Protection of the Seas Act 1897: Difference between revisions
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The '''Protection of the Seas Act''' was a piece of legislation passed by the [[Parliament of Vionna-Frankenlisch]] in August 1897 with the intention of increasing [[Vionna-Frankenlisch|Vionna-Frankenlisch's]] naval strength and introducing standardisation to [[Imperial Navy (Vionna-Frankenlisch)|Imperial Navy]] units. Passed during the brief reign of [[King Richard II of Vionna-Frankenlisch|King Richard II]] with his support, the act provided 15 million Lucans for the expansion of the [[Imperial Grand Fleet|Grand Fleet]] and funding was granted for the establishment of an official [[Imperial Navy Acquisition Board]] to replace several outdated Imperial Navy and [[Ministry of Defence (Vionna-Frankenlisch)|Ministry of Defence]] organisations. | The '''Protection of the Seas Act''' was a piece of legislation passed by the [[Parliament of Vionna-Frankenlisch]] in August 1897 with the intention of increasing [[Vionna-Frankenlisch|Vionna-Frankenlisch's]] naval strength and introducing standardisation to [[Imperial Navy (Vionna-Frankenlisch)|Imperial Navy]] units. Passed during the brief reign of [[King Richard II of Vionna-Frankenlisch|King Richard II]] with his support, the act provided 15 million Lucans for the expansion of the [[Imperial Grand Fleet|Grand Fleet]] and funding was granted for the establishment of an official [[Imperial Navy Acquisition Board]] to replace several outdated Imperial Navy and [[Ministry of Defence (Vionna-Frankenlisch)|Ministry of Defence]] organisations. | ||
==Background== | ==Background== | ||
It was passed under the [[Conservative Party (Vionna-Frankenlisch)|Conservative]] government of [[Sir Richard Hollins]]. Though Hollins was not personally in favour of the act, he recognised that naval reform was a popular topic and gave his party freedom to [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conscience_vote vote on conscience]. Conservative MPs voted in favour of the bill almost unanimously. | It was passed under the [[Conservative Party (Vionna-Frankenlisch)|Conservative]] government of [[Sir Richard Hollins]]. Though Hollins was not personally in favour of the act, he recognised that naval reform was a popular topic and gave his party freedom to [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conscience_vote vote on conscience]. Conservative MPs voted in favour of the bill almost unanimously. A passionate speech by the [[Phillip, 7th Viscount Acton|Viscount Acton]] saw the House of Nobles vote in favour of the act by a majority of 191. The [[Labour Party (Vionna-Frankenlisch)|Labour]] and [[Socialist Party of Vionna-Frankenlisch|Socialist]] parties both voted mostly in favour of the bill on the grounds that it would provide important jobs in the shipbuilding industry. King Richard II personally spoke passionately in favour of the act. Several historians theorise that the original bill was written, at least in part, by the King or his advisors. | ||
==Naval Expansion== | |||
The 15-million Lucans provided to the Grand Fleet was a figure quite shy from the [[Admiralty of Vionna-Frankenlisch|Admiralty's]] requests for 21-million but it was a still a substantial sum which gave Admiral Lord Hood freedom to expand his fleet by a great deal. Lord Hood, with the grudging support of his Admiralty superiors, also took the controversial move of selling several recently-built but poorly-designed or technically outdated warships for scrap. This action was condemned by the popular press but gave Lord Hood an additional budget of two million Lucans to undertake a radical shipbuilding scheme. | |||
By 1st November, orders had been placed for six battleships at a cost of approximately 900,000 Lucans each, six armoured cruisers at L500,000 each, eight protected cruisers at L380,000 each, and 20 destroyers at a cost of L36,000 each. This initial expansion, therefore, cost the Admiralty a total of around 12-million Lucans. Two more battleships were ordered on 5th November to be built to a second-rate design, this cost L1.3 million. By the time King Richard II died on 12th November, most of the money had already been committed. Four-million Lucans were invested in the overhaul of coastal fortifications and the modernisation of the [[Imperial Navy Corps of Marines]]. | |||
===Ships Constructed during the Expansion=== | |||
'''Battleships''' | |||
{| class="wikitable" style="background-color:#ffffff;" | |||
|- style="font-weight:bold;" | |||
! style="font-family:serif !important;;" | Ship | |||
! Class | |||
! Builder | |||
! Laid Down | |||
! Launched | |||
! Completed | |||
! Cost | |||
|- | |||
| [[HMNS Imperial (1899)|Imperial]] | |||
| [[Imperial-class pre-dreadnought battleship|Imperial-class Battleship]] | |||
| [[J.M Loughton and Sons]], [[City of Brumley|Brumley]] | |||
| 6th December 1897 | |||
| December 1898 | |||
| 4th August 1899 | |||
| L881,000 | |||
|- | |||
| [[HMNS Invincible (1899)|Invincible]] | |||
| Imperial-class Battleship | |||
| J.M Loughton and Sons, Brumley | |||
| 4th January 1898 | |||
| March 1899 | |||
| 11th October 1899 | |||
| L901,000 | |||
|- | |||
| [[HMNS Inflexible (1899)|Inflexible]] | |||
| Imperial-class Battleship | |||
| [[Briceport Dockyard]] | |||
| 17th December 1897 | |||
| January 1899 | |||
| 22nd November 1899 | |||
| L900,000 | |||
|- | |||
| [[HMNs Indefatigable (1900)|Indefatigable]] | |||
