“Extremely well researched . . . a total account of the design,
building, service, refits, and fates of the big gun monitors built for
WW1 and WW2.” —Malcolm Wright, author of British and Commonwealth
Warship Camouflage of WWII In the history of naval warfare probably no
type of ship has provided more firepower per ton than the
monitor—indeed they were little more than a huge gun mounting fitted
on a simple, self-propelled raft. Designed and built rapidly to fulfil
an urgent need for heavy shore-bombardment during World War I, they
were top secret in conception, and largely forgotten when the
short-lived requirement was over. Nevertheless, they were important
ships, which played a significant role in many Great War campaigns and
drove many of the advances in long-range gunnery later applied to the
battle fleet. Indeed, their value was rediscovered during the Second
World War when a final class was built. Monitors were largely ignored
by naval historians until Ian Buxton produced the first edition of
this book in 1978. Although published privately, this became an
established classic and copies of the first edition are now almost
unobtainable, so this new edition will be welcomed by many. It has
been completely revised, extended and redesigned to a generous large
format which allows material deleted from the original edition for
lack of space to be restored. “This book looks in detail at the
technical and economic aspects of the 42 monitors built, and is,
without a doubt, the definitive work on the subject.” —Ships
Monthly “Ian Buxton’s work has set the standard in celebrating
these big gun ships . . . It makes an invaluable contribution to the
study of naval and land operations.” —Warships International
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Design, Construction, and Operations 1914-1945
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781783469116
Publisert
2014
Utgiver
Independent Publishers Group (Chicago Review Press)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter