At the outbreak of
World War I, Harland and Wolff were still engaged in building passenger liners and the Belgian
Red Star Line's 27,000 ton was almost completed on the adjacent No 1 way. had been launched from the No 2 way in July, a fortnight before the outbreak of war. A further liner, yard number 470, had been laid down there, but work had hardly started.
14 inch monitors When the
Royal Navy wished to build the
14 inch monitors as coastal bombardment ships, these building ways were the most immediately available. The monitors were fairly small, of around 6,000 tons and quite short, but they also had protective
anti-torpedo bulges which gave them an extremely broad beam of . This would require equally wide building slips, which the Olympic slips could provide. The monitors were so short that the first two of them,
Admiral Farragut and
General Grant, could be built simultaneously on the same slipway.
Farragut was launched on 15 April 1915, with
Grant following on 29 April. The limited lifting capacity of the gantry's cranes required the 4-inch armour plate to be installed in particularly small pieces, compared to in a warship building yard. To install their US-supplied
turrets, the hulls were taken to the
COW yard on the Clyde.
12 inch monitors A second group of monitors was also built. These were the
12 inch monitors and used guns taken from
Majestic-class pre-dreadnought battleships. Although their
12-inch guns were now quite old, they had been sufficiently advanced over other guns at the time that they were still worth re-using. They had been the first British battleship main guns to use
wire-wound construction and also the first to fire
cordite propelling charges. As originally mounted, their elevation of 13½° only permitted a range of , which would leave the monitors within range of German coastal defences; with this increased to 30°, a range of was expected. Eight of these monitors were built, five by Harland and Wolff and four of them on slips 1 and 3 of the Queen's Island yard. Like the 14 inch monitors, these monitors had prominent anti-torpedo bulges to their hulls and required a wide building slip, but were short enough that two could be built simultaneously on the large liner slips.
Glorious was laid down as a '
large, light cruiser' on 1 May 1915 and launched almost a year later on 20 April 1916.
A class of small
6 inch gun-armed monitors was also designed, to use the secondary armament removed from the
Queen Elizabeth battleships. As the 14-inch monitors were now almost complete, it was hoped to build this whole class of five on a single large slipway. However the number 2 slipway was needed immediately for
Glorious. Slipway 5, at the southern end of Queen's Island, was used instead to build three of them, working around the keel of the postponed , and the other two at the
Workman, Clark yard across the water.
Terror A second batch of 15 inch-armed monitors were built, with a more developed design than the earlier
Marshals. Both were built by Harland and Wolff, at the Govan yard and on the third slip at Queen's Island. The
Marshal monitors had been so unsuccessful, largely owing to their slow speed and their unreliable diesel engines, particularly for , that it was decided to remove their turrets for re-use on the new high-speed monitors. ''Ney's'' turret was removed at Elswick and the mount converted for greater elevation, then shipped to Belfast for installation by Harland and Wolff's floating crane. Both of these monitors had a successful WWI career and served into WWII.
Berth plan == Disuse ==