| Imperial-class Battleship | |||
| [[Frankenlisch Dockyard]] | |||
| 1st January 1898 | |||
| May 1899 | |||
| 26th January 1900 | |||
| L900,000 | |||
|- | |||
| [[HMNS Invulnerable (1900)|Invulnerable]] | |||
| Imperial-class Battleship | |||
| [[Phillip Simmonds Ltd]], [[City Briceport|Briceport]] | |||
| 5th February 1898 | |||
| May 1899 | |||
| 19th February 1900 | |||
| L924,000 | |||
|- | |||
| [[HMNS Intolerant (1899)|Intolerant]] | |||
| Imperial-class Battleship | |||
| [[Vista Ironworks]], [[City of Vladimirska|Vladimirska]] | |||
| 18th January 1898 | |||
| December 1898 | |||
| November 1899 | |||
| L896,000 | |||
|- | |||
| [[HMNS Marienberg (1901)|Marienberg]] | |||
| [[Marienberg-class pre-dreadnought battleship|Marienberg-class Battleship]] | |||
| [[Fredericksburgh Dockyard]] | |||
| 14th March 1898 | |||
| December 1899 | |||
| 8th January 1901 | |||
| L649,000 | |||
|- | |||
| [[HMNS Passero (1900)|Passero]] | |||
| Marienberg-class Battleship | |||
| [[John Benton and Co.]], [[City of Julianopolis|Julianopolis]] | |||
| 11th January 1898 | |||
| June 1899 | |||
| 19th August 1900 | |||
| L654,000 | |||
|} | |||
==Naval Reform== | |||
==Rationale== | |||
==Aftermath== |
Revision as of 18:37, 2 May 2021
Protection of the Seas Act | |
---|---|
Parliament of Vionna-Frankenlisch | |
Territorial extent | Vionna-Frankenlisch and the Empire |
Enacted by | House of Commons |
Date passed | 24th August 1897 |
Enacted by | House of Nobles |
Date passed | 27th August 1897 |
Date assented to | 28th August 1897 |
Date of Royal Assent | 28th August 1897 |
Date commenced | 28th August 1897 |
The Protection of the Seas Act was a piece of legislation passed by the Parliament of Vionna-Frankenlisch in August 1897 with the intention of increasing Vionna-Frankenlisch's naval strength and introducing standardisation to Imperial Navy units. Passed during the brief reign of King Richard II with his support, the act provided 15 million Lucans for the expansion of the Grand Fleet and funding was granted for the establishment of an official Imperial Navy Acquisition Board to replace several outdated Imperial Navy and Ministry of Defence organisations.
Background
It was passed under the Conservative government of Sir Richard Hollins. Though Hollins was not personally in favour of the act, he recognised that naval reform was a popular topic and gave his party freedom to vote on conscience. Conservative MPs voted in favour of the bill almost unanimously. A passionate speech by the Viscount Acton saw the House of Nobles vote in favour of the act by a majority of 191. The Labour and Socialist parties both voted mostly in favour of the bill on the grounds that it would provide important jobs in the shipbuilding industry. King Richard II personally spoke passionately in favour of the act. Several historians theorise that the original bill was written, at least in part, by the King or his advisors.
The 15-million Lucans provided to the Grand Fleet was a figure quite shy from the Admiralty's requests for 21-million but it was a still a substantial sum which gave Admiral Lord Hood freedom to expand his fleet by a great deal. Lord Hood, with the grudging support of his Admiralty superiors, also took the controversial move of selling several recently-built but poorly-designed or technically outdated warships for scrap. This action was condemned by the popular press but gave Lord Hood an additional budget of two million Lucans to undertake a radical shipbuilding scheme.
By 1st November, orders had been placed for six battleships at a cost of approximately 900,000 Lucans each, six armoured cruisers at L500,000 each, eight protected cruisers at L380,000 each, and 20 destroyers at a cost of L36,000 each. This initial expansion, therefore, cost the Admiralty a total of around 12-million Lucans. Two more battleships were ordered on 5th November to be built to a second-rate design, this cost L1.3 million. By the time King Richard II died on 12th November, most of the money had already been committed. Four-million Lucans were invested in the overhaul of coastal fortifications and the modernisation of the Imperial Navy Corps of Marines.
Ships Constructed during the Expansion
Battleships
Ship | Class | Builder | Laid Down | Launched | Completed | Cost |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Imperial | Imperial-class Battleship | J.M Loughton and Sons, Brumley | 6th December 1897 | December 1898 | 4th August 1899 | L881,000 |
Invincible | Imperial-class Battleship | J.M Loughton and Sons, Brumley | 4th January 1898 | March 1899 | 11th October 1899 | L901,000 |
Inflexible | Imperial-class Battleship | Briceport Dockyard | 17th December 1897 | January 1899 | 22nd November 1899 | L900,000 |
Indefatigable | Imperial-class Battleship | Frankenlisch Dockyard | 1st January 1898 | May 1899 | 26th January 1900 | L900,000 |
Invulnerable | Imperial-class Battleship | Phillip Simmonds Ltd, Briceport | 5th February 1898 | May 1899 | 19th February 1900 | L924,000 |
Intolerant | Imperial-class Battleship | Vista Ironworks, Vladimirska | 18th January 1898 | December 1898 | November 1899 | L896,000 |
Marienberg | Marienberg-class Battleship | Fredericksburgh Dockyard | 14th March 1898 | December 1899 | 8th January 1901 | L649,000 |
Passero | Marienberg-class Battleship | John Benton and Co., Julianopolis | 11th January 1898 | June 1899 | 19th August 1900 | L654,000 |