:Italian cruiser Pietro Micca

{{Short description|Torpedo cruiser of the Italian Royal Navy}}

{{other ships|Italian ship Pietro Micca}}

{{Use shortened footnotes|date=November 2022}}

{{Infobox ship begin

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|display title=

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{{Infobox ship image

|Ship image=300px

|Ship image size=

|Ship caption={{lang|it|Pietro Micca}}, date unknown

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{{Infobox ship class overview

|Class before=None

|Class after={{ship|Italian cruiser|Tripoli

2}}

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{{Infobox ship career

|Hide header=

|Ship country=Kingdom of Italy

|Ship flag={{shipboxflag|Kingdom of Italy|naval}}

|Ship name={{lang|it|Pietro Micca}}

|Ship namesake=Pietro Micca

|Ship builder=

|Ship laid down=15 February 1875

|Ship launched=1 August 1875

|Ship completed=3 July 1877

|Ship commissioned=

|Ship decommissioned=

|Ship struck=7 November 1893

|Ship fate=Sold for scrap

}}

{{Infobox ship characteristics

|Hide header=

|Header caption=

|Ship type=Torpedo cruiser

|Ship displacement=

  • Design: {{cvt|526.5|LT|lk=on}}
  • Full load: {{cvt|598|LT}}

|Ship length={{convert|61.87|m|abbr=on|0}}

|Ship beam={{convert|5.97|m|ftin|abbr=on}}

|Ship draft={{convert|3.62|m|ftin|abbr=on}}

|Ship propulsion=

|Ship power=

  • 4 × boilers
  • {{convert|571|ihp|lk=in}}

|Ship speed={{convert|12.88|kn|abbr=on|lk=in}}

|Ship complement=73

|Ship armament=

|Ship armor=Deck: {{cvt|0.8|in}} steel on {{cvt|1.6|in

1}} wrought iron

}}

{{lang|it|Pietro Micca}} was the first torpedo cruiser built by the Italian {{lang|it|Regia Marina}}, and one of the first vessels of the type to be built by any navy. She was laid down in February 1875, launched in August 1876, and completed in July 1877. Details of her armament are contradictory, with various sources reporting a range of torpedo weapons, including a single {{convert|16|in|adj=on|0}} torpedo tube, a pair of tubes of undetermined diameter, and as many as six tubes. She proved to be unable to reach the projected speed of {{convert|17|kn|lk=in}}, and so she did not see much active service. She remained in the {{lang|it|Regia Marina}}{{'}}s inventory until 1893, but spent most of her 16-year life in the reserve.

Design

Admiral Simone Antonio Saint-Bon, then the Italian Minister of the Navy, ordered a small, fast vessel that was armed with Whitehead torpedoes. Saint-Bon's request came in part due to budgetary problems that prevented building a large fleet of ironclad battleships. Engineering Inspector Felice Mattei prepared the design for the new ship, which became {{lang|it|Pietro Micca}}, one of the first torpedo cruisers, along with the German {{SMS|Zieten||2}}.{{sfn|Fraccaroli|p=346}}{{sfn|Osborne|p=36}} Mattei and the design staff intended to build a fast, light ship that could quickly strike at an enemy ironclad and then escape before the enemy's guns could be brought to bear.{{sfn|King|p=599}} Design work was completed in 1873 and Saint-Bon presented the concept to the Chamber of Deputies on 6 December that year.{{sfn|Russo|p=263}}

=General characteristics and machinery=

{{lang|it|Pietro Micca}} was {{convert|61.87|m|sp=us|0}} long between perpendiculars and had a beam of {{convert|5.97|m|ftin|abbr=on}} and an average draft of {{convert|3.62|m|ftin|abbr=on}}. She displaced {{convert|526.5|LT|sp=us|lk=on}} normally and {{convert|598|LT|abbr=on|sp=us}} at full load.{{sfn|Fraccaroli|p=346}} The ship had an iron-built hull with a flat bottom; above the waterline, she had a pronounced tumblehome shape with sharply curving sides. Much of the ship's internal space was reserved for propulsion system and coal storage, with only the forward quarter reserved for crew spaces and stores. Steering was controlled with a single rudder.{{sfn|Brassey 1882|p=159}}{{sfn|King|p=598}} The ship had a very minimalist superstructure, with a small conning tower and a single pole mast. She had a crew of 73 officers and men.{{sfn|Fraccaroli|p=346}}

