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Wednesday, 17 June 2026

American destroyer USS Lang DD-399 1937-1947

Somers-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Benham-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Sims-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Gridley-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Bagley-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Part of Benham-class (sometimes called as Ellet-class) preceded by Somers-class succeeded by Sims-class. Gibbs&Cox-design. Built between 1936-1939 were 10 vessels built with a limited 1,500 tons standard displacement according to the London Naval Treaty. With similar characteristiscs as the Gridley- and Bagley-classes. Hull number DD-399. Laid down by Federal Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company, Kearny, New Jersey, USA on 5 April 1937, launched on 27 August 1938, commissioned on 30 March 1939, decommissioned on 16 October 1945, sold to be broken up on 20 December 1944, completed on 31 October 1947. 

German submarine SM UC 27 sunk the Tunesian sailing vessel El Khadra according to the Kriegsnachrichten of the Chef des Admiralstabes der Marine dated Berlin 14 August 1917

German submarine UC 16-79©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

An item reported that the German submarine SM UC 27 commanded by Kapitänleutnant Gerhard Schulz sunk on 6 August the Tunesian sailing vessel of 20 ton El Khadra.

Note

1. Type UC II minelaying submarine. Ordered on 29 August 1915, launched by AG Vulkan, Hamburg, Germany with yard number 66 on 28 June 916, commissioned on 25 July 1916, surrendered to France on 3 February 1919and scrapped at Landerneau in July 1921.

Source

Bundesarchiv RM-40-622

Shipping traffic coming from Gibraltar heading west according to the Kriegsnachrichten of the Chef des Admiralstabes der Marine dated Berlin 16 August 1917

British Formidable-clas battleships©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

An item reported the ships coming from Gibraltar heading west between 10-14 August: 2 French passenger steamships, 11 British steamships, 1 steamship, 1 Brazilian steamship, 4 Spanish steamships; as part of a convoy: 1 British guard vessel, 12 steamships, 1 passenger steamship and British warships Irresistible (1), 1 American steamship armed with 2 guns and 1 Greek steamship; 1 minelayer together with 7 full loaded deep lying cargo ships, 1 Italian steamship, 1 Belgian steam tanker and 1 Greek steamship.

Note

1. Pencil note that she was destroyed on 18 March 1915 in the Dardanelles so that it should be another ship. This note is correct, this Formidable-class battleship was indeed lost on that date. The second part of the note is difficult to understand it says muss also neubau sein [should be new building], but that can’t be correct. Laid down by Chatham Dockyard on 11 April 1898, launched on 15 December 1898, completed in October 1901, commissioned on 4 February 1902 and lost on 18 March 1915. Part of Formidable-class precedeed by Canopus-class succeeded by London-class.

Source

Bundesarchiv RM-40-622

Greek destroyer (ex-Argentine San Luis 1911-1912) Aetos 1912-1946

Design Argentine 32 knots ocean going San Luis-class destroyer©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Argentina ordered 12 destroyers in 1910, 2 at Krupp and 2 at Schichau, Germany, 4 in England and 4 in France. The British built destroyers were in October 1912 sold to Greece (Aetos-class) and the French built destroyers were taken over the French navy (Aventurier-class) when the First World War broke out. Part of Aetos-class also known as the Thiria-class. Laid down by Cammell Laird in 1911, launched on 19 September 1911, seized by the Allies in October 1916, commissioned in 1912, transferred to France in November 1916, served in the French navy between 1917-1918 , returned to Greece in 1918, decommissioned in 1945 and stricken in 1946.

