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gun·boat (gŭn'bōt') ![]() |
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| US History Encyclopedia: Gunboats |
Gunboats, in the simplest sense, are tiny men-of-war that are extremely overgunned in proportion to size. Their influence dates to the 1776 Battle of Valcour Island on Lake Champlain when Benedict Arnold, with fifteen green-timber boats with cannon, halted a British invasion from Canada. (The Philadelphia, one of eleven gunboats sunk during the battle, was raised and restored in 1935 and is exhibited in the Smithsonian Institution. Search teams subsequently found the remaining sunken gunboats, the last being discovered in 1997.)
The gunboats sent to Tripoli during the first Barbary War typically carried twenty to twenty-three men and two twenty-four-or thirty-two-pound cannons in a hull seventy feet long. The boats were effective only along a coast, since, for them to be stable on the open sea, their crews had to stow the cannons below deck. To President Thomas Jefferson, anxious to avoid entanglement in the Napoleonic Wars, such a limitation seemed a virtue.
Congress authorized further commissions, and 176 gunboats were at hand for the War of 1812. The gunboats were almost entirely worthless. Since the token two dozen U.S. blue-water frigates and sloops were highly effective at sea, the U.S. Navy learned an important lesson—do not overinvest in any single type of man-of-war.
In the Civil War, improvised gunboats were found on embattled rivers everywhere. Often, their heavy guns inhibited Confederate movement or prevented such Union disasters as those at Shiloh and Malvern Hill. In the decades before the Spanish-American War, European neocolonialism introduced "Gunboat Diplomacy," calling for larger, hybrid craft that could safely cross oceans, assume a year-round anchorage on a foreign strand, and possess sufficient shallow draft to go up a river. The 1892 U.S.S. Castine, for example, on which Chester W. Nimitz (who became U.S. commander of the Pacific Fleet in World War II) served as a lieutenant, was 204 feet over-all, weighed 1,177 tons, and had eight four-inch rifles, making it a far stronger man-of-war than the famous destroyer type then emerging. Of the score of American gunboats before World War II, the half-dozen-strong Chinese Yangtze River patrol was immortalized in the novel Sand Pebbles by Richard McKenna. In real life, the Panay was sunk without provocation on 12 December 1937 by Japanese bombers. The others in the Far East were destroyed early in World War II.
The inshore fighting of World War II led to the building of forty-one small gunboats (patrol gunboat, or PG) and twenty-three still smaller motor gunboats (patrol gunboat motor, or PGM), with the emphasis on a multiplicity of automatic weapons and on rocket launchers for shore bombardment. The Soviet Union became particularly interested in such vessels, and, by 1972, had at least 200 gunboats.
The U.S. Navy had no interest in modernizing gunboats until the Vietnam War spawned a variety of tiny types used in swarms, either to police the shoreline or to penetrate the riverways. The heaviest types revived the name of "monitor." Since the Vietnam War, the U.S. Navy has developed heavily armed and computerized hydrofoil gunboats capable of exceeding seventy knots and fitted for nighttime amphibious operations.
Bibliography
Friedman, Norman. U.S. Small Combatants, Including PT-Boats, Subchasers, and the Brown-Water Navy: An Illustrated Design History. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press, 1987.
Lundeberg, Philip K. The Gunboat Philadelphia and the Defense of Lake Champlain in 1776. Basin Harbor, Vt.: Lake Champlain Maritime Museum, 1995.
Tucker, Spencer. The Jeffersonian Gunboat Navy. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1993.
| Columbia Encyclopedia: gunboat |
Bibliography
See Jane's Fighting Ships (pub. annually since 1897).
| Games: Gunboat |
| Wikipedia: Gunboat |
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| Look up gunboat in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
A gunboat is literally a boat carrying one or more guns. The term is rather broad, and the usual connotation has changed over the years (sometimes encompassing vessels which would otherwise be considered ships).
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In the age of sail, a gunboat was usually a small undecked vessel carrying a single smoothbore cannon in the bow, or just two or three such cannons. A gunboat could carry one or two masts or be oar-powered only, but the single-masted version of about 50 ft length was most typical. Some types of gunboat carried two cannons, or else mounted a number of swivel guns on the railings.
The advantages of this type of gunboat were that since it only carried a single cannon, that cannon could be quite heavy—for instance a 32-pounder—and that the boat could be maneuvered in shallow or restricted waters, where sailing was difficult for larger ships. A single hit from a frigate would demolish a gunboat, but a frigate facing a half-dozen gunboats in an estuary would likely be seriously damaged before it could manage to sink all of them. Gunboats were also easy and quick to build; the combatants in the 1776 Battle of Valcour Island on New York's Lake Champlain were mostly gunboats built on the spot.
