Fire ship

A fire ship, used in the days of wooden rowed or sailing ships, was a ship filled with combustibles, deliberately set on fire and steered (or, where possible, allowed to drift) into an enemy fleet, in order to destroy ships, or to create panic and make the enemy break formation.[1] Ships used as fire ships were usually old and worn out or purpose-built inexpensive vessels. An explosion ship or hellburner was a variation on the fire ship, intended to cause damage by blowing up in proximity to enemy ships; for example the English used the fire ship technique on the Spanish Armada during the Battle of Gravelines.[2]

Contents

History

Ancient era, first uses

Possibly the oldest account of the military use of a fire ship is recorded by the Greek historian Thucydides on the occasion of the failed Athenian Sicilian Expedition (415–413 BC).[3] In the episode, the Athenian expeditionary force successfully repels an attack by the Syracusans:

The rest [of the Athenian force] the enemy tried to burn by means of an old merchantman which they filled with faggots and pine-wood, set on fire and let drift down the wind which blew full on the Athenians. The Athenians, however, alarmed for their ships, contrived means for stopping it and putting it out, and checking the flames and the nearer approach of the merchantman, thus escaped the danger.

A fire ship was used in the Battle of Red Cliffs (208 AD) on the Yangtze River when Huang Gai assaulted the enemy naval force with a fire ship filled with bundles of kindling, dry reeds, and fatty oil.

The invention of Greek fire in 673 increased the use of fire ships, at first by the Greeks and afterward by other nations as they came into possession of the secret of manufacturing this compound. In 951 and again in 953 Russian fleets narrowly escaped destruction by fire ships.

Age of Fighting Sail, refinement

While fire ships were used in the Medieval period, notably during the Crusades, these were typically ships that were set up with combustibles on an ad hoc basis. The career of the modern fire ship, as a naval vessel type designed for this particular function and made a permanent addition to a fleet, roughly parallels the era of cannon-armed sailing ships, beginning with the defeat of the Spanish Armada in 1588 and lasting until the English victory over the Turks at the Battle of Navarino in 1827. The first modern fireships were put to use in early seventeenth century Dutch and Spanish fleet actions during the Thirty Years War. Their use increased throughout that century, with purposely-built fireships a permanent part of many naval fleets, ready to be deployed whenever necessary. While only used sparingly during the Napoleonic Wars, fire ships as a distinct class were part of the British Royal Navy until 1808, at which point the use of permanently designated fire ships attached to British squadrons disappeared.[4] Fire ships continued to be used, sometimes to great effect such as by the U.S. Navy at the Battle of Tripoli Harbor in 1804 and by the British Navy's Thomas Cochrane at the Battle of the Basque Roads in 1809, but for the most part they were considered an obsolete weapon by the early nineteenth century.

Warships of the age of sail were highly vulnerable to fire. Made of wood, with seams caulked with tar, ropes greased with fat, and stores of gunpowder, there was little that would not burn. Accidental fires destroyed many ships, so fire ships presented a terrifying threat. With the wind in exactly the right direction a fire ship could be cast loose and allowed to drift onto its target, but in most battles fire ships were equipped with skeleton crews to steer the ship to the target (the crew were expected to abandon ship at the last moment and escape in the ship's boat). Fire ships were most devastating against fleets which were at anchor or otherwise restricted in movement. At sea, a well-handled ship could evade a fire ship and disable it with cannon fire. Other tactics were to fire at the ship's boats and other vessels in the vicinity, so that the crew could not escape and therefore might decide not to ignite the ship, or to wait until the fire ship had been abandoned and then tow it aside with small maneuverable vessels such as galleys.

The role of incendiary vessels changed throughout the age of the modern fire ship. The systematic use of fire ships as part of naval actions peaked around the Third Anglo-Dutch War. Whereas just twenty years before a naval fleet might have six to seven fire ships, by the Battle of Solebay in 1672 both the Dutch and English fleets employed typically between 20 and 30 fire ships, and sometimes more.[5] By this time, however, admirals and captains had become very experienced with the limitations of fire ship attacks and had learned how to avoid them during battle. Great numbers of fire ships were expended during the Third Dutch War without destroying enemy men-of-war, and fire ships had become a way to harass and annoy the enemy, rather than destroy him.[6] The successful use of fire ships at the Battle of La Hogue and Cherbourg in 1692 marked both the greatest achievement of a fire ship attack since the Spanish Armada, and also the last significant success for fire ships. Though fire ships as a specified class sailed with the British Royal Navy for another century, they would never have a significant impact on a naval victory. Once the most feared weapons in naval arsenals, fire ships had declined in both importance and numbers, so that by the mid-eighteenth century only five to six British fire ships would be at sea at a time, and the Royal Navy attempted only four attacks using modern fire ships between 1697 and 1800.[7] Hastily outfitted ad hoc fire ships continued to be used in naval warfare; for example, a large number of fire rafts were used in mostly ineffective attacks on the British fleet by American forces during the American Revolution at Philadelphia, on the Hudson River, and elsewhere. The end of the modern fire ship came in the early nineteenth century, when the British began to use hastily outfitted fire ships at engagements such as Boulogne and Dunkirk despite the presence of purpose-built fire ships in the fleet. The last modern fire ship in the British Royal Navy was Thais, the only designated fire ship out of the entire navy of 638 warships when she was converted to a ship sloop in 1808.[8]