The boats were to be built by Cammell Laird&Company Limited, Birkenhead, England as the San Luis-class with the following characteristics. Dimensions 86.87 (between perpendiculars)-89.30 (over all) x 8.46 (moulded) x 5.18 (depth moulded) x 2.59 (mean draught on trials) metres. Displacement 980 (on trials)-1,175 (fullload) tons. Speed on trials 32 knots. Load on trial 195 tons. Total bunker capacity 225 tons. Total capacity oil fuel tanks 75...300 tons. Combined repulse&reaction turbines of around 600rpm. Five White Forster Type boilers. Boiler pressure 230 lbs. Range 3,000 miles/13 knots. Estimatated horsepower 19,750 hp.  Total heating surface of boilers 2,484 square metres. Crew numbers 110 men. Four 21” Whitehead torpedo tubes and 150 kilo explosives with a speed of 41 knots at a range of 2,000 metres and 29 knots at 5,000 metres. Placed two fore end of ship and two little aft the middle part of the ship. Carried 8 torpedoes. Length forecastle 18 metres at 2.20 above the main deck. Armament 4-4” cal 50 Bethlehem guns, all on the centre line of the ship. Magazines have a capacity of 250 rounds of ammunition. Provided with wireless telegraphy for 200 kilometres range.

Source

Hiraga-archive. Description General data of Argentine destroyers. 

American whaler Levant visited Honolulu, Hawaii according to the newspaper The Polynesian dated 10 December 1853

An item reported the arrival at Honolulu, Hawaii on 7 December of the American whaler Levant master Cooper 1,400 barrels whale oil 5,000 lbs bone

American whaler Callao visited Honolulu, Hawaii according to the newspaper The Polynesian dated 17 December 1853

An item reported the arrival at Honolulu, Hawaii on 12 December of the American whaler Callao master Baker 90 barrels sperm oil 1,600 barrels whale oil 25,000 lbs bone

German whaler Alexander Barclay visited Honolulu, Hawaii according to the newspaper The Polynesian dated 10 December 1853

An item reported the arrival at Honolulu, Hawaii on 5 December of the German whaler Alexander Barclay, master Heine of Bremen 220 barrels whale oil 5,000 lbs bone

Russian cargo screw steamship (ex-Warplum 1919, Baron Sempill 1919-1934) Ussuri 1934-1960

©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Launched by Chas. Hill&Sons, Bristol, England with yard number 130 on 7 December 1918, completed in January 1919. The Dutch newspaper Scheepvaart dated 3 July 1933 referred to Lloyd’s Casualty Book 29-27 June 1933 reporting that she was stranded.

Sources

Budzbon, P., J. Radziemski, and M. Twardowski. Warships of the Soviet Fleets 1939-1945, volume III.

Lloyds Registers

Jane’s Fighting Ships several editions.

Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Shipping and shipbuilding  dated 13 April 2026 07:52 o’clock 

Russian naval officer A. Zelenoi according to a report from the Military Observer at Riga, Latvia dated 22 July 1921

The information was received from the Latvian General Staff and considered to be reliable. In fact few was known dealing with the personnel of the Central Institutions except that the majority in authority were former naval officers already officers prior to the First World War. The descriptions of the officers were supplied by a former high officer of the Imperial Russian Navy which now stayed in Latvia. “Ex rear admiral. Chief of the Naval Forces of the Baltic Fleet (1920); medium cleverness, few abilities, no moral principles, much given to intrigues; the only one of all naval officers who, at the end of 1917 joined the Bolshevist party.”

Source

National Archive. Record Group 165: Records of the War Department General and Special Staffs Series: Security Classified Correspondence and Reports. File Unit. Russia: Navy - MID 2503-16 THRU 2503-265. Roll 1443.

Construction status of the German kriegsfischkutter KFK 606 in 1944

©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

List of planning with deadlines for new construction of warships dated Berlin 22 May 1944. Built by Timmer, Delft, Netherlands. Yard number 211. Date building ordered 3 November 1943. Date completion unknown depends on delivery propulsion allowing a future maximum completion of 5-7 Kriegsfischkutters possible.

Source

Deutsches Historisches Institut Moska. Records 500 findbuch 12453-file 152. 

Turkish merchant ship Burhaniye chartered by France according to a letter of the German naval attaché at Istanbul dated 17 February 1940

In his letter dated Istanbul, Turkey 17 February 1940 No. 758 g. reported the German naval attaché to the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht Abteilung Ausland the neutral ships passing Istanbul coming out of the Black Sea and loaded with contraband for or chartered by the enemy. An item reported on 12 February the Turkish merchant ship Burhaniye with a cargo load capacity of around 5,200 tons chartered by France.

