• Version 1.0
  • |
  • Last updated 13th January 2016

Dreadnought, HMS

Adopted in 1906, HMS Dreadnought represented an innovative battleship design that changed the nature of the Anglo-German naval race preceding the Great War. A hybrid Dreadnought battlecruiser design soon followed; by 1914, all major navies measured their strength by the number of Dreadnought battleships and battlecruisers they possessed.

Pre-war Battleship Design

Technological development during the steamship age pushed 19th century warship design to its limits, featuring battleships mounting large caliber, turreted guns, driven by high output piston steam engines, and protected by steel armor. By the turn of last century, a typical battleship mounted four 12-inch guns in two twin-turrets and was armed with an assortment of intermediate gun batteries throughout the ship. Reciprocating steam engines produced enough power to drive the ships to high speeds, typically fifteen to eighteen knots.

Major drawbacks of these designs included difficulty in fire control for the different caliber ammunition. Also, the steam engines required lengthy periods in port for maintenance overhauls and could not be run at full speed for very long without risking breakdowns.

Early in the 20th century, British Admiralty leaders learned of plans by American, Italian and Japanese navies to design and build “all big gun” battleships, a concept publicized by Italian naval engineer Vittorio Cuniberti (1854-1913) in 1903. Led by First Sea Lord, Sir John Fisher (1841-1920), British decision makers designed the HMS Dreadnought to steal the lead on the plans of other navies and launch a battleship that would outfight any ship afloat.

Dreadnought Design Innovations

Fisher’s team produced a design that incorporated a number of innovations into a single hull. Chief among HMS Dreadnought’s design characteristics was a main battery of ten 12-inch guns, mounted in five twin-turrets. The turrets were arranged with one at the bow, one on each wing of the ship’s bridge, and two along the centerline to the rear of the superstructure. Thus, the arrangement allowed the ship to fire eight heavy guns in a broadside, as compared to contemporary battleships that could answer only with four heavy guns. HMS Dreadnought possessed no intermediate battery, making fire control and ammunition storage less difficult.

Other features included turbine steam propulsion – the first use of lighter, dependable and efficient turbine engines in a battleship. These new engines allowed HMS Dreadnought to steam at almost twenty-one knots continuously, providing a speed advantage over potential enemy ships that would allow fleets to better close with a retreating enemy, avoid a more numerous enemy, or evade a torpedo threat when present. Dreadnought also featured redistributed armor to protect guns, engines, and magazines more effectively. Finally, an innovative bulkhead structure in the interior of the ship made flood control easier, providing better survivability.

A hybrid heavy cruiser design, called a battlecruiser, featured similar characteristics, but possessed less heavy armor and fewer large guns to provide for even higher speed. Fisher’s concept for the battlecruiser was for it to be able to chase down any ship it wanted to attack, as well as be able to run from anything more powerful. When necessary, the battlecruiser could join the battle fleet and serve alongside Dreadnought battleships, since its large guns could provide a similar offensive capability.

Ship History

Taking advantage of guns and turrets already completed for other ships and using other prefabricated construction, HMS Dreadnought was laid down in February 1906 and commissioned in December of the same year, a remarkable construction record for the time. By comparison, the US Navy’s first Dreadnought-style battleships, the USS South Carolina and USS Michigan, were laid down in December 1906 and not completed until early 1910. Thus, in a single stroke Fisher and the Royal Navy stole the lead on other navies planning to produce an “all big gun” battleship and made all other battleships obsolete.

As newer and larger Dreadnought designs joined the Royal Navy, the original vessel served as flagship for the Home Fleet from 1907 to 1911. During the First World War, HMS Dreadnought gained fame by being the only battleship to sink a submarine when she rammed U-29 in March 1915. During the Battle of Jutland, she was in refit and thus never actually fired a shot in anger during the war. After the war, she was sold for scrap along with most of her consorts and broken up in early 1923.

