The Brazilian monitor Ceará was the fifth ship of the river monitors built for the Brazilian Navy during the Paraguayan War in the late 1860s. Ceará arrived in Paraguay in mid-1868 and provided fire support for the army for the rest of the war. The ship was assigned to the Mato Grosso Flotilla after the war. Ceará was scrapped in 1884.
The Pará-class monitors were designed to meet the need of the Brazilian Navy for small, shallow-draft armoured ships capable of withstanding heavy fire. The monitor configuration was chosen as a turreted design did not have the same problems engaging enemy ships and fortifications as did the central battery ironclads already in Brazilian service. The oblong gun turret sat on a circular platform that had a central pivot. It was rotated by four men via a system of gears; 2.25 minutes were required for a full 360° rotation. A bronze ram was fitted to these ships as well. The hull was sheathed with Muntz metal to reduce biofouling.[1]
The ships measured 39m (128feet) long overall, with a beam of 8.54m (28.02feet). They had a draft between of 1.51- and displaced 500t. With only 0.3m (01feet) of freeboard they had to be towed between Rio de Janeiro and their area of operations.[1] Their crew numbered 43 officers and men.[2]
The Pará-class ships had two direct-acting steam engines, each driving a single 1.3sp=usNaNsp=us propeller. Their engines were powered by two tubular boilers at a working pressure of 59psi. The engines produced a total of 180ihp which gave the monitors a maximum speed of 8kn in calm waters. The ships carried enough coal for one day's steaming.[3]
Ceará had a single 120-pounder Whitworth rifled muzzle loader (RML) in her gun turret. The gun had a maximum range of about 5540m (18,180feet).[4] The 7adj=onNaNadj=on shell of the 120-pounder gun weighed 151lb while the gun itself weighed 16660lb.[5] Most unusually the guns' Brazilian-designed iron carriage was designed to pivot vertically at the muzzle; this was done to minimize the size of the gunport through which splinters and shells could enter.[6]
The hull of the Pará-class ships was made from three layers of wood that alternated in orientation. It was 457sp=usNaNsp=us thick and was capped with a 102mm layer of peroba hardwood. The ships had a complete wrought iron waterline belt, 0.91sp=usNaNsp=us high. It had a maximum thickness of 102 millimetres amidships, decreasing to 76sp=usNaNsp=us and 51sp=usNaNsp=us at the ship's ends. The curved deck was armored with 12.7sp=usNaNsp=us of wrought iron.[1]
The gun turret was shaped like a rectangle with rounded corners. It was built much like the hull, but the front of the turret was protected by 152sp=usNaNsp=us of armor, the sides by 102 millimetres and the rear by 76 millimetres. Its roof and the exposed portions of the platform it rested upon were protected by 12.7 millimetres of armor. The armored pilothouse was positioned ahead of the turret.[1]
Ceará was laid down at the Arsenal de Marinha da Côrte in Rio de Janeiro on 8 December 1866, during the Paraguayan War, which saw Argentina and Brazil allied against Paraguay. She was launched on 22 March 1868 and commissioned the following month. The monitor arrived in Paraguay in May 1868. On 31 August she bombarded enemy positions on the Tebicuary River to provide cover for advancing troops. The ship destroyed Paraguayan defenses on the Manduvirá River on 18 April 1869.[7] Ceará, together with her sister ships and, broke through the Paraguayan defenses at Guaraio on 29 April and drove off the defenders.[8] After the war she was assigned to the Mato Grosso Flotilla and was scrapped in 1884.[7]