HMS Royal Oak (1892)
{{short description|Royal Sovereign-class battleship}}
{{Other ships|HMS Royal Oak}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{good article}}
{{Infobox ship begin}}
{{Infobox ship image |Ship image=HMSRoyalOak1897.jpg |Ship caption=HMS Royal Oak in 1897 }} {{Infobox ship career |Hide header= |Ship country=United Kingdom |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United Kingdom|naval}} |Ship name=Royal Oak |Ship namesake=The Royal Oak |Ship ordered= |Ship awarded= |Ship builder=Laird Brothers, Birkenhead |Ship original cost=£977,996 |Ship yard number= |Ship way number= |Ship laid down=29 May 1890 |Ship launched=5 November 1892 |Ship sponsor= |Ship christened= |Ship completed=June 1894 |Ship commissioned=14 January 1896 |Ship recommissioned= |Ship decommissioned=December 1911 |Ship in service= |Ship out of service= |Ship refit= |Ship struck= |Ship reinstated= |Ship motto= |Ship nickname= |Ship honours= |Ship fate=Sold for scrap, 14 January 1914 |Ship notes= |Ship badge= }} {{Infobox ship characteristics |Hide header= |Header caption=(as built) |Ship class={{sclass|Royal Sovereign|battleship|0}} predreadnought battleship |Ship displacement={{convert|14150|LT|t|lk=on}} (normal) |Ship length=*{{convert|380|ft|abbr=on|1}} (pp) |Ship beam={{convert|75|ft|m|abbr=on|1}} |Ship draught={{convert|27|ft|6|in|m|abbr=on|1}} |Ship power=*{{convert|11000|ihp|abbr=on|lk=in}} |Ship propulsion=2 shafts; 2 Triple-expansion steam engines |Ship speed={{convert|17.5|kn|lk=in}} |Ship range={{convert|4720|nmi|abbr=on|lk=in}} @ {{convert|10|kn}} |Ship complement=692 (as flagship, 1903) |Ship armament=*2 × twin BL 13.5 inch naval gun Mk I - IV
| Ship armour =* Main belt: {{convert|14 |
18|in|mm|abbr=on|0}}
|
16|in|mm|abbr=on|0}}
|
17|in|mm|abbr=on|0}}
|
14|in|mm|abbr=on|0}}
|
3|in|mm|abbr=on|0}}
|Ship notes= }} |
HMS Royal Oak was one of seven {{sclass|Royal Sovereign|battleship|0}} pre-dreadnought battleships built for the Royal Navy during the 1890s. Upon her completion in 1894, she was initially placed in reserve until mobilised in 1896 for service with the Flying Squadron. After returning briefly to reserve, the ship was assigned the following year to the Mediterranean Fleet. Royal Oak remained there until 1902 when she returned home; after a refit, the ship was assigned to the Home Fleet, where she served as the flagship of the fleet's second-in-command in 1904–05. Royal Oak was then reduced to reserve until she was taken out of service in 1911. The ship was sold for scrap in early 1914.
Design and description
The design of the Royal Sovereign-class ships was derived from that of the {{sclass2|Admiral|ironclad}} battleships, greatly enlarged to improve seakeeping and to provide space for a secondary armament as in the preceding {{sclass|Trafalgar|ironclad|2}} battleships.Gardiner, p. 116; Parkes, p. 359 The ships displaced {{convert|14150|LT|t|lk=on}} at normal load and {{convert|15580|LT|t}} at deep load. They had a length between perpendiculars of {{convert|380|ft|m|1}} and an overall length of {{convert|410|ft|6|in|m|1}}, a beam of {{convert|75|ft|m|1}}, and a draught of {{convert|27|ft|6|in|m|1}}.Chesneau & Kolesnik, p. 32 Their crew consisted of 670 officers and ratings in 1903.Burt, p. 73
The Royal Sovereigns were powered by a pair of three-cylinder, vertical triple-expansion steam engines, each driving one shaft. Their engines were designed to produce a total of {{convert|11000|ihp|lk=in}} and a maximum speed of {{convert|17.5|kn|lk=in}} using steam provided by eight cylindrical boilers with forced draught. The ships carried a maximum of {{convert|1420|LT|t|0}} of coal, which gave them a range of {{convert|4720|nmi|lk=in}} at a speed of {{convert|10|kn}}.
Their main armament consisted of four breech-loading (BL) BL 13.5 inch naval gun Mk I - IV mounted in two twin-gun barbettes, one each fore and aft of the superstructure.Parkes, p. 355 Each gun was provided with 80 rounds. Their secondary armament consisted of ten quick-firing (QF) QF 6 inch Mk I - III naval gun. 200 rounds per gun were carried by the ships. Sixteen QF 6-pounder ({{convert|57|mm|in|abbr=on|1|order=flip}}) guns of an unknown type and a dozen QF 3-pounder Hotchkiss Hotchkiss guns were fitted for defence against torpedo boats. The two 3-pounders in the upper fighting top were removed in 1899–1902 and all of the remaining light guns from the lower fighting tops and main deck followed in 1905–1909. The Royal Sovereign-class ships mounted seven 18-inch (450 mm) torpedo tubes, although Royal Oak had four of hers removed in 1902.Burt, pp. 73, 85, 87, 100
The Royal Sovereigns' armour scheme was similar to that of the Trafalgars, as the waterline belt of compound armour only protected the area between the barbettes. The {{convert|14|-|18|in|mm|0|adj=on}} belt was {{convert|238|ft|m|1}} long and had a total height of {{convert|8|ft|8|in|m|1}} of which {{convert|5|ft|m|1}} was below water. Transverse bulkheads {{convert|14|-|16|in|0}} thick closed off the ends of the belt. Above the belt was a strake of {{convert|4|in|0|adj=on}} nickel-steel armour closed off by {{convert|3|in|adj=on}} transverse bulkheads.
