HSwMS Sverige explained

HSwMS Sverige was a (Pansarskepp) commissioned by Sweden during the last year of the First World War. The ship cost approximately 12 million kronor, a sum raised entirely by public donations. The fundraising was done because of the Karl Staaff government's reluctance to spend money on a new battleship. In addition to its impressive cost, the ship also had a significant impact on the Swedish Navy and its capabilities.

Background and description

Sweden was not immune from the naval arms race in the early 20th century. After dissolving the union with Norway in 1905, the situation was tense with the Russian Empire in the east, Germany south of the Baltic Sea, and Norway, traditionally being an Anglophile country, to the west. In 1911, battle-ready units from the Royal Navy and the Imperial German Navy cruised around in the North Sea. Due to the perilous atmosphere brought about by these tensions, and as the latest Swedish coastal battleship was a typical pre-dreadnought ship (with two 8-inch (203 mm) guns and a maximum speed of 17.8kn), the need for a new class of ships was pressing. Seaworthiness, armament, armour and speed, all had to be improved according to the multiple new technologies that had arrived with the naval arms race that followed the launch of the British . In 1911, the parliament voted (with a small majority) funds for the building of the new vessel, varying in size from 4800MT7500MT and with armaments and speed in various arrangements accordingly). The postponement of funding for HSwMS Sverige by Prime Minister Karl Staaff had a significant impact on the "Pansarbåtinsamlingen" fundraising campaign. The campaign, which had aimed to raise 12 million Kronor for the ship, was put on hold as a result of the political uncertainty. Despite initial political uncertainty, the fundraising campaign for Sverige was successful, thanks to the support of King Gustav V. The campaign raised 15 million Kronor in just over three months, an impressive achievement. The new government accepted the money and let the contract for the ship, which was named Sverige for the people who had paid for it.[1]

After the outbreak of World War I, two more ships were ordered which had a slightly changed appearance, the two bearing the names of the King and Queen of Sweden.

Note that while the ship is listed as a battleship in Jane's Fighting Ships, 1938 edition, technically it is a coastal defence ship, a class which was commonly used in Nordic countries. The navies of Finland, Norway, and Denmark made use of similar ships. However, the Swedish Navy used the Sverige-class armored warships as the core of battle groups in the same manner as other navies used battleships.

Svierge had an overall length of 119.72m (392.78feet), a beam of 18.63m (61.12feet) and a maximum draught of 6.25m (20.51feet).[2] The ship displaced 6852LT at standard load and 7516LT at deep load.[3] A dozen Yarrow boilers provided steam at a pressure of 18kg/cm2 to four Curtis direct-drive geared steam turbines that each drove a single propeller shaft. Fuel oil could be sprayed onto the coal in the boilers to maximize steam pressure. The engines were rated at a total of 20000shp that was designed to give her a speed of 22.5kn.[4] Svierge carried up to 665LT of coal and 100LT of fuel oil that gave her a range of 2720nmi at a speed of .[5] The ship had a complement of 443 officers and ratings when serving as a flagship.[3]

Armament, fire control and protection

The ship's main battery consisted of four Bofors 283mm m/12 guns. These were mounted in two twin-gun turrets, one each forward and aft of the superstructure. Her secondary armament consisted of eight 152mm m/12 guns. One pair was positioned in a twin-gun turret superfiring over the forward 283 mm gun turret; the other were arranged in single-gun turrets, three on each broadside amidships. Defence against torpedo boats was provided by four 75mm m/12 guns in single mounts in the superstructure. The ship was fitted with two single mounts for Bofors 75 mm m/15 anti-aircraft (AA) guns. She was also equipped with a pair of submerged 45cm (18inches) torpedo tubes, one on each broadside. Targeting data for the guns was collected by 3m (10feet) rangefinders in the conning tower and in the main-gun turrets. The ranges were sent to a pair of range clocks that calculated the elevation and traverse positions for the guns.[6]

The Svierge-class ships had a waterline armour belt 200mm thick. Their deck armour ranged in thickness from 18mm on the flat to 28mm on the slope where it connected to the base of the armour belt. The armour protecting the conning tower had a maximum thickness of 175mm while that of the armoured citadel was 100mm thick. The main-gun turrets also had a maximum thickness of 200 millimetres of armour, but the secondary-gun turrets only had 125mm of armour. Underwater protection was limited to a single anti-torpedo bulkhead on each broadside and subdividing the hull below the deck into thirteen watertight compartments. The ships were also fitted with a double bottom.[5]

Modifications

Sometime during the early 1920s, the 75-millimetre AA guns were modified with new sights and mounts and were redesignated as m/15-23 guns. During Svierges 1931–1933 refit, a 4m (13feet) rangefinder with a Dutch Hazemeyer fire-control system was installed on the aft superstructure and the existing AA guns were replaced by twin mounts for 75 mm Bofors m/28 guns. At the same time a pair of Bofors 25mm m/32 AA guns on single mounts were added on the roofs of the forward single 152 mm gun turrets.[7]

The ship's 1938–1940 refit saw the replacement of her mixed-firing Yarrow boilers, and their coal bunkers, with four oil-buring Penhoët boilers.

Captains

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Warship Magazine - 1999
  2. Harris, p. 96
  3. Westerlund, p. 359
  4. Harris, p. 88
  5. Sundberg, p. 295
  6. Sundberg, p. 298
  7. Sundberg, p. 297