'' Most of the world's major navies took note of the development of this device by the late 1880s. Even the extremely reduced post-
Civil War United States Navy was involved in torpedo development; and established a
Naval Torpedo Station in
Newport, Rhode Island, in 1870. The first vessel sunk by self-propelled torpedoes was the Turkish steamer
Intibah, on 16 January 1878, during the
Russo-Turkish War of 1877–78. She was hit by torpedoes launched from torpedo boats operating from the tender
Velikiy Knyaz Konstantin under the command of
Stepan Osipovich Makarov. Three naval actions during the late nineteenth century changed the world navies' perception of the torpedo: • During the
1891 Chilean Civil War, the Chilean vessel
Almirante Lynch, torpedoed and sank in port the rebel
frigate Blanco Encalada with a Whitehead torpedo at a range of 100 yards. • In 1894, in the
Revolta da Armada, the rebel Brazilian vessel
Aquidaban was torpedoed and sunk at night while moored in a roadstead by the Brazilian torpedo gunboat
Gustavo Sampaio with a
Schwartzkopff torpedo, and was perhaps also torpedoed by the torpedo boat
Affonso Pedro. • In 1895, during the
Sino-Japanese War, the Chinese battleship
Dingyuan was put out of action in port by multiple torpedo hits over the course of two nights by several Japanese torpedo boats. The risks of torpedoes to the ships that carried them were shown, however, at the
Battle of Santiago de Cuba, in July 1898, when the Spanish cruiser
Vizcaya was severely damaged by a shell hit that detonated one of her internally mounted bow torpedoes while it lay armed in its above-water tube. The
USS Texas, which also fought in the battle, had its bow and stern tubes removed before the war under just such a concern. One of the major concerns of the US Navy in the Santiago campaign was Spanish torpedoes. All ships during the blockade of Santiago, despite the heat and to the great discomfiture of their crews, kept their portholes shut to delay sinking if the ships were struck by torpedoes or mines. During
Operation Weserübung in 1940, the German invasion of Denmark and Norway, the German heavy cruiser
Blücher, already crippled by fire from shore batteries, was hit by two Whitehead torpedoes launched from fixed, shore-mounted tubes in
Oscarsborg Fortress in Norway, and later sank. Whitehead's invention of the torpedo was a key development in naval history. ==Heritage==