Armored cruisers were large cruisers, so-named because, unlike regular (or unarmored) cruisers or the protected cruisers, they were protected by armor on their sides as well as on the decks and gun positions. This type was built from around 1873 until 1908, but was obsolete at the time of World War I because of the development of the dreadnought and its less well amored derivative; the battlecruiser. They were used in patrolling and minor roles until the end of World War II.
The development of the explosive shell gun in the mid-1800s made the use of armor inevitable, despite its cost and weight, and armored cruisers began to appear in large Western navies.
One armored cruiser still exists: Giorgios Averoff, preserved as a museum in Greece.
New York (Armored Cruiser No. 2), launched in 1895, was less well protected than Maine, with 3 inches (76 mm) of belt armor, and 3 to 6 inches (76 to 152 mm) of deck armor. The Brooklyn (Armored Cruiser No. 3) was an improved version of the New York and Olympia designs.
Shortly after the Spanish-American War, the Navy built six Pennsylvania class armored cruisers, almost immediately followed by five of the Tennessee class.
On 17 July 1920, when the standard naval hull numbering nomenclature was adopted, all existing US armored cruisers were merged with protected cruisers in a single class "cruiser" with hull classification symbol "CA", bringing to an end the use of the term in the US. The London Naval Treaty of 1930 essentially abolished the term 'armored cruiser', and adopted the terms heavy cruiser and light cruiser. After this, the symbol "CA" was used to designate 'heavy cruiser'.
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