Carronade
Captain
- Joined
- Aug 4, 2011
- Location
- Pennsylvania
Warship construction was at a leisurely pace in the early-mid-1800s. Of nine ships of the line authorized in 1816, three were completed by 1820, one in 1837, one in 1848, three were still on stocks at the outbreak of the Civil War, and one was never started. The nine Brandywine class frigates started construction in 1819, but the last two were not commissioned until 1855. Smaller ships were completed a bit more promptly, some 25 sloops and ten brigs and schooners in the 1820s-40s. There were also the "repaired" Congress, Constellation, and Macedonian, actually new-built ships; all told some 52 sailing warships in the forty years 1816-55.
Steamers did not progress any more quickly. Demelogos aka Fulton was laid up almost as soon as she was commissioned in 1816. Starting with the second Fulton in 1837, there were about ten steam frigates, sloops, and gunboats by 1852, including Michigan, the one ship we were allowed by treaty on the Great Lakes. In sum, 62 ships in forty years, about 1 1/2 per year.
Starting in 1854 there was a significant increase in warship construction: six large, powerful steam frigates, followed by five sloops, basically smaller versions of the frigates, with the same broadside batteries of 9" Dahlgrens. Next came seven sloops of a new design, featuring heavy pivot guns*. Each were among the most powerful of their type in the world. All were in service by 1861, forming the core of the Union navy early in the war, and most had significant war service (one, Merrimack, on the wrong side
).
The number of ships and the promptness with which they were completed - 18 in seven years, start to finish - were a departure from prior practice and, as it turned out, quite timely. It would have been a significant increase in the annual naval budget also. Does anyone know what the motivation was? I'm not aware of any situation that required a naval buildup. The new ships featured the new Dahlgren guns, but that alone would not seem to explain the scale or urgency of the new program.
* one ship, Pawnee, was designed to carry 11" pivot guns but was given a conventional broadside arrangement of 9-inchers.
Steamers did not progress any more quickly. Demelogos aka Fulton was laid up almost as soon as she was commissioned in 1816. Starting with the second Fulton in 1837, there were about ten steam frigates, sloops, and gunboats by 1852, including Michigan, the one ship we were allowed by treaty on the Great Lakes. In sum, 62 ships in forty years, about 1 1/2 per year.
Starting in 1854 there was a significant increase in warship construction: six large, powerful steam frigates, followed by five sloops, basically smaller versions of the frigates, with the same broadside batteries of 9" Dahlgrens. Next came seven sloops of a new design, featuring heavy pivot guns*. Each were among the most powerful of their type in the world. All were in service by 1861, forming the core of the Union navy early in the war, and most had significant war service (one, Merrimack, on the wrong side
).The number of ships and the promptness with which they were completed - 18 in seven years, start to finish - were a departure from prior practice and, as it turned out, quite timely. It would have been a significant increase in the annual naval budget also. Does anyone know what the motivation was? I'm not aware of any situation that required a naval buildup. The new ships featured the new Dahlgren guns, but that alone would not seem to explain the scale or urgency of the new program.
* one ship, Pawnee, was designed to carry 11" pivot guns but was given a conventional broadside arrangement of 9-inchers.
One of my ancestors would take it personal.