Impact

Contemporaries and historians have criticized Fisher for wiping the slate clean and negating Britain’s advantage in pre-Dreadnought battleships. A new naval race with Germany began in 1906 but Britain would never lose its lead in battleships; by the outbreak of the war, Britain possessed twenty-nine Dreadnought battleships and battlecruisers while Germany only had seventeen. At the Battle of Jutland on 31 May 1916, 249 ships engaged in a massive naval battle that included fifty-eight Dreadnought battleships and battlecruisers, thirty-seven of them British and twenty-one of them German.

Indeed, HMS Dreadnought provided her name to a new concept for battleship design that would continue to improve through the Second World War. The world’s final battleship class afloat, the US Navy’s Iowa class that served until the 1990s, owed its existence to the Admiralty’s leaders from the early years of the century.

John Abbatiello, Independent Scholar

Section Editor: Mark E. Grotelueschen
John Abbatiello: Dreadnought, HMS, in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War, ed. by Ute Daniel, Peter Gatrell, Oliver Janz, Heather Jones, Jennifer Keene, Alan Kramer, and Bill Nasson, issued by Freie Universität Berlin, Berlin 2016-01-13. DOI: 10.15463/ie1418.10803
Note

Images5

British HMS Dreadnought, 1914
This photograph shows the British HMS Dreadnought in 1914, a time when it was already outdated, having given way to newer Super-Dreadnoughts.
Symonds & Co, 1914, n.p.
IWM (21184), http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205024321.

Building a battleship
By August 1914, ninety-two dreadnought battleships and battle cruisers were constructed by the European powers (76), the United States (8), and Japan (8), costing between two-and-three million pounds sterling apiece. Roughly another forty had been laid down.
Oakley, Thornton: Building a Battleship, drawing, in: Hart, Albert Bushnell et al. (eds.): Harper’s Pictorial Library of the World War, vol. IV, New York 1920, p. between 126 and 127; source: Internet Archive, https://archive.org/stream/harperspictorial04hart#page/126/mode/2up.
This file has been identified as Public Domain Mark 1.0: http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/.

British HMS Dreadnought, front view
The British battleship HMS Dreadnought as seen from the front. Adopted in 1906, the battleship’s design was a great success and the number of Dreadnought battleships and battlecruisers became the measurement used to compare the strength of the navies involved in WW1.
Unknown photographer, n.d., n.p.
IWM (Q 74896), http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205319683.

HMS Dreadnought in cross section view
The 1906 HMS Dreadnought in Hull longitudinal section: CC – condenser compartment; ER – engine room; BR – boiler room; WTB – watertigth bulkhead; WTF – watertigth frame. 1 – after capstan; 2,4 – torpedo head magazine; 3- mess space; 5 – fore top; 6 – engine room vent; 7 – boiler room vent; 8 – signal tower;9 – ;10 – main top; 11 – admirals sea cabin; 12 – chart house; 13 – conning tower; 14 – officers` cabin; 15 – escape trunk; 16 – vent; 17 – capstan; 18 – trimming tank; 19 – capstan engine room; 20 – submerged torpedo room; 21 – 12inshellroom; 22 – 12in magazines; 23 – ash hoist; 24 – reserve feed-water tank; 25 – coal bunker; 26 – coal shute; 27 – electric lift; 28 – oil fuel tank; 29 – fresh water tank; 30 – submerged torpedo room; 31 – fresh water tank; 32- stern torpedo tube.
Sas1975kr: HMS Dreadnought. Hull longitudinal section, colour graphic, 12 December 2015, n.p.; source: Wikimedia Commons, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:HMS_Dreadnought_1906_Hull_longitudinal_section.svg.
This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/deed.en.

HMS Dreadnought armour layout
This drawing shows the layout of the HMS Dreadnought’s armour.
Sas1975kr: HMS Dreadnought (1906) armour layout, drawing, n.p., n.d.; source: Wikimedia Commons, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:HMS_Dreadnought_1906_armour_EN.svg.
This item is licensed under Creative Commons license. Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0):
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/deed.en.