C.S.S. Torpedo Ram #1
1890 - the CSN's first torpedo boat destroyer, intended to be deployed against USN vessels on the Chesapeake.
The forward scuppers aren't going to work with the turtleback bow. They'd most likely be smashed in first time it took a dive.
I personally think the torpedo armament is rather heavy, at least if torpedo boats are going to be its primary target. I'd replace one set of tubes with a heavier piece of artillery. A 2-3" Quick-firer should give you an edge against Northern destroyers. And since the north still possesses the industrial edge, you're going to need it.
A breakwater abeam the conning platform would make it far easier to man the midship guns. As it is the forward gun will most likely be unworkable in even moderate seas.
A searchlight is a must, and given that the radio has yet to be invented, you might even want to include a semaphore.
Whew!
A nice, long list of what I need to start putting on ships and considering in a design- THANK YOU!
I might change the turtleback, but it seemed period appropriate, so I wanted to do it.
The forward gun is indeed a 2.75" (10-pounder), and the guns on the beams are 2.25" (5-pounder). She mounts one 10-pounder and four 5-pounders. The torpedo tubes are singles- not a very heavy torpedo armament at all. As the Union (in OTL) had no real torpedo boat fleet until the late 1890's, this ship would most likely be tasked with attacking the older, slower monitors and screw gunboats that would patrol the Bay.
The
T.R. #1 is still pretty rough... a lot of work still to do as I don't know a lot about how to make such a small boat work. Thanks for the help, and any more things you can put out there is welcome.
Re: you map: since I'm myself something of a CW-buff, I noticed that you didn't include West Virginia. Shouldn't this part have been relinquished back to the CSA - inspite of its overwhelmingly Unionist sentiment? Or was there some sort of monetary compensation made? Otherwise I like the idea and even have the outlines for a class of armored cruisers built along Sir Philip Watts' lines in the offing...
West Virginia, the Virginia Cape and the northern part of Missouri were both 'strategic sacrifices' for the South- they gained Kentucky's land area, and they avoided a lot of nasty fighting over the coal deposits in the area. Basically, in this timeline, the
British looked around, decided what
they thought both sides could do without and proposed a deal... the South took it without too much of a fight because they knew loosing British support would be fatal. A part of the deal- at Her Majesty's insistence- was a clause stating that slavery must be phased out by 1880.
I'm still working on the specifics of the treaty that will end the war, but I have the basic timeline of the war done already.
Basically- Prince Albert dies a few weeks early and is not there to temper the wrath of Victoria during the Trent Affair. Both sides get caught up in a lot of finger-pointing, and words get heated. Lincoln has the British spies shot (which he had every right to do), and Queen Victoria- half-mad with grief over Albert already- immediately calls for action 'against the murderers of two of Our brave sons' and the British Empire is at war with the United States before anyone can really stop things. Canadian forces enter through Minnesota and drive on Chicago's strategic railhead. This causes a massive realignment of Union troops in order to hold off the Canadian assault. This weakens the Union's forces in the east enough for 2nd Manassas to succeed and Confederate forces push on to Washington. Lincoln (disguised as a clean-shaven conscript) attempts to flee among the withdrawing Union army and is killed in a stroke of luck when a Confederate cavalry force turns the Union flank. Vice President Hamlin- who never bothered with those stuffy cabinet meetings anyway (historical fact)- is unaware that he is only facing about 10,000 Rebs, and a vastly superior relief force is on it's way. He surrenders mostly out of sheer shock and a healthy lack of intel.
The protected and armored cruisers are currently being revised to account for some problems that I didn't take into account originally. They are both loosely based on the
Mersey class cruisers you suggest using.