World War I , formerly USS
Florida, tending to submarines
K-5 and
K-6 in Hampton Roads, 1919 During World War I, the Royal Navy developed several classes of ships which were designed to give close support to troops ashore. Termed "monitors", they owed little to the monitors of the 19th century, though they shared the characteristics of poor seaworthiness, shallow draft and heavy armament in turrets. The first class, the , had been laid down as large river gunboats for the Brazilian navy. Later monitor classes were equally makeshift; they were often designed for carrying whatever spare guns were available from ships scrapped or never built, with the hulls quickly designed and built in "cheap and cheerful" fashion. They were broad beamed for
stability (beam was about 1/3 of the overall length) which together with a lack of emphasis on speed made them extremely slow, and they were not suitable for naval
combat or any sort of work on the high seas. Monitors of the Royal Navy played a part in consolidating the left wing of the
Western Front during the
Race to the Sea in 1914. In addition to these ships, several monitors were built during the course of the war. Their armament typically consisted of a turret taken from a de-commissioned
pre-dreadnought battleship. These monitors were designed to be resilient against torpedo attacks—waterline bulges were incorporated into the of 1915. As the war settled to its longer course, these heavier monitors formed patrols along with destroyers on either side of the
Straits of Dover to exclude enemy surface vessels from the
English Channel and keep the enemy in port. The monitors could also operate into the river mouths. , one of the
Lord Clive-class monitors, which had a single gun added in 1918, was able to shell a bridge away near
Ostend. Other RN monitors served in the Mediterranean. The dimensions of the several classes of monitor varied greatly. Those of the
Abercrombie class were by in the beam and drew compared to the s of 1915 that were only long, and the of 1916, which were long. The largest monitors carried the heaviest guns. By this point the United States Navy had largely stopped using monitors. Only a few still existed, and only seven were still in service, all of which had been relegated to being
submarine tenders. This would be the last war in which United States monitor-type vessels would see commissioned service. The last original American monitor, , renamed USS
Cheyenne in 1908, was removed from the
Navy List in 1937. The
Austro-Hungarian Navy had also invested heavily in the construction of river monitors to patrol its internal river systems such as the
Danube and its tributaries. These vessels were among the first to fire on Serbian territory at the start of the First World War, and took part in the
bombardment of Belgrade, as well as other Balkan campaigns against Serbia and Romania. At the end of the war, the surviving vessels were parceled out to the navies of the new state of
Yugoslavia and Romania as war prizes. Several would see action in World War II as well. The Italian Navy also constructed some monitors including the
Faa di Bruno, using the main gun barrels for the cancelled
Francesco Caracciolo-class battleships.
World War II The smaller Royal Navy monitors were mostly scrapped following World War I, though and survived to fight in World War II. When the requirement for shore support returned, two large new s,
Roberts and
Abercrombie, were constructed and fitted with guns from older
battleships. Royal Navy monitors saw service in the
Mediterranean in support of the
British Eighth Army's
desert and
Italian campaigns. They were part of the offshore bombardment for the
Invasion of Normandy in 1944. They were also used to clear the German-mined
River Scheldt by the British to utilize the port of
Antwerp.
Roberts and
Abercrombie were to form part of the British
East Indies Fleet in support of
Operation Mailfist, the planned liberation of Singapore in late 1945, which was cancelled following the Japanese surrender. The former Italian WWI monitor
Faa di Bruno had been redesignated as floating battery by the beginning of WW2, in which role she continued to play until the capitulation of Italy. She was then captured by the Germans and served as monitor
Biber in Genoa, until the German surrender. She was scrapped after the war. The German, Yugoslav, Croatian and Romanian navies all operated river monitors on the Danube, all of which saw combat during the war.
Soviet river monitors The
Soviet Union built many monitors before World War II, and used them mostly on rivers and lakes. After experiences during WWI, the
Russian Civil War and the
Manchukuo Imperial Navy raids in the Far East, the Soviets developed a new monitor class for their river flotillas. The lead ship of the new series was
Zheleznyakov, laid down in the
Leninska Kuznia factory in
Kiev in late 1934.
Zheleznyakov is preserved as a museum and monument on the
Dnieper.
1946–1964 The Royal Navy still had (completed 1943) and (1941) in reserve in 1953. They were typical monitors,
trunk-decked vessels, long overall, in the beam and with an mean draught carrying two guns. The
Brazilian Navy presently operates the last true "monitor" as part of their inland waterway force, .
Vietnam War The
Vietnam War was the U.S. Navy's second riverine war, after the American Civil War. On 18 December 1965, the U.S. Navy, for the second time in a hundred years, authorized the reactivation of a
brown-water navy, this time in
South Vietnam. After studies were conducted, plans were drawn up by the U.S. Naval Advisory Group in February 1966, and by the summer of 1966
Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara authorized the U.S. Navy a
Mobile Riverine Force (MRF). Although U.S. Navy
Patrol Craft Fast (Swift Boats),
Patrol Boat River (PBRs) and assorted gunboats had been performing counter-insurgency operations in country prior to 1966, the allies were not gaining success in the
Mekong Delta region. A stronger naval force was needed, one that was heavily armored, and heavily gunned. The U.S. Navy's MRF initially consisted of
River Assault Flotilla One, under Program 4 in 1967, and consisted of four
River Assault Divisions: RAD-91 which contained 3
Monitors; RAD-92 contained 2 Monitors; RAD-111 had 3 Monitors; and RAD-112 operated 2 Monitors. These "river battleships", as they were known by the men, operated in conjunction with the CCB (Command Control Boat—also a monitor), ATCs
Armored Troop Carrier (ATC) and the
Assault Support Patrol Boats (ASPBs) which were also assigned to each RAD. Vietnam Monitors were originally converted from World War II long all-steel
Landing Craft Mechanized (LCM) Mark 6s. They were constructed under two phases: Programs 4 and 5. Under Program 4, 10 Monitors were armed with one
40 mm cannon and then fielded. Program 5 Monitors would correct any deficiencies from the previous vessels, and were fielded as the
Monitor (H) 105 mm (Howitzer) and the
Monitor (F) (Flamethrower). The Program 4 monitors mounted their single barrel 40 mm cannon in a Mk 52 turret; while the Program 5 monitors mounted their 105 mm cannon in a T172 turret, and the six flamethrowers were mounted in M8 cupola turrets (one on each side of the vessel's 40 mm turret). Because the U.S. Marine Corps was also using the M49 105 mm howitzer, there was a shortage, and only 8
Monitor (H) versions could be procured for the brown-water navy. As fielded, the 24 monitors of the U.S. Navy in Vietnam averaged about 10 tons of armor, were about long, had two screws, were powered by two 64NH9 diesel engines, (maximum speed), wide, draft, and were normally manned by 11 crewmen. When
South Vietnam fell on 30 April 1975, all monitors fell into the enemy's hands; leaving only one survivor, a training monitor, that never left the US. "Training" monitor #C-18 is on display, along with one Swift Boat and one PBR at the
U.S. Naval Amphibious Base in
Coronado, California. ==Similar vessels==