Source

Bundesarchiv. German Marineattaché for Greece, Romania and Bulgaria 1939-1941. RM 12-II/459.

Russian nuclear attack submarine K-493 1972-1990

 

Project 705 Lira/NATO: Alfa-class©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Project 945/NATO: Sierra I ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Project 971 Shchuka-B/NATO:Akula ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Part of the Project 705 Lira/NATO: Alfa-I class, preceded by Victor-class succeeded by Project 945 Barrakuda and Project 945A Kondor/NATO: Sierra-class I and II and Akula-class. Laid down by Sevmash, Severodvinsk on 21 January 1972, launched on 21 September 1980, commissioned on30 September 1981 and decommissioned on 19 April 1990 to be broken up.

Sources

Breemer, Jan. Soviet submarines. Design, Development and Tactics, 1989

Breyer, S. and N. Polmar. Guide to the Soviet Navy, 2nd edition.

Jordan, J. Soviet submarines 1945 to the present.

Kouznetsov, N. La Marine sovietique en guerre 1941-1945.

Pavlov, A.S. Warships of the USSR and Russia 1945-1995.

Polmar N. and J. Noot. Submarines of the Russian and Soviet Navies 1718-1990.

Schulz-Troge, U. Die sowjetische Kriegsmarine.

Jane’s Fighting Ships several editions.

Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Sierra-class dated 11 April 2026 16:09 o’clock

Russian ships info dated 12 April 2026 19:46 o’clock.

Jane’s Fighting Ships several editions.

Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Construction status of the German submarine U 2519 in July 1944

List of planning with deadlines for new construction of warships by German shipyards in July 1944. Type XXI. Yard Blohm&Voss, Hamburg, Germany. Yard number Date building ordered 6 November 1943. Date completion open. Remarks new deadlines coming in September.

Source

Deutsches Historisches Institut Moska. Records 500 findbuch 12453-file 147. 

Italian sailing ship Bimanire Prof. Luigi lost in 1917

According to a list of the Italian Department for transport over sea and by rail was she lost on 24 April due to submarine attack on the location Cap S. Vincenzo. Tonnage 265 tons.

Source

Bundesarchiv RM 20/728.

Spanish torpedo boat T-2 1911-1939

©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Part of T-class preceded by Arie-class succeeded by German S-boats. Between 1912-1922 were totally 22 of the planned 24 boats built by Sociedad Española de Construcción Naval, Cartagena, Spain. Based on the French Bourrasque-torpedo boats class, design from Chantiers et Ateliers A. Normand, Le Havre, France? Launched in 1911 and beach at Santander on 13 September 1937 International call sign GRAC. Dimensions 50 (maximum) x 5,00 (maximum) x 3.20 x 1.47 metres. Maximum displacement 180 ton. Number of screws 3. Maximum speed 27,19 knots. Coal bunker capacity1,000 ton. Crew numbered 31 men. Armament 3-4.7cm Vickers guns, 1x45cm and 1x2-45cm torpedo tubes.

Sources

https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clase_T-1

Lista official de los buques de Guerra y mercantes de España 1925. 

British merchant ship Storm Queen chartered for the Anglo-Egyptian War of 1882

Between July-September 1882 was the United Kingdom in war with Egyptian and Sudanese troops ending in the British occupation of Egypt. The British government chartered between July-August a lot of merchant steamships for transporting troops, stores etc. from the United Kingdom to Egypt including the Storm Queen.

Source

The Nautical Magazine. Fifty-first year. Volume VII. July 1882. 

France hired transport Canarias for French expedition to Madagascar in 1895

With the First Madagascar Expedition (May 1883-December 1885) started the Franco-Hova War. In December 1885 was a Treaty signed which the French interpreted as being a Protectorate Treaty which was denied by Queen Ranavalona III. The result was the Second Madagascar Expedition December 1894-1 October 1895) ending in Madagascar becoming a French colony (1897-1958). The Malagasy Republic was an autonomous French territory until she became independent as the Democatric Republic of Madagascar in 1975. Was to depart on 1 May with provisions and material.

