French ironclad Surveillante
{{Short description|Provence-class armored frigates}}
{{good article}}
{{Infobox ship begin}}
{{Infobox ship image |Ship image=Edwin Weedon - The War, the French Fleet in the Baltic, the Admiral's Flagship, the Serveillante, Leading.jpg |Ship caption=The French Fleet in the Baltic, the Admiral's Flagship, the Surveillante, Leading }} {{Infobox ship career |Hide header= |Ship country=Second French Empire |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|France|naval}} |Ship name=Surveillante |Ship namesake=Guardian |Ship ordered=12 November 1860 |Ship awarded= |Ship builder=Arsenal de Lorient |Ship original cost= |Ship laid down=28 January 1861 |Ship launched=28 August 1864 |Ship reclassified=*As a guard ship, 1887
|Ship stricken=1890 |Ship completed=May 1867 |Ship commissioned=21 October 1867 |Ship fate=Scrapped, 1898 |Ship badge= }} {{Infobox ship characteristics |Hide header= |Header caption= |Ship class={{sclass|Provence|ironclad}} frigate |Ship displacement={{cvt|5700 |
6000|t|LT|lk=on}}
|Ship length={{Convert|80.72|m|ftin|abbr=on}} |Ship beam={{Convert|17|m|ftin|abbr=on}} |Ship draft={{convert|7.7 |
8.8|m|ftin|abbr=on}}
|Ship power=*8 boilers
|Ship propulsion=1 shaft, 1 HRCR-steam engine |Ship speed={{convert|13.2|kn|lk=in}} (trials) |Ship range={{convert|2410|nmi|lk=in}} at {{convert|10|kn}} |Ship sail plan=Barque-rig |Ship complement=579–594 |Ship armament=11 × single {{convert|194|mm|in|abbr=on}} smoothbore muzzle-loading guns |Ship armor=*Belt: {{convert|150|mm|in|abbr=on}}
|Ship notes= }} |
The French ironclad Surveillante was one of 10 {{sclass|Provence|ironclad|0}} armored frigates built for the French Navy ({{lang|fr|Marine Nationale}}) during the 1860s. Commissioned in 1867, she was initially assigned to the Northern Squadron ({{lang|fr|Escadre du Nord}}). The ironclad played a minor role as a flagship in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–1871, blockading the Baltic and North Sea coasts of Prussia. Surveillante was decommissioned after the war, but was reactivated in 1876. She was transferred to the Mediterranean Squadron ({{lang|fr|Escadre de la Méditerranée}}) the following year.
The ship was reduced to reserve in 1879, but was reactivated in 1880 and participated in the French occupation of Tunisia the following year. Surveillante spent most of the years between 1882 and 1887 in reserve. The ship was condemned that latter year, but served as a guard ship until 1890. She then hulked as a coal storeship and was finally scrapped in 1898.
Design and description
File:French Provence Class Ironclad 1863.jpg
The Provence class was designed as an enlarged version of the {{sclass|Gloire|ironclad|1}}s with thicker armor, more powerful guns, and better seakeeping qualities. The ships had an overall length of {{convert|82.9|m|ft|0|sp=us}}, a beam of {{convert|17.06|m|ft|0|sp=us}}, and a draft of {{convert|8.4|m|ftin|sp=us}} at deep load. They displaced {{convert|5810|t|LT|sp=us|lk=on}}.Winfield & Roberts, p. 423 Their crew numbered 579–594 officers and enlisted men.Gille, p. 30
Surveillante had a single two-cylinder horizontal-return connecting-rod compound steam engine that drove the propeller shaft,de Balincourt & Vincent-Bréchignac 1975a, p. 10 using steam provided by eight boilers. The engine was rated at 1,000 nominal horsepower or {{convert|3200|PS|lk=on|sp=us}} and was intended to give the ships a speed in excess of {{convert|13|kn|lk=in}}.Campbell, p. 287 Surveillante reached a speed of {{convert|13.2|kn}} from {{convert|3254|PS|sp=us}} during her sea trials. The Provence-class ships carried enough coal to allow them to steam for {{convert|2410|nmi|lk=in|sp=us}} at a speed of {{convert|10|kn}}.Silverstone, p. 62 They were fitted with a three-masted barque rig that had a sail area of {{convert|1960|sqm|sp=us}}.