Use in the Greek War of Independence

In the Greek War of Independence, 1821-1832, Greek fire ships were manned and sailed alongside a small and medium Turkish ship attached to her with hooks, ropes and grips, and then set on fire by the captain alone when the crew was in the escape boat. As the small fire ships were much more manoeuvrable than enemy ships of the line, especially in the coasts of the Aegean Sea where the islands, islets, reefs, gulfs and straits restrained big ships from being easily moved, they were a serious danger for the ships of the Turkish fleet. Many naval battles of the Greek war of independence were won by the use of fire ships.[9]

Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, obsolescence

From the beginning of the nineteenth century steam propulsion and the use of iron, rather than wood, in shipbuilding gradually came into use, making fire ships less of a threat. During World War II in September 1940, there was a British sortie codenamed Operation Lucid to send old oil tankers into French ports to destroy barges intended for the planned invasion of Britain; it was abandoned when both tankers broke down.[10] Ships or boats packed with explosives could still be effective. Such a case was Operation Chariot of 1942, in which the old destroyer HMS Campbeltown was packed with explosives and rammed into the dry dock at Saint-Nazaire, France, to deny its use to the battleship Tirpitz, which could not drydock anywhere else on the French west coast. In the Mediterranean, the Italian Navy made good use of high-speed boats filled with explosives, mostly against moored targets. Each boat, called by the Italians MTM (Motoscafo da Turismo Modificato), carried a 300 kilograms (660 lb) explosive charge inside their bow. Their best-known action was the 1941 assault on Souda Bay, which resulted in the destruction of cruiser HMS York and the Norwegian tanker Pericles, of 8,300 tons.[11][12]

In 1946, as part of Operation Crossroads, the American landing ship LSM-60 demonstrated the potential of explosives ships containing nuclear weapons. Eight vessels were sunk in the test in addition to LSM-60, including the aircraft carrier Saratoga.[13] The successful attack by terrorists in a speedboat packed with explosives on the USS Cole in 2000 is another extension of the idea. Another remarkable incident took place in April 2004, during the Iraq War, when three motor craft laden with explosives attempted the bombing of Khawr Al Amaya Oil Terminal in the Persian Gulf. It instead sank a rigid inflatable boat from USS Firebolt as it pulled up along side, killing two US Navy personnel and one member of the US Coast Guard.[14]

Notable uses

Notable fire ship attacks include:

See also

References

  1. ^ The Fireship and its Role in the Royal Navy by James Coggeshall. Master's Thesis, Texas A&M University, 1997
  2. ^ The Fireship and its Role in the Royal Navy by James Coggeshall. Master's Thesis, Texas A&M University, 1997, pp. 7-11
  3. ^ Thucydides, History of the Peloponnesian War, 7.53.4
  4. ^ The Fireship and its Role in the Royal Navy by James Coggeshall. Master's Thesis, Texas A&M University, 1997, p. 2
  5. ^ The Fireship and its Role in the Royal Navy by James Coggeshall. Master's Thesis, Texas A&M University, 1997, p. 15
  6. ^ The Fireship and its Role in the Royal Navy by James Coggeshall. Master's Thesis, Texas A&M University, 1997, p. 16
  7. ^ The Fireship and its Role in the Royal Navy by James Coggeshall. Master's Thesis, Texas A&M University, 1997, p. 17-18
  8. ^ The Fireship and its Role in the Royal Navy by James Coggeshall. Master's Thesis, Texas A&M University, 1997, p. 18-19
  9. ^ The Fireship and its Role in the Royal Navy by James Coggeshall. Master's Thesis, Texas A&M University, 1997, p. 19
  10. ^ http://www.naval-history.net/xDKWW2-4009-22SEP02.htm
  11. ^ Greene, Jack & Massignani, Alessandro: The Naval War in the Mediterranean, 1940-1943. Chatam Publishing, London, 1998, page 141. ISBN 1-86176-057-4
  12. ^ Sadkovich, James: The Italian Navy in World War II. Greenwood Press, Westport, 1994, page 25. ISBN 0-313-28797-X
  13. ^ Daly, Thomas M.: Crossroads at Bikini. United States Naval Institute Proceedings July 1986, pp.64-73.
  14. ^ Suicide bombing attack claims first Coast Guardsman since Vietnam War by Kendra Helmer. Stars and Stripes, 27 April 2004
  15. ^ Alexander's mole
  16. ^ The Fireship and its Role in the Royal Navy by James Coggeshall. Master's Thesis, Texas A&M University, 1997, pp. 7-11
  17. ^ The Fireship and its Role in the Royal Navy by James Coggeshall. Master's Thesis, Texas A&M University, 1997, pp. 14-16
  18. ^ The Fireship and its Role in the Royal Navy by James Coggeshall. Master's Thesis, Texas A&M University, 1997, pp. 16-18
  19. ^ The Fireship and its Role in the Royal Navy by James Coggeshall. Master's Thesis, Texas A&M University, 1997, p. 19

External links

Media related to [//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Fire_ships Fire ships] at Wikimedia Commons