The Cyclops-class monitor was a group of four ironclad breastwork monitors built for the Royal Navy during the 1870s. They were slightly modified versions of the s. The ships were ordered to satisfy demands for local defence during the war scare of 1870, but the pace of construction slowed tremendously as the perceived threat of war declined. The Cyclops-class monitors spent most of their careers in reserve and were finally sold off in 1903.
The immediate reason why these ships were ordered was for local coast defence during the war scare during the Franco-Prussian War of 1870, but they were chosen for several other reasons. They were small and cheap, and their shallow draft was thought to limit them to defensive operations, which appealed to economy and defence-minded Members of Parliament. The Admiralty, however, envisioned them attacking shallow-water ports that larger ironclads could not enter and operating in the shallow waters of the Baltic Sea.[1]
The ships used the basic design of the Cerberus-class breastwork monitors to reduce design and construction time. Their hulls were completed very quickly, but building pace reduced as the likelihood of their immediate use diminished. They were delivered to the Royal dockyards in 1872 and commissioned for fitting out, but a number of years elapsed before that process was completed, and there was little sense of urgency.[2]
The ships had a length between perpendiculars of 225feet, a beam of 45feet, and a draught of 16inchesft3inchesin (ftin) at deep load. They displaced 3480LT. Their crew consisted of 156 officers and men.[3]
The Cyclops-class ships and other ships of her type were described by Admiral George Alexander Ballard as being like "full-armoured knights riding on donkeys, easy to avoid but bad to close with."[4] While not unfit to face heavy weather their decks were frequently awash in even a moderate sea. Their accommodations were rated the worst in the fleet, referred to by ordinary seamen as "ratholes with tinned air".[5]
The Cyclops-class ships had two steam engines, each driving a single 121NaN1 propeller. Cyclops and Hydra had 4-cylinder inverted compound steam engines made by John Elder that had a working pressure of 60psi. The engines produced a total of 1472ihp1528ihp on sea trials which gave the ships a maximum speed around 11kn. The engines used by Hecate and Gorgon were built by Ravenhill and were simple horizontal 4-cylinder direct acting steam engines. Their working pressure was 340NaN0 and they produced a total of 1579- for about the same speed. The first pair of ships carried 250LT of coal while the second pair carried 270LT.[6] This was enough to steam 3000nmi at 10knots.[7]
The ships mounted a pair of 10-inch rifled muzzle-loading guns in each turret. The shell of the 10adj=onNaNadj=on gun weighed 407lb while the gun itself weighed 18LT. The gun had a muzzle velocity of 1365ft/s and was credited with the ability to penetrate a nominal 12.9inches of wrought iron armour at the muzzle. The guns could fire both solid shot and explosive shells.[8] They were mounted on compound pivoting carriages that used hydraulic jacks to elevate and depress the guns.[2]
The Cyclops-class ships had a complete waterline belt of wrought iron that was 8inches thick amidships and thinned to 6inches at the ends. The superstructure and conning tower was fully armoured, the reason it was called a breastwork, with 8- of wrought iron. The gun turrets had 10 inches on their faces and nine inches on the sides and rear. All of the vertical armour was backed by 9inches-11inchesin (-in) of teak. The decks were 1.5inches thick.[9]
Each of the ships was towed to Devonport from the builders in 1872. They were commissioned and placed into reserve until finally completed.[10]
Ship | Builder | Laid down | Launched | Commissioned | Completed | Fate | Cost |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Thames Ironworks, London | 10 September 1870 | 18 July 1871 | January 1872 | 4 May 1877 | Sold 7 July 1903 | £156,782[11] | |
Palmers Shipbuilding, Jarrow | 5 September 1870 | 14 October 1871 | April 1872 | 19 March 1874 | Sold 12 May 1903 | £141,254 | |
Dudgeon, Cubitt Town, London | 30 September 1871 | 24 May 1877 | £143,310 | ||||
Robert Napier and Sons, Govan | 28 December 1871 | August 1872 | 31 May 1876 | Sold 7 July 1903 | £194,334 |
Although a recommendation had been made while the ships were still under construction to extend the superstructure out to the sides of the ship to improve their stability and habitability, this was not acted upon until they were refitted during the 1880s. This refit also strengthened the breastwork and upper decks, added another watertight bulkhead as well as a false keel. Four quick-firing 3-pounder Hotchkiss guns were added on the breastwork for torpedo boat defence as well as five machine guns and several searchlights.[12] This increased their crew to approximately 191 men[3] and added 80LT to their displacement.[13]
HMS Gorgon was the first ship completed and she served as tender to HMS Cambridge, the gunnery school ship at Devonport, from 1874 to 1877. All four ships were commissioned between April and August 1878 during the war scare during the Russo-Turkish War for service with Admiral Sir Cooper Key's Particular Service Squadron in Portland Harbour. She resumed her duties as tender to HMS Cambridge until she was refitted in 1888–89. All four of the ships of the class participated in the annual fleet manoeuvers in 1887, 1889–90 and 1892; in between times they were in Fleet Reserve. HMS Gorgon, like all of her sisters, was placed on the non-effective list in 1901 and sold in 1903 for £8,400.[14]
HMS Hydra was the next ship to be completed. After her service with the Particular Service Squadron she was paid off at Sheerness and served as tender to . The ship was refitted in 1888–89 and was in Fleet Reserve at Chatham until 1901.[10]
HMS Cyclops, the lead ship of the class, was the third ship to be completed. She was placed in 1st Reserve after her completion. The ship was paid off at Chatham in August 1878 and refitted in 1887–89.[10]
HMS Hecate was the fourth and final ship of the class to be completed. She paid off at Devonport after her service with the Particular Service Squadron. The ship was refitted in 1885–86 and was placed into reserve at Devonport afterwards.[10]
. George Alexander Ballard . The Black Battlefleet . 1980 . Naval Institute Press . Annapolis, Maryland. 0-87021-924-3.