Source

Captain Pasfield Oliver, “The Madagascar expedition”: The United Service Magazine, volume XI. New Series. April 1895 to September 1895, p. 136-137.

Peruvian scout cruiser BAP Almirante Grau 1905-1958

Coronel Bolognesi©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Part of Coronel Bolognesi-class consisting of the Coronel Bolognesi and Almirante Grau. Building authorized by president of Peru in 1904, ordered in 1905, contract signed on 29 November 1905, laid down by Vickers Sons Armstrong&Maxim Limited, Barrow-in-Furness, United Kingdom with yard number 344 in 1905, launched on 27 March 1906, delivered on 19 November 1907, commissioned in 1907, decommissioned and stricken on 24 June 1958. 

American whaler George Washington cleared at Laihana, Hawaii according to the newspaper The Polynesian dated 16 April 1853

An item reported that at Laihana, Hawaii on 7 April was cleared the American whaler George Washington master Edwards for cruising 

American whaler Pacific cleared at Laihana, Hawaii according to the newspaper The Polynesian dated 16 April 1853

An item reported that at Laihana, Hawaii on 7 April  was cleared the American whaler Pacific master Pease for Honolulu 

American whaler Caravan cleared at Laihana, Hawaii according to the newspaper The Polynesian dated 16 April 1853

An item reported that at Laihana, Hawaii on 7 April  was cleared the American whaler Caravan master Bragg for cruising 

Tuesday, 16 June 2026

British light cruiser HMS Swiftsure 1941-1962

Fiji-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

HMS Swiftsure, Minotaur-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Part of Minotaur-class (also known as Swiftsure-class after 1944) preceded by Fiji-class (also called Colony and Crown Colony-class) and succeeded by planned Neptune-class and realized by Tiger-class. Penannt 08. Laid down by Vickers-Armstrong, Newcastle-on-Tyne, England on 22 September 1941, launched on 4 February 1943, commissioned on 22 June 1944,decommissioned in 1958 and sold to be broken up in 1962. 

Shipping traffic coming from Gibraltar heading east ccording to the Kriegsnachrichten of the Chef des Admiralstabes der Marine dated Berlin 16 August 1917

An item reported the ships coming from Gibraltar heading east between 10-14 August: 1 French steamship, 1 Japanese steamship, 14 British steamships; as part of a convoy 5 British steamships, 1 Norwegian steamship, 1 Italian steamship armed with 2 guns, 1 Norwegian steamship, 1 British steam transport, 2 Italian steamships, 1 Spanish passenger steamship, 1 American steamship armed with 2 guns, 2 Spanish steamships and 1 British steamtug with lighter.

Source

Bundesarchiv RM-40-622

Floating seaplane halle at Patras operational according to the Kriegsnachrichten of the Chef des Admiralstabes der Marine dated Berlin 16 August 1917

An item referred to an agent message dated 5 August reporting that at Patras [Greece?] since recently a floating seaplane halle was operational.(1)

Note

1. The French navy established in August 1917 her Coastal Escadrille 488 at Courtesis, Patras Regio especially for reconnaissance and anti submarine patrols to control the entrance to the Gulf of Corinth. She used the Caudron G.4 seaplanes for this purpose.

Source

Bundesarchiv RM-40-622

Dutch cargo ship Noord Nederland 2002-

Harlingen, Netherlands 29 April 2026

Netherlands-flagged, IMO 9269611, ENI 02720228, MMSI 244296000, call sign PBJN. NB-234. Ordered in October 2001, laid down by ASB Aluminium&Steel Boats, Harwood, New South Wales, launched on 10 June 2002 and delivered to Rederij Doeksen, Terschelling on 12 June 2002. Ferry between Harlingen and Terschelling. 

Sale of 1/32 share in the Dutch whaler St. Anna sold at Amsterdam, Netherlands in 1767

An item mentioned that ship brokers J. de Files, V. de Vries, T. Beth Ysbrands and T. van Lingen sold at Nieuwezyds Heeren Logement at Amsterdam, Netherlands on Monday 13 July 1767 1/32 share in the fluytship St. Anna and whaling tools of commandeur Jacob Tieboot, built in 1738, dimensions 111.5 x 28 8.5 feet, bookkeeper Joannes van Wayenburg, 400 guilders, stroke 8 guilders, not sold.