The barbettes were protected by compound armour, ranging in thickness from {{convert|11|to|17|in|mm|0}}, and the casemates for the 6-inch guns were protected by armour equally thick. The thicknesses of the deck armour ranged from {{convert|2.5|to|3|in|mm|0}}. The walls of the forward conning tower were {{convert|12|-|14|in|0}} thick and the aft conning tower was protected by 3-inch plates.
Construction and career
The Royal Sovereign class was ordered as part of the Naval Defence Act 1889 that was a supplement to the normal naval estimates.Burt, p. 90 Royal Oak, named after the tree in which King Charles II hid after the Battle of Worcester,Silverstone, p. 265 was the sixth ship of her name to serve in the Royal Navy.Colledge, pp. 300–01 The ship was laid down by Laird Brothers at their shipyard in Birkenhead on 29 May 1890 and floated out of the drydock on 5 November 1892. She arrived at Portsmouth Dockyard on 29 October 1893 for fitting out, completed her sea trials in June 1894, and cost £977,996. Upon completion, Royal Oak was placed in reserve at Portsmouth. Almost two years later, she mobilised there on 14 January 1896 for service in the Particular Service Squadron – later renamed the Flying Squadron – which was formed in response to rising tensions in Europe following the Jameson Raid and Germany's Kaiser Wilhelm II's telegram of support to the Boer government. When the squadron disbanded on 25 November, the ship returned to reserve at Portsmouth.Burt, p. 92
Royal Oak was recommissioned on 9 March 1897 for service with the Mediterranean Fleet, where she was to relieve the battleship Collingwood. She departed Portsmouth on 24 March 1897, and arrived at Malta on 5 April. Royal Oak was relieved by the battleship Bulwark and departed the Mediterranean in May 1902. She arrived at Plymouth on 16 May,{{Cite newspaper The Times |title=Naval & Military intelligence |date=16 May 1902 |page=11 |issue=36769| }} and at Portsmouth the following day, and paid off there on 6 June 1902.{{Cite newspaper The Times |title=Naval & Military intelligence |date=7 June 1902 |page=9 |issue=36788| }} She soon moved to Chatham Dockyard for a refit, during which casemates were provided for her six-inch upper deck guns. On 16 February 1903, Royal Oak recommissioned at Portsmouth for service in the Home Fleet using part of the battleship Nile's crew as a nucleus. In the summer of 1903, she participated in combined exercises in the Atlantic involving the Home, Mediterranean, and Channel Fleets, as well as the Cruiser Squadron.
In April 1904, while operating with the Home Fleet off the Scilly Isles, Royal Oak and her sister ship Revenge had their bottoms lightly damaged when they struck a sunken wreck. On 9 May 1904, Royal Oak became flagship of the Home Fleet's second-in-command, relieving her sister Empress of India, and took part in annual maneuvers in July and August. On 7 March 1905, Royal Oak paid off at Portsmouth into the Chatham Reserve, and her crew transferred to the battleship Caesar. The following day the ship recommissioned with a skeleton crew for service with the Sheerness-Chatham Division of the newly formed Fleet in Commission in Reserve at Home. While she was under refit at Chatham, an explosion in her small-arms magazine on 11 May killed one workman and injured three others. In July, Royal Oak participated in Reserve Fleet manoeuvres. Her crew was then transferred to the battleship Ocean, and Royal Oak recommissioned with a new nucleus crew to serve as an emergency reserve ship at Chatham.Burt, pp. 92–93; Parkes, p. 363
As a unit of the First Division of the Blue Fleet, Royal Oak took part in annual maneuvers off the coast of Portugal and in the eastern Atlantic from 12 June to 2 July 1906. On 1 January 1907, she recommissioned in reserve at Devonport with a nucleus crew. In April 1909, Royal Oak and the other reserve ships with nucleus crews at Devonport were formed into the 4th Division of the Home Fleet. She relieved her sister Ramillies as the parent ship of the division in June 1911, and was in turn relieved of this duty by her sister Empress of India in November. The ship was taken out of service in December 1911 and towed to the Motherbank by the battleship Bellerophon in August 1912.Burt, p. 93 She was sold to Thos. W. Ward on 14 January 1914 for £36,450 and subsequently broken up at Briton Ferry.Colledge, p. 301
Notes
{{Reflist|30em}}
References
- {{cite book|last=Burt|first=R. A.|title=British Battleships 1889–1904|year=2013|publisher=Naval Institute Press|location=Annapolis, Maryland|isbn=978-1-59114-065-8}}
- {{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}}
- {{Cite Colledge2006}}
- {{cite book|editor=Gardiner, Robert|title=Steam, Steel and Shellfire: The Steam Warship 1815–1905|series=Conway's History of the Ship|year=1992|publisher=Conway Maritime Press|location=London|isbn=1-55750-774-0}}
- {{cite book |last=Parkes |first=Oscar |title=British Battleships |publisher=Naval Institute Press |location=Annapolis, Maryland |year=1990 |orig-year=1957 |isbn=1-55750-075-4|author-link=Oscar Parkes}}
- {{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}}
External links
{{Commons category|HMS Royal Oak (ship, 1892)}}
- [http://www.dreadnoughtproject.org/tfs/index.php/H.M.S._Royal_Oak_(1892) Royal Oak on the Dreadnought Project]
{{Royal Sovereign class battleship}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Royal Oak}}