Italian ironclad Palestro

{{Short description|Ironclad warship of the Italian Royal Navy}}

{{other ships|Italian ship Palestro}}

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

{{Infobox ship begin}}

{{Infobox ship image

|Ship image=Italian ironclad Palestro.jpg

|Ship caption=Palestro at anchor in La Spezia in 1887

}}

{{Infobox ship career

|Hide header=

|Ship country=Kingdom of Italy

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

|Ship name=Palestro

|Ship builder=Arsenale di La Spezia{{cite web | url = https://www.marina.difesa.it/noi-siamo-la-marina/mezzi/mezzi-storici/Pagine/PQRS/palestro_fregata.aspx | title = Palestro | publisher = Marina Militare | access-date = 19 March 2021}}

|Ship namesake={{ship|Italian coastal defense ship|Palestro

2}}

|Ship laid down=August 1865

|Ship launched=30 September or 2 October 1871

|Ship completed=11 July 1875

|Ship stricken=1895

|Ship fate=Scrapped, 1902–04

}}

{{Infobox ship characteristics

|Hide header=

|Header caption=

|Ship class={{sclass|Principe Amedeo|ironclad|0}} ironclad warship

|Ship displacement=

  • Normal: {{convert|5761|LT|t|0|abbr=on|lk=on}}
  • Full load: {{convert|6318|LT|0|abbr=on}}

|Ship length={{convert|78.82|m|ftin|abbr=on}}

|Ship beam={{convert|17.3|m|ftin|abbr=on}}

|Ship draft={{convert|8|m|ftin|abbr=on}}

|Ship power=*6 fire-tube boilers

  • {{convert|6117|ihp|0|abbr=on|lk=on}}

|Ship propulsion=

|Ship speed={{convert|12.85|kn|lk=in}}

|Ship range={{convert|1780|nmi|km|abbr=on|lk=in}} at {{convert|10|kn|abbr=on}}

|Ship complement=548

|Ship armament=

  • 6 × {{convert|10|in|abbr=on|0|order=flip}} guns
  • 1 × {{convert|11|in|abbr=on|0|order=flip}} gun

|Ship armor=

  • Belt armor: {{convert|8.7|in|abbr=on|0|order=flip}}
  • Casemate: {{convert|5.5|in|abbr=on|0|order=flip}}
  • Conning tower: {{convert|2.4|in|abbr=on|0|order=flip}}

|Ship notes=

}}

Palestro was an ironclad warship, the second and final member of the {{sclass|Principe Amedeo|ironclad|4}}, built for the Italian Regia Marina (Royal Navy) in the 1860s and 1870s. She was armed with a battery of six {{convert|10|in|abbr=on|0|order=flip}} guns and one {{convert|11|in|abbr=on|0|order=flip}} gun. The last sail-rigged ironclad of the Italian fleet, she had a single steam engine that was capable of propelling the ship at a speed of slightly over {{convert|12|kn|lk=in}}.

Obsolescent before she entered service, Palestro had an uneventful career. She served primarily in Italy's colonial empire and did not see action. In 1880, she took part in an international naval demonstration off Ragusa to enforce the Treaty of Berlin. Palestro was employed in the defense of La Maddalena from 1889 to 1894, and thereafter as a training ship. She was stricken from the naval register in 1900 and broken up for scrap in 1902–1904.

Design

{{main|Principe Amedeo-class ironclad}}

File:Palestro line drawing.png

Palestro was {{convert|78.82|m|ftin|sp=us}} long between perpendiculars; she had a beam of {{convert|17.3|m|ftin|abbr=on}} and an average draft of {{convert|8|m|ftin|abbr=on}}. She displaced {{convert|5761|LT|sp=us|lk=on}} normally and up to {{convert|6318|LT|sp=us|abbr=on}} at full load. Her superstructure consisted of a small conning tower. She had a crew of 548 officers and men.{{sfn|Fraccaroli|p=340}}

Her propulsion system consisted of one single-expansion steam engine that drove a single screw propeller, with steam supplied by six coal-fired, cylindrical fire-tube boilers that were vented through a single funnel placed directly aft of the conning tower. Her engine produced a top speed of {{convert|12.85|kn|lk=in}} at {{convert|6117|ihp|lk=in}}. She could steam for {{convert|1780|nmi|lk=in}} at a speed of {{convert|10|kn}}. The ship was barque-rigged to supplement the steam engine; Palestro and her sister were the last rigged ironclads to be built by Italy.{{sfn|Fraccaroli|p=340}}