Her propulsion system consisted of one single-expansion steam engine that drove a single screw propeller.{{sfn|Fraccaroli|p=346}} The engine was produced by Gio. Ansaldo & C.{{sfn|King|p=599}} Steam was supplied by four coal-fired boilers, which were separated into two boiler rooms,{{sfn|Brassey 1882|p=159}} and each room was ducted into its own funnel.{{sfn|King|p=599}} Though she was designed to steam at {{convert|17|kn|lk=in}}, with a maximum speed of {{convert|20|kn}}, her hull shape prevented her from reaching either speed. {{lang|it|Pietro Micca}} could only steam at a top speed of {{convert|12.88|kn}} from {{convert|571|ihp|lk=in}}.{{sfn|Fraccaroli|p=346}}

=Armament and armor=

File:Whitehead 1876 torpedo.jpg similar to the type carried by {{lang|it|Pietro Micca}}]]

The primary weapon for {{lang|it|Pietro Micca}} was her torpedo armament, but details of it are contradictory. According to Conway's All The World's Fighting Ships, she was fitted with a single {{convert|16|in|abbr=on|0}} torpedo tube. The tube was mounted in the bow, above the waterline, and was supplied with ten Whitehead torpedoes.{{sfn|Fraccaroli|p=346}} But the US Navy officer Ridgely Hunt, writing in 1891, describes the vessel as having been equipped with a pair of tubes submerged in her hull.{{sfn|Hunt|p=411}} Meanwhile, the Italian Navy describes the vessel as having had six torpedo tubes.{{sfn|Pietro Micca}} The contemporary naval expert Edward Very seems to support the Navy's description, writing in 1881 that the ship was "provided with tubes for discharging Whitehead torpedoes ahead, abeam, and astern."{{sfn|Very|p=336}} She also carried a pair of machine guns,{{sfn|Fraccaroli|p=346}} though again, the Italian Navy disagrees, stating that {{lang|it|Pietro Micca}} had only one light gun.{{sfn|Pietro Micca}}

The ship was protected with an armor deck that was {{convert|7|ft|abbr=on}} wide on the flat, and then sloped down to the sides of the hull. It was placed 10 inches below the waterline.{{sfn|Brassey 1882|p=159}} The flat portion of the deck consisted of one layer of steel that was {{cvt|0.6|in}} thick, atop two layers of wrought iron that were {{cvt|0.8|in}} thick each. The sloped sides decreased in thickness slightly, to layers of {{cvt|0.4|in}} of steel and 0.8 in of iron.{{sfn|King|p=599}}

Service history

{{lang|it|Pietro Micca}} was built by the Venetian Arsenal. Her keel was laid down on 15 February 1875, and her completed hull was launched on 1 August 1876. Fitting-out work was finished on 3 July 1877. Shortly after completing sea trials, during which the crew discovered that her hull shape prevented her from reaching her intended speed, {{lang|it|Pietro Micca}} was placed in reserve.{{sfn|Fraccaroli|p=346}} Since her low speed prevented her from catching the ironclad battleships she had been intended to destroy,{{sfn|Osborne|p=37}} she did not see much service with the Italian fleet.{{sfn|Fraccaroli|p=346}} Instead, she was used primarily as a test ship to further develop the use of torpedoes by the fleet.{{sfn|Marshall|p=238}} By 1886, {{lang|it|Pietro Micca}} had been disarmed of her torpedo weapons and carried just a pair of machine guns. By that time, she was credited by The Naval Annual with a top speed of only {{convert|7|kn}}.{{sfn|Brassey 1886|p=248}}

The 1892 edition of The Naval Annual reported that {{lang|it|Pietro Micca}} had had a single torpedo launcher installed, though she was only used for harbor service; by that time, she was reportedly capable of steaming at {{convert|8|kn}}.{{sfn|Brassey 1892|p=240}} The following year, she was laid up in La Spezia, along with several other torpedo cruisers of the {{sclass|Goito|cruiser|5}} and {{sclass|Partenope|cruiser|4}}es.{{sfn|"Naval and Military Notes—Italy"|p=567}} According to Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships, the Italian Navy had informally removed {{lang|it|Pietro Micca}} from the naval register "some years before" formally striking her in 1893. {{lang|it|Pietro Micca}} was sold for scrap on 7 November that year and subsequently broken up.{{sfn|Fraccaroli|p=346}}

Notes

{{reflist|20em}}

References

{{Commons category}}

  • {{cite book

|last=Brassey

|first=Thomas

|editor-link=Thomas Brassey, 1st Earl Brassey

|title=The British Navy: Its Strength, Resources, and Administration

|volume=II

|year=1882

|location=London

|publisher=Longmans, Green and Co.

