Kalamazoo-class monitor: Difference between revisions

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|Name=''Kalamazoo'' class
|Builders=
|Operators={{navynaval|USAUnited States}}
|Class before={{sclass-|Miantonomoh|monitor|4}}
|Class after={{USS|Puritan|BM-1|6}}
|Built range=1863–65
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==Design and description==
[[John Lenthall (shipbuilder)|John Lenthall]], Chief of the [[Bureau of Construction and Repair]], ordered Benjamin F. Delano, naval constructor at [[New York City]], to design a wooden-hulled ironclad that would carry her armament in two gun turrets. The [[deck (ship)|deck]] was to be {{convert|3|ft|m|1}} above the [[waterline]] and protected by {{convert|3|in}} of armor. The ship's side armor was to be {{convert|10|in|0}} thick, backed by {{convert|12|-|15|in|0}} of wood; it was to cover the entire ship's side, down to a depth three feet below the waterline. It should carry enough coal to steam one week at full power with "sufficient speed to make good use of its [[naval ram|ram]]".<ref>Canney, p. 124–25</ref> [[Gideon Welles]], [[Secretary of the Navy]], called them enlarged versions of the {{sclass-|Miantonomoh|monitor|2}}s with greater speed and "adapted to coast service", meaning more seaworthy.<ref name=c5>Canney, p. 125</ref>
 
The ''Kalamazoo''-class ships were {{convert|345|ft|5|in|m|1}} [[length overall|long overall]] and had a [[length between perpendiculars]] of {{convert|332|ft|6|in|m|1}}. They had a [[Beam (nautical)|beam]] of {{convert|56|ft|8|in|m}} and a [[Draft (hull)|draft]] of {{convert|17|ft|6|in|m|1}}. The ships were designed to displace {{convert|5660|LT|t|lk=in}} and were 3,200 [[Builder's Old Measurement|tons burthen]].<ref name=s9>Silverstone 1989, p. 9</ref> They were the largest ships to be built in navy shipyards to date.<ref name=c5/>
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==Construction and fate==
Construction of the ships began between late 1863 and early 1864 and they were still being built when the war ended in early 1865. Construction was suspended on all four on 17 November 1865; they remained on the stocks. The ships were renamed, usually twice, in 1869 to conform to several new ship naming conventions. [[Vice Admiral]] [[David Dixon Porter|David D. Porter]] ordered that ''Colossus'' be rebuilt to carry 10 large [[Broadside (naval)|broadside]] guns and fitted with iron [[mast (sailing)|masts]] in a [[ship rig]], but this never happened. The unseasoned wood in their hulls quickly began to rot after construction was suspended and they were broken up beginning in 1874.<ref name=c5/> Unusually, ''Passaconaway'' was condemned by an Act of Congress on 5 August 1882 before she was finally broken up in 1884.<ref>{{cite DANFS | title = Passaconaway | url = http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/p2/passaconaway-i.htm | access-date =1 January 2013 }}</ref>
 
==Notes==
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==External links==
{{Portal|American Civil War}}
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20040302103255/http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/k1/kalamazoo.htm] [[Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships]] entry on ''Kalamazoo''
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20040314020402/http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/p2/passaconaway-i.htm] [[Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships]] entry on ''Passaconaway''
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20040317224335/http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/q1/quinsigamond.htm] [[Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships]] entry on ''Quinsigamond''
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20040314163215/http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/s10/shakamaxon.htm] [[Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships]] entry on ''Shackamaxon''
 
{{Union ironclads}}
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[[Category:Cancelled ships of the United States Navy]]
[[Category:1860s ships]]
[[Category:Monitor classes]]
[[Category:Kalamazoo-class monitors| ]]