Source

De Maandelyksche Nederlandsche Mercurius, Volume 22, July, Amsterdam, 1767. 

Sale of 1/32 share in the Dutch whaler de Vrouw Maria at Amsterdam, Netherlands in 1767

An item mentioned that ship brokers J. de Files, V. de Vries, T. Beth Ysbrands and T. van Lingen sold at Nieuwezyds Heeren Logement at Amsterdam, Netherlands on Monday 13 July 1767 1/32 share in the fluytship de Vrouw Maria and whaling tools of commandeur Hendrik Vermeulen, built in 1746, dimensions 111.2 x 29 4 1/2 feet, bookkeepers Jan Middelman en Zoon, 400 guilders, stroke 10 guilders, not sold.

Source

De Maandelyksche Nederlandsche Mercurius, Volume 22, July, Amsterdam, 1767. 

Dutch patrol vessel Barend Biesheuvel 2001-

Scheveningen, Netherlands 14 April 2026

Netherlands-flagged, homeport Rijswijk, Netherlands, IMO 9226255, MMSI 245155000 and callsign PBAU. Built by Damen Shipyard Gorinchem, Gorinchem, Netherlands with yard number 555050 in 2011. Coast guard vessel-patrol vessel-fishery support vessel.

Italian sailing ship Unione lost in 1917

According to a list of the Italian Department for transport over sea and by rail was she lost on 24 April due to artillery on the location Giannutri. Tonnage 207 tons.

Source

Bundesarchiv RM 20/728.

Construction status of the German kriegsfischkutter KFK 603 in 1944

©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

List of planning with deadlines for new construction of warships dated Berlin 22 May 1944. Built by Kerstholt, Groningen, Netherlands. Yard number 6. Date building ordered 3 November 1943. Date completion unknown depends on delivery propulsion allowing a future maximum completion of 5-7 Kriegsfischkutters possible.

Source

Deutsches Historisches Institut Moska. Records 500 findbuch 12453-file 152. 

Dutch tug/supply ship (ex-Pan Engineer 1975-1991, Britannia Endeavour 1991-1998, Viking Endeavour 1998-2008, Alert 2008-2013) Glomar Patriot 2013-


Harlingen, Netherlands 29 April 2026
Harlingen, Netherlands 30 April 2026

Panama-flagged, IMO 7404176, MMSI 353186000 and call sign HP8004. Built by Welgelegen Amels&Zoon Scheepswerf, Makkum, Netherlands in 1975. Owner/manager Glomar Shipmanagement, Den Helder, Netherlands. St. Vincent&Grenadines-flagged 2008-2013.

Construction status of the German submarine U 2518 in July 1944

List of planning with deadlines for new construction of warships by German shipyards in July 1944. Type XXI. Yard Blohm&Voss, Hamburg, Germany. Yard number Date building ordered 6 November 1943. Date completion 30 September 1944. Remarks due to air attack in end July was it impossible to predict new deadlines.

Source

Deutsches Historisches Institut Moska. Records 500 findbuch 12453-file 147. 

France hired transport Anatolie for French expedition to Madagascar in 1895

With the First Madagascar Expedition (May 1883-December 1885) started the Franco-Hova War. In December 1885 was a Treaty signed which the French interpreted as being a Protectorate Treaty which was denied by Queen Ranavalona III. The result was the Second Madagascar Expedition December 1894-1 October 1895) ending in Madagascar becoming a French colony (1897-1958). The Malagasy Republic was an autonomous French territory until she became independent as the Democatric Republic of Madagascar in 1975. Leaving Marseille, France on 30 April with war material.

Source

Captain Pasfield Oliver, “The Madagascar expedition”: The United Service Magazine, volume XI. New Series. April 1895 to September 1895, p. 136-137. 

