s armed with the BL 13.5” Mk.I, the
Missouri’s differed in a couple of respects. The Americans specified heavier barbette armor and two military-style masts instead of the one heavy sail-rigged mast of the British ships. These changes resulted in the ships being slightly heavier at 11,075 tons and longer overall at 332 feet.
In addition to the twin barbette mounts fore and aft for their 13.5” main guns, the
Missouri’s carried six 6” secondary guns and twelve 6-pounders. Armor consisted of an 18” belt, 3” deck, and 12” barbettes. Two triple expansion engines produced a top speed of 16 knots, although both ships easily exceeded this in service.
A rude surprise to the US, the Confederate ships (named for two of the Border States that had joined the CSA following the Civil War) were arguably the most powerful in the Americas – with their contemporaries; the US
Michigan class, exceeding their capacities only in secondary battery and barbette and transverse bulkhead armor. While naval experts, armchair admirals, and later, game designers, forever debated which class was superior, it was ironic that the ships never met in battle as they were the closest in concept and design of any US and CS ships built to date; after this, the two nations would pursue different design philosophies.
The
Missouri’s were based in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, after 1901, with
Kentucky becoming in 1907 the first capital ship assigned to the CS Pacific Fleet based in Guaymas, Mexico under the 100-lease signed between the CSA and Mexico the previous year. Retained in active service long after they were rendered obsolete, the two ships were not retired until 1911-1912. Both were scrapped during 1916-1917.
Coming soon; Pre-dreadnoughts!
Cheers!
StealthJester