The Battleship Builders: Constructing and Arming British Capital Ships

The Battleship Builders: Constructing and Arming British Capital Ships

by Ian Johnston, Ian Buxton
The Battleship Builders: Constructing and Arming British Capital Ships

The Battleship Builders: Constructing and Arming British Capital Ships

by Ian Johnston, Ian Buxton

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Overview

How shipbuilders, engine manufacturers, and more united to build Britain’s Grand Fleet: “Superbly written…One of the best naval titles I have seen.”—Marine News
 
The launch in 1906 of HMS Dreadnought, the world’s first all-big-gun battleship, rendered all existing battle fleets obsolete, but at the same time it wiped out the Royal Navy’s numerical advantage, so expensively maintained for decades. Already locked in the same arms race with Germany, Britain urgently needed to build an entirely new battle fleet of these larger, more complex, and costlier vessels.
 
In this she succeeded spectacularly; in little over a decade fifty such ships were completed, almost exactly double what Germany achieved. It was only made possible by a vast industrial nexus of shipbuilders, engine manufacturers, armament fleets, and specialist armor producers, whose contribution to the Grand Fleet is too often ignored. This heroic achievement, and how it was done, is the subject of this book. It charts the rise of the large industrial conglomerates that were key to this success, looks at the reaction to fast-moving technical changes, and analyzes the politics of funding this vast national effort, both before and beyond the Great War. It also attempts to assess the true cost—and value—of the Grand Fleet in terms of the resources consumed. And finally, by way of contrast, it describes the effects of the postwar recession, industrial contraction, and the very different responses to rearmament in the run up to the Second World War.
 
Includes photographs

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781473822269
Publisher: Pen & Sword Books Limited
Publication date: 01/24/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 352
Sales rank: 971,092
File size: 29 MB
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About the Author

Ian Buxton is an author and historian.
IAN JOHNSTON was brought up in a shipbuilding family, although his own career was in graphic design. A lifetime’s interest in ships and shipbuilding has borne fruit in a number of publications, including Ships for a Nation, a history of John Brown’s, and Beardmore Built, the story of another great Clydeside yard.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements 6

Abbreviations 6

Preface 7

Chapters

1 Introduction 8

2 An Upward Trajectory, 1860-1919 11

3 Retrenchment and Revival, 1920-1945 29

4 The Builders 54

5 Building 108

6 Facilities 136

7 Powering 154

8 Armament 168

9 Armour and Steel 211

10 Exporting Battleships 227

11 Money 235

12 Manpower 253

13 Conclusions 264

Appendices

1 Tenders 1905 to 1945, John Brown & Co Ltd 267

2 Armour, the Admiralty and Parliament 298

3 The British Battleship Breaking Industry 305

Notes 309

Sources and Bibliography 315

Index 317

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