=Armament and protection=
The main battery of the Provence-class ships was intended to be thirty {{convert|164.7|mm|adj=on|sp=us|1}} Modèle 1858–60 rifled muzzle-loading (RML) guns, but this was changed to a mixed armament of four {{convert|240|mm|adj=on|1|sp=us}} Modèle 1864 RMLs and six {{convert|194|mm|adj=on|1|sp=us}} Modèle 1864 smoothbore muzzle-loading guns on the gundeck. Positioned on the quarterdeck and the forecastle were another 194 mm RML and six 164.7 mm Modèle 1858 RMLs, at least some of which served as chase guns. By 1869–1870, Surveillante had been equipped with eight {{convert|240|mm|adj=on|1|sp=us}} Modèle 1864 RMLs and four 194 mm Modèle 1864 weapons serving as chase guns.
From the upper deck down to below the waterline, the sides of the ships were completely armored with {{cvt|150|mm|in|1}} of wrought iron, backed by {{cvt|750|mm|in|1}} of wood. The sides of the battery itself were protected with {{cvt|110|mm|in|1}} of armor that was backed by {{cvt|610|mm|in}} of wood. The conning tower's sides consisted of {{convert|100|mm|in|sp=us|1|adj=on}} armor plates.
Construction and service
Surveillante (Guardian)Silverstone, p. 112 was ordered on 16 November 1860 from the Arsenal de Lorient, was laid down on 28 January 1861 and launched on 18 August 1864. She was commissioned for trials on 13 May 1867, completed that same month, but was not definitively commissioned ({{lang|fr|armement définitif}}) until 21 October. Surveillante was assigned to the Ironclad Division ({{lang|fr|Division cuirassée}}) of the Northern Squadron, based in Cherbourg, although she was placed in reserve on 28 April 1869.de Balincourt & Vincent-Bréchignac 1975a, p. 11
When the Franco-Prussian War began on 19 July 1870, the ship was mobilized and became the flagship of Vice Admiral ({{lang|fr|vice-amiral}}) Édouard Bouët-Willaumez's squadron that was tasked to blockade German ports in the Heligoland Bight. It departed Cherbourg on 24 July and, failing to find any German ships, proceeded to Danish waters to wait for further instructions. Bouët-Williaumez was ordered on 2 August to split his forces with half, including Surveillante, proceeding into the Baltic Sea to blockade the Prussian ports there under his command and the others to return to the Bight. On 22 August the Prussian unarmored corvette {{SMS|Nymphe|1863|6}} approached the anchored squadron in the Bay of Puck off Danzig (modern Gdansk, Poland) and fired two broadsides at the flagship at long range without result before she was chased off. The strong Prussian coastal defenses prevented any attack by the French ships, but their presence severely inhibited German shipping. Bouët-Willaumez was ordered to return to Cherbourg on 16 September where his squadron joined the ships blockading the Bight after their arrival on the 29th. By then the Prussians were besieging Paris and many of the trained gunners aboard the squadron were transferred to the city. The squadron resumed the blockade with reduced crews until December when smaller ships took it over. Surveillante lost her rudder during a storm on 12 October and had to be towed back to Cherbourg by her sister {{ship|French ironclad|Guyenne||2}}. Bouët-Willaumez became sick a week later and had to haul down his flag.de Balincourt & Vincent-Bréchignac 1975b, p. 30; Stenzel, pp. 583–584; Wilson, pp. 271–274, 276–278
The ship was paid off on 1 April 1871; despite this, she was rearmed with Modèle 1870 guns in 1873.Gille, p. 28 Surveillante was reactivated on 18 March 1876 for service with the Squadron of Evolutions ({{lang|fr|Escadre d'évolution}}) of the Channel Division ({{lang|fr|Division de la Manche}}). In 1877 the ship was transferred to the Mediterranean Squadron during the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878. She ran aground near Golfe-Juan, France, on 1 February 1879, but was refloated the following day. Surveillante was placed in reserve at Toulon on 14 February, but was reactivated on 1 March 1880 for trials and was assigned to the Mediterranean Squadron the following month. During the French occupation of Tunisia in early 1881, the ship ferried 450 troops, some horses and a battery of mountain guns to Tabarka, Tunisia, on 27 April.Roche, p. 428