Cypriot hopper dredger Strandway 2014-


Harlingen, Netherlands 29 April 2026

Harlingen, Netherlands 30 April 2026

Cyprus-flagged, homeport Limassol, IMO 9664457, MMSI 2123960000 and call sign 5BZJ3. Owner BW Marine (Cyprus) Ltd.,, Limassol, Cyprus, manager Baggermaatschappij Boskalis BV, Papendrecht, Netherlands. Built by Shipkits BV, Groningen, Netherlands in 2014.

American whaler James Loper visited Honolulu, Hawaii according to the newspaper The Polynesian dated 2 April 1853

An item reported the arrival at Honolulu, Hawaii on 30 March of the American whaler James Loper master Whippy from Hawaii 

American whaler James cleared at Honolulu, Hawaii according to the newspaper The Polynesian dated 9 March 1853

An item reported that at Honolulu, Hawaii on 15 March was cleared the American whaler James master Cornell for cruising 

American whaler Citizen cleared at Honolulu, Hawaii according to the newspaper The Polynesian dated 16 April 1853

An item reported that at Honolulu, Hawaii on 8 April was cleared the American whaler Citizen master Bayley 

Dutch tug (ex-Britoil 37 2000-2008) Anteos 2008-

Scheveningen, Netherlands 8-5-2026

Netherlands-flagged, homeport Scheveningen, IMO 9223681, MMSI 244120000 and call sign PCYH. Built by Wuxi Shipyard, China in 2000. Owner/manager Dutch Tender Service, Hardinxveld-Giessendam, Netherlands.

The design of the Bureau of Construction of the Navy Department for the American armoured cruiser USS Maine in 1887

American USS Maine©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Brazilian Riachuelo©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

In 1886 was the building of a battleship which became the USS Texas and an armored cruiser which became the USS Maine authorized.(1) The US Navy asked for plans including from parties abroad. For the USS Maine was chosen for an American design although inspired by a Brazilian warship.

The Internal Revenue Record and Customs Journal edition dated 11 April 1887 p. 144 wrote that the Secretary of Navy William C. Whitney on 6 April invited proposals for the building of 5 warships under the Act of 38 March 1887. Further more he considered the details for the Board which was responsible to examine the plans for the two 6,000 tons ships authorized under the Act of 3 August 1886. Expected was that as naval members were to be appointed captain Ramsay, commodore Goodrich and assistant naval constructor Bowles. The names of the civilian members were yet not known. In the meantime were the plans of the Bureau of Construction and Repair his favourite. Of the ten plans for new cruisers were at least six worth of close attention. According to The Nation dated Thursday 7 April 1887 were the plans opened on 1 April.

The Railroad and Engineering Journal, May edition p. 194 reported that the plans for an armored cruiser and an armored battleship were now being studied by a mixed board of naval officers and civilian constructors. The general features were published on page 211: “The armored cruiserwas to have a double-bottomedSteel hull, unsheathed and divided into numerous watertight compartments, fitted with a powerful pumping apparatus, and finished with a perfect drainage and ventilation system throughout. She was to be fitted with a rambow and was to have a steel-armored deck which would run thewhole length of the ship and cover the boilers, engines and magazines. Two-thirds full sail power was required on two or three masts, each with a protected top, carrying one or more machine or rapid-fireguns. The main batterywas to havefour 10-in. guns, each weighing 26½tons, and six 6-in.guns each weighing 5 tons. The secondary battery was to be composed of four 6-pounder, four3-pounder, and two 1-pounder Hotchkiss rapid-fire guns, four 47-millimeters and four 37-millimeters Hotchkiss revolving cannon, and four Gatling guns. The vessel was to be equipped with a torpedo and searchlight outfit, and the guns were to be so arranged as to obtain for bow and stern fire the greates thorizontal and vertical command consistent with other essential conditions. The 10-in. guns were to load in at least two positions,and were to be served and handled by power and protected by at least 10 1/2 inch of steel armor, properly backed, while the 6-in. guns were to be efficiently shielded. The motive machinery was to be below the armored deck and well covered from hostile fire, and the ship was to be driven by twin screws. When fully equipped and with all weights on board, excluding the reserve coal, she was to maintain 17 knots speed per hour over the measured mile. The coal endurance had to be large, the consumption economical, and the distance to be covered at moderate speed as great as practicable. The furnaces were to be arranged to work with forced draught when desired, air for combustion being furnished independently of the ventilating system. Quarters had to be provided for 270 officers and men, with provisions provisi for three months and water for one month. The ship was required to have arrangements for being steered either by power or by hand from several independent positions upon and below the deck. A sufficient number of boats to carry the crew were to be furnished, two of them being second class torpedo boats and two others steam launches or cutters, each of which was able to mount, shielded, one 3 pounder rapid-fire gun. These conditions were to be fulfilled at a maximum draught of 22 feet and on a displacement of about 6,000 tons."

