Memphis class (CSA):
The only major warships built for the CS Navy during the 1870’s, the
Memphis class frigates suffered from a prolonged design period and frequent construction delays – the last two members of this class did not officially commission until 1880. This was entirely due to the ambitious nature of the project – these ships were not only the first iron-hulled vessels built for the CS Navy, they were the largest, most heavily armed ships built in the Confederacy up to that time.
First proposed in 1870 to supplement and eventually replace the
North Carolina and
Stonewall class ironclads, they were quickly re-envisioned as armored broadside frigates armed with Tredegar-built 9” Dahlgren smoothbores intended to counter the US
Brandywine class laid down that year.
As design work continued, however, a conversation over dinner would change the entire scope of the project. In the summer of 1872, the CS Secretary of the Navy, Jean-Phillip Lagrange met his friend and colleague Nigel Armtiage – the British Naval Attaché to the Confederacy – for dinner at the exclusive Heritage Club in downtown Richmond. The conversation soon turned to the subject of naval matters and Armitage inquired about the new frigates. Over cigars and brandy, the pair discussed the new ships and how best to compete with the US Navy. Armitage, who had no love for the United States, offered to let his friend look over the plans for a pair of central battery ships (HMS
Alexandra and HMS
Temeraire) the UK was planning to build. Lagrange was impressed and soon after directed the Confederate Naval Design and Construction Bureau (BuD&C) – the equivalent of the BuC&R in the US, to redesign the ships as central battery armored frigates to be armed with the heaviest guns available – license-built copies of the Armstrong 300-pounder rifle. Known to the CSN as the 10-inch Armstrong BLR, the gun was one of the largest breech-loaders in use anywhere in the world and was thought to allow the new frigates to outgun their US counterparts. With the final design in hand, BuD&C went to the CS Congress for funds. That body debated the issue for several months before authorizing eight ships (out of a planned class of twelve) for immediate construction.
The first three were all laid down in late 1873, with two more the following year, with the final three scheduled for 1875. Almost immediately, the project ran into trouble. The Confederate iron industry, although much stronger than during the Civil War, was still unable to provide all the material needed for the hulls of the new ships, to say nothing of the wrought-iron armor plate that would be required. This delay was short, however, as negotiations with the British and French (both at that time building a large number of ironclads) meant that high-quality armor could be supplied.
Although this put construction back on track, the delays caused by the domestic iron industry “ramping up” meant growing cost overruns. In 1875, the project was dealt a blow when the CS Congress cancelled the last three ships (provisionally named
Pensacola, Little Rock, and
St. Louis) in an effort to control costs. In mid-1876, the fifth ship,
Jacksonville, was also cancelled incomplete and was soon broken up on the slipway.
Despite the setbacks and delays, however, the first two ships;
Memphis and
Savannah, were launched successfully, but fitting out as well as completion of the second pair;
Houston and
Richmond, were delayed by the outbreak of the Mexican-Confederate War.
When the first two ships were commissioned in 1878, they were immediately dispatched to join the squadron stationed at Veracruz. During the conflict the ships were plagued by bad luck in the form of issues with their main guns (mostly misfires and breech seating failures), the engine difficulties that sent
Memphis back to Mobile for repairs causing her to miss the remainder of the War, and
Savannah gaining the dubious distinction of being the only Confederate ship lost during the conflict.
After the War ended, construction resumed on
Houston and
Richmond, but yet another change brought about by the powerful new
Oliver Perry class frigates, occurred. These ships had spent the war under close scrutiny during their regular training exercises and impressed the CS Navy with their capabilities. It was therefore decided to arm the ships with the British RML 11 inch 25-ton gun instead of the 10” Armstrong rifle. A total of twenty of these weapons were purchased from the UK by the end of 1879 – enough to arm the three remaining ships plus two spares. The CS Congress, however, refused to fund the refit of
Memphis so she retained her original armament for the remainder of her career.
As built, CSS
Memphis and CSS
Savannah were 302 feet long overall and displaced 4,968 tons normal and 5,370 tons full load. Their main armament was pattered after HMS
Temeraire and consisted of eight 10” guns; two in single barbettes, six in the central casemate. Four light 70-pounders were included as chasers and defense against gunboats and the newly emerging threat; torpedo boats.
