Monitor (warship): Difference between revisions
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[[Image:USS Monitor.jpg|left|thumb|300px|''USS Monitor'' underway]] | |||
Giving the type its name, the '''''USS Monitor''''' was an 1862 [[United States Navy]] warship that made its debut, at the [[Battle of Hampton Roads]], against the ironclad but [[broadside (gunnery)]] oriented ship ''CSS Monitor''. ''Monitor'', designed by [[John Dahlgren]], was a full technological generation beyond the advanced ''Virginia'' that had appeared the day before, but the monitor type was still very much a prototype. | |||
'''USS Monitor''', derisively called the "cheesebox on a raft", had a very low deck over which waves washed, a small pilothouse, and a central, heavily armored turret containing two 11" guns and being able to rotate 360 degrees. She was slow and barely seaworthy, certainly unable to go outside coastal waters. | |||
The basic design, however, proved valuable in the [[American Civil War]], and many more, some with two turrets, were built, mostly for river and harbor combat. As the more seaworthy armored [[battleship]] design emerged, monitors generally fell out of use. There were a few exceptions with extended life, used for shore bombardment, such as ''HMS Roberts'', with a pair of 18" guns, built in [[World War I]] and briefly used in [[World War II]]. |
Revision as of 10:30, 8 July 2009
Giving the type its name, the USS Monitor was an 1862 United States Navy warship that made its debut, at the Battle of Hampton Roads, against the ironclad but broadside (gunnery) oriented ship CSS Monitor. Monitor, designed by John Dahlgren, was a full technological generation beyond the advanced Virginia that had appeared the day before, but the monitor type was still very much a prototype.
USS Monitor, derisively called the "cheesebox on a raft", had a very low deck over which waves washed, a small pilothouse, and a central, heavily armored turret containing two 11" guns and being able to rotate 360 degrees. She was slow and barely seaworthy, certainly unable to go outside coastal waters.
The basic design, however, proved valuable in the American Civil War, and many more, some with two turrets, were built, mostly for river and harbor combat. As the more seaworthy armored battleship design emerged, monitors generally fell out of use. There were a few exceptions with extended life, used for shore bombardment, such as HMS Roberts, with a pair of 18" guns, built in World War I and briefly used in World War II.