All navies of the sailing era kept a number of gunboats on hand. Gunboats were a key part of the planned Napoleon's invasion of England in 1804, and were heavily used by Denmark-Norway. Between 1803 and 1812, the US Navy had a policy of basing the naval forces on coastal gunboats, and experimented with a variety of designs, but they were nearly useless in the War of 1812, and went back to being special-purpose vessels.
With the introduction of steam power in the early 19th century, small vessels propelled by side paddles and later by screws were built in considerable numbers by the Royal Navy and other navies. These retained full sailing rigs, so that steam propulsion was used as an auxiliary form.
Britain launched a number of wooden paddle gunboats between 1834-1847 for Canadian service on the Great Lakes. This was followed by at least one iron-hulled paddle gunboat.
The Von der Tann was a steam-powered 120 ton gunboat built in 1849 at Conradi shipyards in Kiel for the small navy of Schleswig-Holstein, the first propeller-driven gunboat in the world. Initially called Gunboat No. 1, Von der Tann was the most modern ship in the navy. She participated successfully in the First Schleswig War.
Britain built a large number of wooden screw gunboats during the 1850's, some of which participated in the Crimean war, Second Opium War and Indian Mutiny.
Gunboats experienced a revival during the American Civil War. Armed sidewheel steamers were quickly converted from existing passenger-carrying boats by Union and Confederate forces. Later some boats were purposely built, such as the USS Miami (1861). They all frequently mounted a dozen guns or more, sometimes of rather large caliber, and were usually armored to some degree. Britain continued to expand its fleet of gunboats in response to tensions between it and the United States, as well as to police its growing empire.
In the later 19th century and early 20th century, "gunboat" was the common name for smaller armed vessels, often called "patrol gunboats". These could be classified, from the smallest to the largest, into river gunboats, river monitors, coastal defense gunboats (such as the SMS Panther), and full-fledged monitors for coastal bombardments. When there would be few opportunities to re-coal, vessels carrying a full sailing rig were still used as gunboats; HMS Gannet, a sloop preserved at Chatham Historic Dockyard in the United Kingdom, is an example of this type of gunboat.
In the US Navy, these boats had the hull classification symbol "PG"; they usually displaced under 2,000 tons, were about 200 ft long, 10-15 feet draft and sometimes much less, and mounted several guns of caliber up to 5-6 inches. An important characteristic of these was the ability to operate in rivers, enabling them to reach inland targets in a way not otherwise possible before the development of aircraft. In this period, gunboats were used by the naval powers for police actions in colonies or weaker countries, for example in China. It is this category of gunboat that inspired the term "gunboat diplomacy".
With the addition of torpedoes they became torpedo gunboats.
During the Second World War the gunboat was for the Royal Navy a vessel identical to torpedo boats, but equipped with machine guns and larger weapons up to 57 mm in calibre for attacking enemy torpedo boats or small craft - the Motor Gun Boat (MGB). Post-World War II, the terms "motor gunboat" came to be used for smaller vessels, with displacements in the 50-ton range.
US riverine gunboats in the Vietnam War, utilized Patrol Boats River (PBR), which were constructed of fiberglass; Patrol Crafts Fast (PCF), commonly known as Swift Boats, which were built of aluminum; and ASPB boats built of steel. The Assault Support Patrol Boats (ASPB) were commonly referred to as "Alpha" boats and were primarily deployed for mine sweeping duties along the water ways, due to their all steel construction. The ASPB's were the only US Navy riverine craft specifically designed and built for the Vietnam War.[1] All of these boats were assigned to the US Navy's "Brownwater Navy".[2]
Gunboats are still being built and operated around the world today, albeit mainly used for coast guard duties.
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
| Translations: Gunboat |
idioms:
Nederlands (Dutch)
kanonneerboot, (mv) grote voeten
Français (French)
n. - canonnière
idioms:
Deutsch (German)
n. - Kanonenboot
idioms:
Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - (ναυτ.) κανονιοφόρος
idioms:
idioms:
Português (Portuguese)
n. - canhoneira (f) (Mil.)
idioms:
idioms:
Español (Spanish)
n. - cañonero, lancha cañonera
idioms:
Svenska (Swedish)
n. - kanonbåt (sjö.)
中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
炮舰, 炮艇
idioms:
中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 炮艦, 炮艇
idioms:
idioms:
العربيه (Arabic)
(الاسم) سفينه صغيرة مزودة بمدافع
עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ספינת-תותחים
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| Barbary Wars | |
| Navy, United States | |
| Panay Incident |
| What is the diffrence between gunboat diplomacy and good neighbor policy? | |
| How did the battle of Gunboat Benton and the other one end? | |
| When did Japan attack the united states' gunboat Panay? |
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