Royal Navy Warships – Steam

Published 1971 © Hugh Evelyn; artist Martin Holbrook. Printed on high white matt cardstock of 154 g/sm2.
Size: c. 42½ cm x 35½ cm (17″ x 14″) but size may vary slightly.  Images below are scans.
Prints are LARGE size. Shipping cost is the same for up to 10 prints of the largest size in an order – see Shipping and Returns

For a brief background on the Royal Navy’s conversion from sail to steam scroll down

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Royal Navy Warships – Steam

La Gloire from “La Royale” by Jean Randier

For 400 years, until the Treaty of Washington in 1922, the navies of England, then Britain held dominion over the oceans of the world. With the destruction of the French and Spanish fleets at Trafalgar in 1805 Britain really did rule the waves until Kaiser Wilhelm’s rearming of Germany a century later.
But this history had led to complacency and there was little renewal or invention in naval affairs during most of the 19th century. The development of vessels built of iron and powered by steam was anathema to the Admiralty until 1858, when the Germans (ironically) warned the British about France’s naval building programme, which included the world’s first oceangoing ironclad, La Gloire, 1859 (see image) et al.

HMS Warrior, 1860

The first iron warship built in Britain was the 40-gun HMS Warrior delivered to the Navy in 1861, after Queen Victoria had asked the Admiralty if the Navy was adequate for the tasks ahead. Gladstone was, as today, not the first British Prime Minister to oversee extensive cutbacks in military expenditure. Disraeli succeeded him in 1874 but still failed to make up for earlier deficiencies. Finally, when in 1889, it was discovered that France had almost reached navy parity, Britain woke from its sleep and in 1889 Lord George Hamilton, the First Lord of the Admiralty, introduced the Naval Defence Act to Parliament.
Lord Salisbury, now the Prime Minister, moved the second reading of the Act which you can read here.  The Act was passed (ostensibly to deter the ambitions of other great powers) making £21,500,000 (about £13 billion today) available for the purpose of building 70 new ships: ten new battleships, thirty-eight new cruisers, eighteen new torpedo boats and four new fast gunboats.