Palestro was armed with a main battery of six {{convert|10|in|abbr=on|0}} guns, mounted in three armored casemates. The first was located forward, toward the bow, the second and third were placed close to the stern on each side of the ship. A {{convert|11|in|abbr=on|0}} gun was mounted forward as a bow chaser. Palestro was protected by iron belt armor that was {{convert|8.7|in|abbr=on|0}} thick and extended for the entire length of the hull. The casemates were protected with {{convert|5.5|in|abbr=on|0}} of iron plating, and the small conning tower had {{convert|2.4|in|abbr=on|0}} thick iron plates.{{sfn|Fraccaroli|p=340}}

Service history

The keel for Palestro was laid down at the Regio Cantiere di Castellammare di Stabia shipyard in August 1865.{{sfn|Fraccaroli|p=340}} The ship was named for the gunboat {{ship|Italian coastal defense ship|Palestro||2}}, which had been sunk at the Battle of Lissa in 1866.{{sfn|Fraccaroli|p=336}} The date of her launched is unknown, though surviving records indicate either 30 September or 2 October 1871. The ship was completed on 11 July 1875, after almost a decade of work.{{sfn|Fraccaroli|p=340}} Obsolescent by the time she was completed, Palestro primarily served in the Italian colonial empire,{{sfn|Ordovini, Petronio, & Sullivan|p=358}} which Italy had begun acquiring in the 1880s.{{sfn|Pakenham|p=280}} She occasionally took part in training maneuvers with the main Italian fleet throughout her career.{{sfn|Ordovini, Petronio, & Sullivan|p=358}}

On 14 November 1880 she assisted with the refloating of the P&O steamship {{SS|Sumatra|1867|2}}, which had run aground at Brindisi.{{Cite newspaper The Times |title=Italy |date=16 November 1880 |issue=30040 |page=5 |column=E-F }} Also in that month, Palestro and the ironclad {{ship|Italian ironclad|Roma||2}} took part in a naval demonstration off Ragusa in an attempt to force the Ottoman Empire to comply with the terms of the Treaty of Berlin and turn over the town of Ulcinj to Montenegro.{{sfn|London News|p=278}} Palestro was used as a headquarters ship for the ships defending La Maddalena from 1889 to 1894. She was then used as a training ship for coxswains.{{sfn|Fraccaroli|p=340}} Palestro was stationed in La Spezia in 1895 as a special service ship.{{sfn|Garbett 1895|p=91}} The ship was stricken from the naval register on 14 April 1900 and broken up for scrap between 1902 and 1904.{{sfn|Fraccaroli|p=340}}

Notes

{{reflist|20em}}

References

  • {{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

|editor-last=Garbett

|editor-first=H.

|title=Naval and Military Notes

|journal=Journal of the Royal United Service Institution

|volume=XXXIX

|number=203

|year=1895

|publisher=J. J. Keliher & Co.

|location=London

|pages=81–110

|oclc=8007941

|ref={{sfnref|Garbett 1895}}

}}

  • {{cite magazine

|last1=Ordovini

|first1=Aldo F.

|last2=Petronio

|first2=Fulvio

|last3=Sullivan

|first3=David M.

|title=Capital Ships of the Royal Italian Navy, 1860–1918: Part I: The Formidabile, Principe di Carignano, Re d'Italia, Regina Maria Pia, Affondatore, Roma and Principe Amedeo Classes

|magazine=Warship International

|date=December 2014

|volume= 51

|issue= 4

|pages=323–360

|issn=0043-0374

|name-list-style=amp

|ref={{sfnref|Ordovini, Petronio, & Sullivan}}

}}

  • {{cite book

|last=Pakenham

|first=Thomas

|title=The Scramble for Africa: White Man's Conquest of the Dark Continent from 1876 to 1912

|publisher=Perennial

|location=New York

|year=1992

|isbn=978-0-380-71999-0

|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/scrambleforafric00pake_0

|ref={{sfnref|Pakenham}}

}}

  • {{cite magazine

|title=The Naval Demonstration in the Adriatic

|page=278

|date=18 September 1880

|magazine=The Illustrated London News

|location=London

|publisher=George C. Leighton

|ref={{sfnref|London News}}

}}