On 27 January 1882 she sailed for Brest and began a refit there on 8 May. Surveillante was placed in reserve on 3 July and transferred to Cherbourg in December. The ship was reactivated on 15 April 1883 for service with the Trials Division ({{lang|fr|Division d'essais}}), but this was disbanded on 27 May when some of its ships were needed to ferry French troops to Vietnam for the Tonkin Campaign. Surveillante returned to reserve on 16 June and was decommissioned on 5 November 1884. The ship was condemned on 13 May 1887, but remained in use as a guard ship at Cherbourg until she was stricken from the navy list in 1890. Surveillante then became a coal storeship until she was broken up for scrap in 1898.de Balincourt & Vincent-Bréchignac 1975a, p. 12, Roche, p. 428
Citations
{{Reflist}}
Bibliography
- {{cite journal|last=de Balincourt|first=Captain|author2=Vincent-Bréchignac, Captain|year=1975a|title=The French Navy of Yesterday: Ironclad Frigates: Second Group – Provence Type|journal=F.P.D.S. Newsletter|volume=III |issue=2|pages=9–13 |oclc=41554533|name-list-style=amp}}
- {{cite journal|last=de Balincourt|first=Captain|author2=Vincent-Bréchignac, Captain|year=1975b|title=The French Navy of Yesterday: Ironclad Frigates, Part IV|journal=F.P.D.S. Newsletter|volume=III|issue=4|pages=26–30 |oclc=41554533|name-list-style=amp}}
- {{cite book|title=Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860–1905|editor1-last=Chesneau|editor1-first=Roger|editor2-last=Kolesnik|editor2-first=Eugene M.|publisher=Conway Maritime Press|location=Greenwich, UK|year=1979|isbn=0-8317-0302-4 |name-list-style=amp |url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/conwaysallworlds0000unse_l2e2|chapter=France|last1=Campbell|first1=N. J. M.|pages=282–333}}
- {{cite book|last=Gille|first=Eric|title=Cent ans de cuirassés français|trans-title=A Century of French Battleships|publisher=Marines|location=Nantes|year=1999 |isbn=2-909-675-50-5 |language=fr}}
- {{cite book|last=Roberts|first=Stephen S.|title=French Warships in the Age of Steam 1859–1914: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates|year=2021|location=Barnsley, UK|publisher=Seaforth Publishing |isbn=978-1-5267-4533-0}}
- {{Cite book|first=Jean-Michel |last=Roche |year=2005 |title=Dictionnaire des bâtiments de la flotte de guerre française de Colbert à nos jours|volume=Tome I: 1671–1870|language=fr|trans-title=Dictionary of French Warships from Colbert to Today|isbn=978-2-9525917-0-6 |oclc=165892922 |location=Toulon|publisher = Group Retozel-Maury Millau}}
- {{cite book|last=Silverstone|first=Paul H.|title=Directory of the World's Capital Ships|year=1984 |publisher=Hippocrene Books|location=New York|isbn=0-88254-979-0}}
- {{cite book |last1=Stenzel |first1=Alfred |editor1-last=von Pfiugk-Harttung |editor1-first=Julius Albert Georg |title=The Franco-German War |date=1900 |publisher=Swan Sonnenschein and Co. |location=London |chapter=The Fleet and the Coast|oclc=3788640}}
- {{cite book|last=Wilson|first=H. W.|title=Ironclads in Action: A Sketch of Naval Warfare From 1855 to 1895, with Some Account of the Development of the Battleship in England|oclc=902936108 |url=https://archive.org/details/ironcladsinacti00wilsgoog|volume=1|year=1896|publisher=Little, Brown|location=Boston}}
- {{cite book |last1=Winfield |first1=Rif |last2=Roberts |first2=Stephen S. |title=French Warships in the Age of Sail, 1786–1861 |date=2015 |publisher=Seaforth Publishing |location=Barnsley, UK |isbn=978-1-84832-204-2|name-list-style=amp}}
Further reading
- {{cite book |last1=Konstam |first1=Angus |title=European Ironclads 1860–75: The Gloire Sparks the Great Ironclad Arms Race |date=2019 |publisher=Osprey Publishing |location=Oxford, UK |isbn=978-1-47282-676-3}}
External links
- {{Commons category-inline|Surveillante (ship, 1864)}}
{{Provence-class ironclad}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Surveillante}}