The Napoléon (1850), the very first purpose-built steam battleship in history. |
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Career (France) | |
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Namesake: | Napoléon I of France |
Ordered: | 14 July 1847 |
Builder: | Toulon |
Laid down: | 7 February 1848 |
Launched: | 16 May 1850 |
Commissioned: | 1 May 1852 |
Struck: | 6 November 1876 |
General characteristics | |
Class and type: | Napoléon class ship of the line |
Displacement: | 5,120 tonnes |
Length: | 77.8 m |
Beam: | 17 m |
Draught: | 8.4 m |
Propulsion: | Sail and 2-cyl Indret geared, 960 nhp (574 ihp) |
Speed: | 12.1 knots |
Endurance: |
3 months worth of food |
Boats and landing craft carried: |
chaloupe : 12 x 375 x 1.30 mètres canotduCdt:10.50x2.45x0.80 canotdeserviceNR1:10.50x2.50x0.82 canot-major:15.50x2.50x0.82 youyouNR1:5.30x1.60x0.60 youyouNR2:5.30x1.64x0.62 canotdeserviceNR2:9x2.24x0.82 2baleinières:8.5x1.68x0.62 |
Complement: | 910 men |
Armament: |
90 guns (26–30 pdr,4–22 cm) (14–16 cm) |
Armour: | Timber (8cm) |
The Napoléon was a 90-gun ship of the line of the French Navy, and the very first purpose-built steam battleship in the world [1]. She is also considered the first true steam battleship, and the first screw battleship ever [2]. Launched in 1850, she was the lead ship of a class of 9 battleships, all considered as very successful and built over a period of 10 years. This class of ship was designed by the famous naval designer Dupuy de Lôme.
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Before the experimental adoption of the screw in warships in the 1840s, the only available steam technology was that of the paddle wheels, which, due to their positioning on the side of the hull and the large machinery they required were not compatible with the broadside cannon layout of the battleships.
From 1844–45 the Anglo-French Entente collapsed following the French interventions in Tahiti and Morocco, and the publication of French pamphlets advocating a stronger navy (such as "Notes sur l’état des forces navales" by the Prince de Joinville), leading to an arms race in the naval area.
The United Kingdom already had a few coastal units with screw/steam propulsion in the 1840s, called "blockships", which were conversions of small traditional battleships into floating batteries with a jury rig, with a medium 450 hp (340 kW) engine for speeds of 5.8 knots (10.7 km/h) to 8.9 knots (16.5 km/h). However, the Napoléon was the first regular steam battleship to be launched.
In 1846, Britain had designed a screw/steam battleship named the James Watt, but the project was abandoned. Finally, the Agamemnon was ordered in 1849 and commissioned in 1853 as a response to rumours of the French development. Britain’s reluctance to commit to the steam battleship apparently stemmed from her commitment to long-distance, worldwide operation, for which, at that time, sail was still the most reliable mode of propulsion.
In the end, France and Great Britain were the only two countries to develop fleets of wooden steam battleships, although several other navies are known to have had at least one unit, built or converted with British technical support (Russia, Turkey, Sweden, Naples, Denmark and Austria). Altogether, France built 10 new wooden steam battleships and converted 28 from older battleship units, while Britain built 18 and converted 41.[4]
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