The Topaze-class cruisers (often referred to as the Gem class) were a quartet of third-class protected cruisers built for the Royal Navy in the first decade of the 20th century (four additional ships of the class were cancelled before their keels were laid). of this class was the first warship larger than a destroyer to be powered by turbine engines.
As well as a significant historical 'first' this class also embodied many 'lasts' and, despite being units of the Edwardian-period Royal Navy, represented the end of the Victorian-period lineage of protected cruisers in many ways. Amongst the many cruiser classes of the Royal Navy to have been rated as protected cruisers these were; the last to be officially classified as such until the turbine-propelled Bristol class of 1909 appeared; the last to feature the traditional arrangement of raised forecastle & poop connected by amidships bulwarks; and, in the case of three out of the four ships, the last to be designed for propulsion by reciprocating steam engines.
Perhaps most significantly of all, the Gems were the very last third-class cruisers to be so rated in the Royal Navy: the following classes of scout cruisers which featured internal protective decks instead of armour belts were of similar type, but were faster & weaker and intended for a very specialist role; they were accordingly assigned their new official type designation. When the later small turbine-propelled cruisers of the Arethusa class appeared (combining the features of scouts & second-class cruisers, to provide for greater utility & fighting power more in line with the Third Class), the new ships were designated from the outset as 'light armoured cruisers, thus dispensing with the third-class rating entirely.
Discussions had been ongoing for several years about a successor to the previous before the Admiralty decided on a design in 1901 that was very much larger and faster than the older ships. This represented a shift away from the traditional role of the third-class cruiser: previously best-suited to Imperial defence duties on foreign stations, but now shifting closer to the German concept of a light cruiser; a fast & potent small combatant, suitable for use with the Fleet for scouting duties in the presence of an enemy fleet. In this regard, the Topaze class demonstrates the effect of heightening tensions between the British and Germans, as the Royal Navy's procurement programmes began to emphasise potential combat in the North Sea in anticipation of a possible future war.
The first small cruisers designed for the Royal Navy by the new DNC Sir Philip Watts, the Topaze-class ships had a distinctive three-funneled appearance, with a length between perpendiculars of 360feet, a beam of 40feet and a draught of 16feet. They displaced 3000LT and their crew consisted of 313 officers and other ranks.[1]
One objective for the Admiralty with these ships was to evaluate steam turbines against traditional triple-expansion steam engines in a ship larger than a destroyer and became the first cruiser to be equipped with them.[2] Her three sisters used a pair of 4-cylinder triple-expansion steam engines, each driving one shaft, using steam provided by 10 water-tube boilers. The engines were designed to produce a total of 9800ihp which was intended to give a maximum speed of 21.75kn. The three ships easily exceeded their designed power and speeds during their sea trials.[2] They carried a maximum of 700LT of coal[1] which gave them a range of 7000nmi at and at .[2]
Amethyst was fitted with a Parsons steam turbine set that drove three shafts using the same number of boilers as her sisters. They delivered enough steam to allow the engines to reach 12000ihp and her designed speed of . She also easily exceeded her designed power and speeds during her sea trials, reaching from 14300ihp. The turbine proved to be more economical at high speeds than the reciprocating engines of her sisters, but less so at slow speeds, only having an endurance of at 10 knots, but at 20 knots.[2]
The main armament of the Topaze class consisted of a dozen quick-firing (QF) 4adj=onNaNadj=on guns.[3] One gun each was mounted on the forecastle and the poop. The remaining ten guns were placed port and starboard amidships, with the forward and aftermost pairs of waist guns being sponsoned and the sides of the forecastle and poop embrasured to allow for axial fire from these four guns. This gave the ships a broadside of seven guns, with at least two guns able to fire through the extreme bow and quarter arcs, or three guns firing dead ahead and dead astern in a chase.[2] Their 31lb shells were fired at a muzzle velocity of .[3] The ships also carried eight QF 3-pounder Hotchkiss guns and two above water 18-inch (450 mm) torpedo tubes.[2] The ships' protective deck armour ranged in thickness from 0.75to, being at its thickest on the slopes amidships. The main guns were fitted with 1inches gun shields and the conning tower had armour thick.[2]
Name | Builder | Laid Down | Launched | Commissioned | Cost | Fate | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
7 January 1903 | 5 November 1903 | 17 March 1905 | £228,426[4] | Sold for scrap on 1 October 1920[5] | |||
24 March 1903 | 6 January 1904 | January 1905 | £231,010[6] | Sold for scrap 9 May 1921 | |||
30 March 1903 | 17 March 1904 | 7 February 1905 | £226,227[7] | Sold for scrap 9 May 1921 | |||
Laird, Birkenhead | 14 August 1902 | 23 July 1903 | November 1904 | £242,444 | Sold for scrap 22 September 1921 |