The Railroad and Engineering Journal, July edition p. 311 and 315 reported that the US Navy still considered the building but did not invite yet for bids of shipyards. In the meantime reported the Board to the Secretary of the Navy what the results were of the plans sent by various parties in last April. The Board was appointed on 22 April. Some plans were not conform the requirements and were already rejected. Dealing with the plans of the Barrow Shipbuilding Company, Lieutenant W. I. Chambers. A. H. Grandjean and the Thames Iron Works & Shipbuilding Company was the conclusion that “The marked differences in the essential features of the designs prevent their classification in the order of merit; each exhibits features which strongly commend themselves, but the Board does not consider it advisable for the Government to build a vessel upon any one of these.”

In The Railroad and Engineering Journal, August edition p. 357-359 were the results of the examination discussed. The Board recommended not one of the submitted designs for an armored cruiser. The plans were to be carefully examined before anything could be decided. Yet it was probably the design of the Bureau of Construction of the Navy Department made a good chance to be chosen. It resembled in many ways the Brazilian turret ship Riachuelo but with many improvements.The dimensions were 310 x 54 x 21.6 feet and a displacement of 6,600 tons. Coal bunker capacity 800 tons and speed 17 knots, bark rigging. The armament consisted of 2x2-25.4cm/10” guns in turrets en echelon, 6 x1-15.2cm/6” guns in central pivot carriages making an arrangement possible to fire with all 10” guns and 3-6” guns at one point, 13 quick firing guns and [4-45cm/18”] torpedo tubes for fish torpedoes. Could carry two steam torpedo boats with her. The armour belt had a thickness of 1&’ and a breadth of 6 feet.

The Internal Revenue Record and Customs Journal dated 11 April supplied the details of the cruiser design from the Bureau of Construction of the Navy Department Chief T.D. Wilson.(2) “Displacement 6,000 (?) tons and as dimensions 310 (between perpendiculars) x 54 x 21.6 feet. Sail area 7,000 square feet. Rigging bark. Armament 4-10” guns, 6-6” guns, 13 quick firing guns. Armour 10-17”. Coal bunker capacity 800 ton. Speed 17 knots.

Notes

1. Ordered on 3 August 1886, laid down by New York Naval Shipyard on 17 October 1888, launched on 18 November 1890, commissioned on 17 September 1895 and sunk due to an explosion in the harbour of Havana, Cuba on 15 February 1898 and what was left of her was scuttled in the Strait of Florida on 16 March 1912.

2. Theodore Delavan Wilson (11 May 1840 Brooklyn, New York, USA-29 June 1896 Brooklyn, New York, USA), in service of the US Navy between 1861-1896.

Sources

Engineering. An Illustrated Weekly Journal. London, 1885. 

Internal Revenue Record and Customs Journal. Volume XXXIII, January-December 1887.

The Nation No. 113, p. 286.

The Railroad and Engineering Journal, vol. LXI (Volume 1, new series), New York, 1887.

Hamersly, Lewis Randolph. The Records of Living Officers of the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps. Philadelphia, 1894. 