Propulsion was provided by two compound engines producing 2,800 horsepower driving twin-shafts. Design speed was 13 knots and range was 2,500 nautical miles. Their auxiliary sail rig was also borrowed from the
Temeraire and configured as a two-masted brig. They utilized the tripod lower masts now commonplace in American ships to provide additional clearance for their barbette guns.
Armor was of the wrought-iron type and comprised a 6” belt tapering to 3” at bow and stern, 8” barbettes, and a 5” casemate. For the first time, an armored deck was featured and consisted of 1” plates over the entire main deck save the extreme fore and quarterdecks. Crew complement was 378.
The second pair; CSS
Houston and CSS
Richmond, differed in some important ways from their sisters. Their main armament was six of the British 11” rifled muzzleloaders (and were the only ships outside the UK to use these weapons), two in barbettes, four in the redesigned central casemate. Displacement rose to 5,023 tons normal and 5,428 tons full load which reduced maximum speed to 12.8 knots and range to 2,470 nautical miles, while crew complement rose to 387, but in all other particulars, they were identical to the first two ships.
After they joined
Memphis in 1880, the three frigates formed the core of the Confederate Navy’s Home Squadron when it was established in April of 1883. The most powerful ships in the CSN at the time, they were quickly rendered obsolete by the rapid advance of warship development over the next twenty years and were relegated to second-line duties by the early 1890’s.
Memphis was decommissioned in 1903 with
Houston and
Richmond retired two years later. Both
Memphis and
Houston went to the breakers beginning in 1906, but CSS
Richmond was refurbished and re-commissioned as a gunnery training ship serving the Confederate Naval Academy in Mobile, Alabama. She was finally retired and scrapped in 1921.
A Class (CSA):
The first torpedo boats built for the CS Navy, the A Class (Confederate torpedo boats were not named) were copies of the British
Lightning type boats built by Thornycroft in 1878-79. The vessels were contracted through the Thornycroft Company’s Chiswick Shipyard and when completed were shipped without armament to the Norfolk Navy Yard where they would finish fitting out. After being armed (equipment also obtained from Britain), they were immediately commissioned with the CSN.
The A Class boats were 90 feet long overall and displaced 28 tons. The first four (
A.I to
A.IV) were armed with two license-built 14” Whitehead torpedoes in drop collars amidships, while the final four (
A.V to
A.VIII) mounted a torpedo tube on a swivel mount on the foredeck, with two reloads carried in place of the drop collars of the earlier boats. They were powered by a single 460 horsepower compound engine which could propel these vessels to speeds up to 20 knots and had a crew of 15.
After they entered service with the Confederate Navy in late 1880, the A Class was split between the newly established Home Squadron in Norfolk and the Gulf Squadron based in Mobile. Considered experimental by the CSN, these boats were used primarily to develop tactics and operational doctrine for torpedo warfare. They were very successful in this role and led to the CS Navy acquiring many more increasingly sophisticated torpedo boats; at first foreign built, but later designed and constructed entirely within the Confederacy. A total of over forty were in service by the end of the decade, which gave the CSA one of the only instances where they held a numerical advantage against the United States.
The US Navy, meanwhile, was initially unsure about how best to counter this new threat. Although a number of torpedo boats were built for the USN during the 1880’s, they were largely experimental, and with the increasing number of Confederate vessels of this type entering service, it was decided to skip further development of the torpedo boat in favor of building ships specifically designed to deal with them; torpedo gunboats during the 1880’s and the torpedo boat destroyer (TBD) starting in the 1890’s. This would force the CSN to build torpedo boat destroyers of its own, and by the turn of the century both navies would be building true destroyers in considerable numbers.
For the pioneering A Class, however, their active service lives would be relatively brief.
A.I, A.II, A.III, and
A.IV were decommissioned in 1891, while
A.V, A.VI, A.VII, and
A.VIII were decommissioned a year later. All were broken up beginning in 1893.
Cheers!
StealthJester