British Destroyers: From Earliest Days to the Second World War
A history of the early days of Royal Navy destroyers, and how they evolved to meet new military threats.
In the late nineteenth century the advent of the modern torpedo woke the Royal Navy to a potent threat to its domination, not seriously challenged since Trafalgar. For the first time a relatively cheap weapon had the potential to sink the largest, and costliest, exponents of sea power.
Not surprisingly, Britain’s traditional rivals invested heavily in the new technology that promised to overthrow the naval status quo. The Royal Navy was also quick to adopt the new weapon, but the British concentrated on developing counters to the essentially offensive tactics associated with torpedo-carrying small craft. From these efforts came torpedo catchers, torpedo-gunboats and eventually the torpedo-boat destroyer, a type so successful that it eclipsed and then usurped the torpedo-boat itself. With its title shortened to destroyer, the type evolved rapidly and was soon in service in many navies, but in none was the evolution as rapid or as radical as in the Royal Navy.
This book is the first detailed study of their early days, combining technical history with an appreciation of the changing role of destroyers and the tactics of their deployment. Like all of Norman Friedman’s books, it reveals the rationale and not just the process of important technological developments.
ASIN : B00LWF60EM
Publisher : Seaforth Publishing (August 30, 2009)
Publication date : August 30, 2009
Language : English
File size : 57000 KB
Text-to-Speech : Enabled
Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
X-Ray : Not Enabled
Word Wise : Enabled
Print length : 938 pages
Customers say
Customers find the book full of technical information and design history. They appreciate the excellent explanations of why each class of ship was created. Readers also mention the drawings are excellent, well-illustrated with profile, plan, and sectional drawings. They describe the text as dense but disorganized chronologically.
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