Navy General Board

Why were so many warships never built?

why were so many warships never built

Why were so many warships never built ? Naval history is littered with warships that were planned or designed but never built, especially in the past century or so.

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Iowa-class battleship Kentucky (BB-66). Public domain, via Wikipedia.

There were many reasons why proposed ships never saw the light of day. Some designs were abandoned at draft stage because infrastructure limits such as specific harbour depths, dock or canal dimensions couldn’t handle a ship of that scale. Sometimes it took only one key limit to force designs in other directions. Other proposals were more practical but didn’t get past peacetime financial constraints or political limits. Sometimes a design was overtaken by other thinking. Or they were pure thought experiments, such as the Tillman ‘maximum’ battleship, which was developed as an illustration for US political purposes; or Admiral Sir John Fisher’s 48,000 ton Incomparable of 1915, which he visualised as an ultimate extension of his rather iconoclastic tactical theories.

In wartime a major issue was resource allocation; many ships fell victim to competing priorities. Many programmes were also truncated with war’s end, often leaving half-built ships on the slipways or fitting out. Among the more prominent cancellations of the Second World War were the last two Iowa-class battleships, Kentucky and Illinois.

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Britain’s 1921 ‘G3’ battlecruiser – cancelled by the Washington Treaty. Via Shipbucket, creator ‘Hood’, http://www.shipbucket.com/license

But these weren’t the only reasons for a particular ship or class being abandoned. Others include:

For more on naval history, check out my book The Battlecruiser New Zealand: a Gift to Empire. Click to buy.

Also check out my articles on the Battle of Jutland and my analysis of the merits of submarines.

Additional articles can be found on the Home Page of the Navy General Board Website.

Copyright © Matthew Wright 2017

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