|oclc=769823035

|ref={{sfnref|Brassey 1882}}

}}

  • {{cite journal

|editor-last=Brassey

|editor-first=Thomas

|title=Italy—Unarmored Ships

|journal=The Naval Annual

|year=1886

|location=Portsmouth

|publisher=J. Griffin & Co.

|pages=248–249

|oclc=496786828

|ref={{sfnRef|Brassey 1886}}

}}

  • {{cite journal

|editor-last=Brassey

|editor-first=Thomas A.

|title=Italy—Unarmored Ships

|journal=The Naval Annual

|location=Portsmouth

|publisher=J. Griffin & Co.

|year=1892

|pages=240–241

|oclc=496786828

|ref={{sfnRef|Brassey 1892}}

}}

  • {{cite book

|last=Fraccaroli

|first=Aldo

|editor-last=Gardiner

|editor-first=Robert

|chapter=Italy

|pages=334–359

|title=Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860–1905

|year=1979

|location=London

|publisher=Conway Maritime Press

|isbn=978-0-85177-133-5

| url-access = registration

| url = https://archive.org/details/conwaysallworlds0000unse_l2e2

|ref={{sfnref|Fraccaroli}}

}}

  • {{cite journal

|last=Hunt

|first=Ridgely

|title=The Torpedo Vessel—A History of its Development

|pages=411–420

|journal=Notes on the Year's Naval Progress

|series=General Information Series: Information From Abroad

|volume=X

|location=Washington

|publisher=Government Printing Office

|date=July 1891

|ref={{sfnref|Hunt}}

|oclc=727366607

}}

  • {{cite book

|last=King

|first=James Wilson

|title=The War-ships and Navies of the World: Containing a Complete and Concise Description of the Construction, Motive Power, and Armaments of the Modern War-ships of All the Navies of the World; Naval Artillery, Marine Engines, Boilers, Torpedoes, and Torpedo-boats

|year=1881

|location=Boston

|publisher=A. Williams and Co.

|ref={{sfnref|King}}

|oclc=685177875

}}

  • {{cite book

|editor-last=Marshall

|editor-first=Chris

|title=The Encyclopedia of Ships: The History and Specifications of Over 1200 Ships

|year=1995

|publisher=Blitz Editions

|location=Enderby

|isbn=978-1-85605-288-7

|ref={{sfnref|Marshall}}

}}

  • {{cite journal

|title=Naval and Military Notes—Italy

|journal=Journal of the Royal United Service Institution

|publisher=J. J. Keliher

|location=London

|year=1893

|volume=XXXVII

|pages=566–568

|oclc=8007941

|ref={{sfnref|"Naval and Military Notes—Italy"}}

}}

  • {{cite book

|last=Osborne

|first=Eric W.

|title=Cruisers and Battle Cruisers: An Illustrated History of Their Impact

|isbn=978-1-280-71136-7

|location=Santa Barbara

|publisher=ABC-CLIO

|year=2004

|ref={{sfnref|Osborne}}

}}

  • {{cite web

|url=http://www.marina.difesa.it/storiacultura/storia/almanacco/Pagine/LMNO/micca.aspx

|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180714173255/http://www.marina.difesa.it/storiacultura/storia/almanacco/Pagine/LMNO/micca.aspx

|title=Pietro Micca Nave Lanciasiluri

|website=marina.difesa.it

|publisher=Marina Militare

|archive-date=14 July 2018

|ref={{sfnref|Pietro Micca}}

}}

  • {{cite journal

|last=Russo

|first=G.

|title=Fifty Years of Progress in Shipbuilding in Italy

|pages=252–278

|year=1911

|journal=Transactions of the Institution of Naval Architects

|editor-last=Dana

|editor-first=R. W.

|volume=LIII

|location=London

|publisher=Henry Sotheran & Co.

|oclc=869970491

|ref={{sfnref|Russo}}

}}

  • {{cite book

|last=Very

|first=Edward W.

|title=Navies of the World

|url=https://archive.org/details/naviesworldgivi00verygoog

|year=1880

|location=New York

|publisher=John Wiley & Sons

|oclc=20400836

|ref={{sfnref|Very}}

}}

{{Portal bar|Italy|Engineering}}

{{Italian cruiser Pietro Micca}}

{{Italian torpedo cruisers}}

{{Good article}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Pietro Micca}}

Category:Cruisers of the Regia Marina

Category:1875 ships

Category:Ships built by the Venetian Arsenal