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Admin. Lesson 10: . Retrenchment 1865-1890. Learning Objectives. Know congressional attitudes toward the Navy in this postwar period. Comprehend the difficulty in maintaining technological leadership and the debate over whether to remain technologically current.
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Lesson 10: Retrenchment 1865-1890
Learning Objectives • Know congressional attitudes toward the Navy in this postwar period. • Comprehend the difficulty in maintaining technological leadership and the debate over whether to remain technologically current. • Comprehend the reasons for the rebuilding of the US Navy and the historical conditions accounting for the emergence and success of Captain Alfred Thayer Mahan’s lectures and books.
Learning Objectives • Know the major changes affecting warship hull, armament, and propulsion design during the period 1865-1890. • Know the principal naval weapons systems conceived by nations desiring cheap methods to level the playing field with the capital ship. • Know the responses of the major naval powers to counter the threats of low cost weapons.
Remember our Themes! • The Navy as an Instrument of Foreign Policy • Interaction between Congress and the Navy • Interservice Relations • Technology • Leadership • Strategy and Tactics • Evolution of Naval Doctrine
International Affairs late 1800s • “Pax Britannica” • Era of peace continues - British Empire dominates the seas. • Japan - Meiji Restoration • Continued increase in foreign trade. • Rapid modernization begins. • German and Italian unifications – 1860s & 70’s. • Austro-Hungarian Empire’s “Dual Monarchy” - 1867. • Continued collapse of Ottoman Empire through 1800’s. • Balkan Peninsula: Independence of European states. • New era of European imperialism: • European powers vigorously compete to establish colonies on remaining world territories.
Battle of Lissa - 1866 • First battle between ironclad fleets. • Adriatic Sea off Dalmatian coast (present-day Croatia). • Italians attempt amphibious assault of the island of Lissa without command of the sea. • Austrian Fleet takes “V” formation. • Breaks the Italian line. • Ferdinand Maximilian sinks Re d’Italiawith the ram. • Rams in warship design: • Remain prominent until late into the nineteenth century.
Evolution of Warship Construction • Construction materials: • Steel hulls replace iron hulls. • Steel has higher strength and less weight than iron. • Compartment divisions. • Protective decks. • Armor protection. • Iron to steel-plated iron to steel. • Location of armor: • Vulnerable areas get more armor. • Unable to armor the entire ship due to weight of armor. • Rams
Evolution of Armaments • Muzzle loaders to breech loaders. • Safety and rate of fire increases. • Rifled guns. • Increased accuracy and ranges. • Mounting of guns. • Hydraulic recoil mechanisms. • Cartridge shells. • Round and charge are combined. • Rate of fire increases. • Greater penetrating power and range. • Self-propelled torpedo: • Invented by Englishman Robert Whitehead in 1866.
Ship Propulsion Innovations • More efficient steam engines developed. • Vertical Triple Expansion (VTE) • Increases in speed. • Longer ranges. • Coaling stations required at regular intervals while transiting overseas. • Further incentive to acquire overseas colonies. • Many ships still use sail as alternate means of propulsion. • Hybrids with stacks and sails.
Low Cost Weapons vs “Capital” Ships • Capital ships: • Large ships with heavy guns - core of a battle fleet. • Battleships (Heavily armored). • Cruisers (Faster but less heavily armored than battleships). • New low cost weapons: • Self-propelled torpedoes launched from “torpedo boats”. • Mines - Stationary torpedoes to protect coastlines and ports.
Countermeasures • Continued advances in compartmentation. • New ship types: • “Torpedo boat destroyer” shortened to just “destroyer” used to screen capital ships from torpedo attacks. • Minesweepers used to clear minefields.
Post-Civil War U.S. Navy • 1865-1870 -- Decline of the Navy. • Large reductions in naval appropriations: 700 to 52 ships. • Isolationism due to the need for: • Reconstruction of the South • Continued westward expansion • Primary mission: • Protection of maritime trade overseas • Costal Defense
Congress and the Rebirth of the U.S. Navy • Naval funding begins to increase in 1870s. • Three distinct construction programs authorized • 1873 • 1883 • ABCD ships • Steam (Sail used as secondary means of propulsion). • Steel hulls and heavy armor. • Rifled breech-loading guns. • 1889 • First three battleships authorized
Congress Acts Why? • 1873 & 1883 • Modernize ships • Stimulate steel & shipbuilding industry • Ships to be employed in the usual way • Cruisers abroad protecting commerce • 1889 • Focused more towards “continentalist” views • Defense of Coasts form another major power • Evolving major power tactics
Professional Rebirth of the U.S. Navy • Naval Institute established by naval officers - 1873. • Proceedings - professional journal for naval personnel. • Office of Naval Intelligence established - 1882. • Naval War College established - 1884. • Engineering Duty Officers enter the Line - 1899. • Increased importance of technical knowledge is apparent.
Naval War College • Commerce raiding and coastal defense • Accepted strategies of the U.S. Navy after Civil War. • Strategies seem obsolete to an influential group of American naval leaders. • Commodore Stephen B. Luce • Establishes Naval War College in 1885 at Newport, Rhode Island to: • “Apply modern scientific methods to the study and raise naval warfare from the empirical stage to the dignity of a science.” • Captain Alfred Thayer Mahan is one of the first instructors to serve under Luce.
The Influence of Sea Power Upon History 1660-1783 • Published in 1890 - Mahan’s first book. • Based on a series of Naval War College lectures. • Strong arguments for the U.S.: • Maintaining naval strength during peacetime. • Building a fleet of capital ships. • Acquiring colonies abroad for secure coaling stations. • Ideas strongly appeals to: - Industrialists - Merchants - Nationalists - Imperialists