Monday, 15 June 2026

American tank landing ship USS LST 325 1942-1964, Greek RHS Syros L-144 1961-2000, American M/V LST-325 2000-2004, USS LST-325 2004-





Facebookpage Museumships

USS LST 325 Ship Memoriaal, Evansville, USA 26 May 2026

Photos made by Jim Dobbins

Laid down by Philadelphia Navy Yard on 10 August 1942, launched on 27 October 1942, commissioned on 1 February 1942, decommissioned on 2 July 1946, reclassified as T-LST in 1951, stricken on 1 September 1961, transferred to Greece, acquired by USS LST Memorial Inc. on 1 September 1964, renamed RHS Syros (L-144), de commissioned in 1999, sold 2000, acquired as m/v LST-325, renamed USS LST-325 in 2004 and nowadays museum ship

German blockade runner ms Rio Grande in 1941-1942

©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

In a letter dated 13 April 1942 No. 1329 to the O.K.M./1 Abteilung Skl. was the so-called ‘Etappen’-organisation of the navy described. In the attachment were the blockade runners decribed used for this purpose. Ms Rio Grande. Loaded with a Germany-cargo. Left Bordeaux, France on 21 September 1941. Arrived at Osaka, Japan on 6 December 1941 and at Kobe, Japan on 9 January 1942. On 6 December 1941 again in hands of the German navy. Left Kobe, Japan on 31 January 1942.

Source

Bundesarchiv RM 7/223

Russian naval officer S. Dmitrijev according to a report from the Military Observer at Riga, Latvia dated 22 July 1921

The information was received from the Latvian General Staff and considered to be reliable. In fact few was known dealing with the personnel of the Central Institutions except that the majority in authority were former naval officers already officers prior to the First World War. The descriptions of the officers were supplied by a former high officer of the Imperial Russian Navy which now stayed in Latvia. “Former rear admiral, commander of the line of batleships (was arrested after the Kronstadt rising); not clever, little ability, weak will power, but brave.”

Source

National Archive. Record Group 165: Records of the War Department General and Special Staffs Series: Security Classified Correspondence and Reports. File Unit. Russia: Navy - MID 2503-16 THRU 2503-265. Roll 1443.

Dutch tug (ex-Taurus 2007-2015, Alp Ippon 2015-2022) Multraship Protector 2022-

Scheveningen, Netherlands 26 May 2026

Netherlands-flagged, homeport Terneuzen, IMO 9344978, MMSI 244830809 and call sign PCBN. Built by Mutzelfeldtwerft Nord, Cuxhaven, Germany in 2007. Owner/manager Multraship BV, Terneuzen, Netherlands.

Sale of 1/32 share in the Dutch whaler ‘t Vertrouwen at Amsterdam, Netherlands in July 1767

 

An item mentioned that ship brokers J. de Flines, V. de Vries, T. Beth Ysbrandsz and T. van Lingen sold at Nieuwezyds Heeren Logement at Amsterdam, Netherlands on Monday 13 July 1767 1/32 part in fluytship ‘t Vertrouwen and whaling tools of commandeur Hans Jacobsz, built in 1752, length 110 feet, 6-6 boats, bookkeeper Fredrik de Harde, 425 guilders, stroke 6 guilders, not sold.

Source

De Maandelyksche Nederlandsche Mercurius, Volume 22, July, Amsterdam, 1767. 

Sale of whaling tools of Dutch commandeur Pieter Bandix Junior at Amsterdam, Netherlands in 1767

An item mentioned that ship brokers sold at Nieuwezyds Heeren Logement at Amsterdam, Netherlands on Monday 16 November 1767 of the extraordinary whaling tools of commandeur Pieter Bandix Junior, 3,400 guilders, stroke 150 guilders, Pieter Engelen.

Source

De Maandelyksche Nederlandsche Mercurius, Volume 22, November, Amsterdam, 1767. 

Dutch research-survey vessel Zirfaea 1993-

Harlingen, Netherlands 29 April 2026

Netherlands-flagged, homeport Rijswijk, IMO 9046497, MMSI 246096000 and call sign PBZV. Built by De Hoop Foxhol-Hoogezand, Netherlands in 1993.

Construction status of the German kriegsfischkutter KFK 602 in 1944

©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

List of planning with deadlines for new construction of warships dated Berlin 22 May 1944. Built by De Vlijt, Aalsmeer, Netherlands. Date building ordered 3 November 1943. Date completion unknown depends on delivery propulsion allowing a future maximum completion of 5-7 Kriegsfischkutters possible.

Source

Deutsches Historisches Institut Moska. Records 500 findbuch 12453-file 152.