A monitor was a special form of warship, little more than a self-propelled floating artillery platform that could move close inshore and give its support to military operations on land. In the twentieth century it was developed into a range of sizes adapted for use in different waters, until it was superseded by aeronautic technology.
The principle of supporting a landing with ship-mounted artillery had been prepared for in the armament of the Spanish Armada of 1588, for example. The principle of supporting a land army was employed in the Battle of the Dunes in 1658. The bomb ketch was well established by the end of the seventeenth century and continued into the early nineteenth century. During the Crimean War, the French and British built "floating batteries": screw-driven, heavily armoured ships built for the sole purpose of bombardment of shore positions. The Crimean war also saw an early example of a rotating gun mount (an experiment by Captain Cowper Coles RN mounting a 32 pounder gun on a raft).
Three months after the Battle of Hampton Roads, John Ericsson took his design to his native Sweden, and in 1865 the first Swedish monitor was built at Motala Warf in Norrköping, taking the engineer's name. She was followed by 14 more monitors. One of them, Kanonbåten Sölve, served until 1922 and is today preserved at the marine museum in Gothenburg. These and others built by several navies in the 1860s and 1870s were used for coastal defence and took the name monitor as a type of ship. Those that were directly modelled on the Monitor were low-freeboard, mastless, steam-powered vessels with one or two rotating, armoured turrets. The low freeboard meant that these ships were unsuitable for ocean-going duties and were always at risk of water entering the ship and causing flooding and possible loss, but it reduced the amount of armour required for protection, and in heavy weather the sea would wash over the deck rather than heeling the ship over.
Attempts were made to design monitors with sail rigs, to overcome the reliance on the steam engine, which, besides its technical problems, was still met with antipathy in some navies. The provision of masts interfered with the turrets' ability to operate in a 360 degree arc of fire and the weight of mast and sail aloft made the ships less stable. One ship, HMS Captain, which combined turret and sails with a low freeboard was lost in heavy weather.
A late example of a vessel fairly directly modelled on the Monitor was the Huáscar, designed by Cowper P. Coles, the advocate and developer of turret ships for the Royal Navy. She was launched in 1865 at Birkenhead and attained fame serving the Peruvian Navy during the War of the Pacific under the command of Rear Admiral Miguel Grau. She successfully raided enemy sea lanes for several months and delayed an invasion of Chilean territory until captured by the Chilean Navy at the Battle of Angamos in 1879. Over the years, both Chile and Peru have come to venerate the ship and the officers from both sides that died on her deck, either commanding her or boarding her, as national heroes. Huáscar is currently commissioned in the Chilean Navy, has been restored to a near-original condition and, as a museum ship, is open to visitors at its berth in Talcahuano.
A more seaworthy variation was called the breastwork monitor. This raised the turrets and superstructure on a platform above the hull. These were still not particularly successful as sea-going ships, because of the short sailing range due from the low efficiency and poor reliability of the steam engines they used. The first of these ships was the HMVS Cerberus, built between 1868 and 1870. She was sunk as a breakwater near Melbourne, Australia and is still visible there, as her upper works project out of the water.
These were two specialized forms, for use on rivers and coasts respectively. There was also a class of river monitors, the strongest dedicated river warships. They were used by several imperial navies, for example, that of Japan.
The dimensions of the several classes of monitor varied greatly. Those of the Abercrombie class were 320 ft (116 m) by 90 ft (27.4 m) in the beam and drew 9 ft (3 m) compared to the M29 class monitors of 1915 that were only 170 ft (52 m) long. and the Erebus class of 1916 were 405 ft (123.5 m) long. The largest monitors carried the heaviest guns.
By this point the United States Navy had largely stopped using monitors. Only a few still existed, of which only seven were still in service, all of which had been relegated to being submarine tenders. This would be the last war that United States monitor-type vessels would see commissioned service.
Only one United States Navy monitor, the Amphitrite, still existed at the start of the war. Under civilian control and stripped of her armament, she was used as a floating hotel. The last action of any United States monitor would be when she was chartered by the government in 1943, and towed via inland waters to Elizabeth City, NC, where she provided housing facilities for the workers building a new naval air station there.
Later in the century, vessels of similar design and construction were built and gave good service in the U.S. Navy's 'Brown Water' fleet in the rivers and deltas of Vietnam. These would best be described as river gunboats.
Монитор (вид кораб) | Monitor (Schiff) | モニター艦 | Monitor (okręt) | Монитор (тип корабля)
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