The Geography of the European Dreadnought Race: 1884
Transcription
The Geography of the European Dreadnought Race: 1884
ABSTRACT The Geography of the European Dreadnought Race: 1884-1919 William D. Walters, Jr. Professor The launching of HMS Dreadnought in 1906 is sometimes regarded as the start of the warship building race preceding World War One and is often seen as one of the causes of that war. In fact, the European battleship building race goes back to the 1880s. Most of the countries of Europe participated in some way in this race, which involved significant transfer of technology from the more developed to the less developed countries of Europe. Spain, Italy and Russia received significant aid from armaments firms in northern and western Europe. During the period before the war, battleships dominated naval thinking and were the subject of intense popular interest. Three historical periods of battleship launchings between 1884 and 1919 show the changing relative importance of European building locations. In addition to economics, shipbuilding locations were often influenced by strategic factors and internal political considerations. British production shifted northward and the North Sea became increasingly important in German production. KEW WORDS : economic geography, shipbuilding, technology transfer, naval armaments race, Europe. Department of Geography-Geology Illinois State University Normal, IL 61761 -6901 The tens of thousands of people who had assembled at Portsmouth Navy Yard on Saturday, February 10, 1906, to watch the launch of HMS Dreadnought expected English weather at its worst. On the preceding night a rapidly moving Atlantic low pressure cell brought near-gale force winds to the ancient seaport town . Morning found the crowds braving driving rain and temperatures in the low 30s as they made their way to the sight of the launch . Fortunately, as noon approached, the rain ceased and sunshine broke through scattered clouds above the English Channel; the day remained raw and blustery, but at least the spectators would be dry. They fortified themselves by singing as the band played Rule Britania and Swaunee River until the official ceremonies began and the KingEmperor ascended the high platform at the bow of the ship to join a thousand 45 specially invited guests and launch what would become perhaps the best known warship in the world. It took Edward VII two trys before he managed to break the flower-covered bottle of colonial wine over the stem of the revolutionary vessel. Everyone cheered as the battleship slowly gathered speed and slid toward the dark water. No one seemed to doubt their presence at a history making event. The launch of the HMS Dreadnought is sometimes seen as the blow which set in motion a worldwide naval arms race which many see as a major contributary cause to the First World War (Fig . 1). In fact, the dreadnought phase was only the last and most intensive manifestation of a process which had been underway for many years. As revolutionary as the new battleship seemed at the time, its building was in many respects the inevitable consequence of events which had their beginning in the 1880s. Like other striking events in history, this naval arms race can not be fully understood unless it is seen in its proper geographical context. This paper examines the geography of European battleship construction between 1884 and 1919 and argues that this geography is important in understanding the economic development at turnof-the-century Europe. BATTLESHIPS AND THEIR BUILDERS Never before or since has a single class of warships dominated naval thinking as battleships did in the years before World War I and only rarely has any single weapons system so captured the popular imagination. Both layman and expert regarded naval power as countable and countable in terms of bat- Figure 1. HMS Dreadnought, the warship which focused increased public attention on the growing naval armaments race. (Courtesy of the United States Naval Institute). 46 tleships. Naval opinion held that naval battles would be decided by the number of first-class vessels which each side could place in the line of battle. In Germany Alfred von Tirptz, the man who more than any other responsible for the development of the Kaiser's new navy, revived the old term Linienschiffe, Shipof-the-Line, for a new generation of battleships. When the London Times of January 22, 1907, quoted Lord George Hamilton, " our supremacy at sea must after all be measured by the number of battleships we could put into the line," his was a general, if not quite universally held opinion (January 22, 1907, p. 8b). A quick comparison of the percentage of pages devoted to battleships in any 1914 naval annual , such as Jane 's Fighting Ships, with issues from 20, 40 or 60 years later, demonstrates the exceptional way in which battleships dominated pre-World War I navies. Certainly the apparent countability of naval strength was an important factor in explaining popular willingness to expend staggering sums on battleship construction. The press was filled with seemingly endless debates about how many battleships a potential enemy was really constructing. Sinister tales of secret construction projects in shrouded shipyards were standard fare in the prewar press of Europe ; tonnage, guns, armor, speed , and rate of construction of enemy warships were all exaggerated in the popular journals. Indeed, one of the most intriguing and economically significant aspects of the great battleship race is the extent to which the people were willing to make staggering sacrifices for major warship construction . The term " social energy" is sometimes used to describe this kind of economic behavior. Former British Prime M inister Arthur Balfour expressed his enthusiasm for more battleships in this way to cheering crowds on October 19, 1910, "I say no pedantries of finance ought to allow us to stand in the way of carrying out a policy on which the future of our whole finance depends." (Times, October 10, 1910, p. 7a.) The modern British Death Dues, taxes on estates which fell almost entirely on the very wealthy and which were perhaps more responsible than any other single cause for reducing the power of the then ruling classes, were instituted in 1894 largely to pay for expanded battleship construction . In Turkey, school children took up contributions to pay for the purchase of a foreign built battleship. In 1908 the speaker of the Reichstag returned to report that the enthusiasm for the arms race could be felt even in the remotest village in Thurengia . (Times, June 16, 1908, p. 8d.) A correspondant of the London Times felt compelled to remind readers that popular demands for new battleship construction were just as strong in Bavaria as they were in the coastal cities of Germany (Times, Janu ary 23, 1908, p. 9f). Although sometimes seen as primarily an Anglo-German arms race, the battleship mania was, in fact, worldwide. In Europe, only the very smallest states failed to join the race. Even Portugal had plans for dreadnought construction. Figure 2 shows each of the participating states. The economic impact of battleship construction was staggering , particularly so for countries like Italy, Spain, Russia, and Austro-Hungary who were in the take-off stage of economic development. Clive Trebilcock (1969) has made some estimates of the importance of warship expenditures on national economies emphasing the total amount spent and the importance "spin-off" in national economic development. Trebilcock stresses that arms expenditures at this period were critical to the industrialization of many European countries. For example, he points to a Spanish naval contract first advertised in 1908. Foreign firms were invited to Spain to develop industries equal to the highest modern standards. The British consortium which ultimately won the contract did much to develop Spanish naval, metallurgical, and machine building industries, particularly at EI Ferrol and Cartagena. The shipyard developed with British assistance at EI Ferrol built three Spanish dreadnoughts. (Trebilcock, 1973.) Trebilcock also provides some insight into the huge sums of money involved. 47 • ~ Dome.tic Production Dome.tic Production: l.fm Some Aaalatance nmm Dome. tic Production: UillllJ Subs tantial AsslatsJlc<l ~ Ordered From Abroad ~ Projected Figure 2. Battleship production and orders. Only the smaller European states were not involved in the struggle to acquire battleships. The Spanish 1906-1914 naval construction program amounted to staggering two percent of the entire Spanish national income for 1906. For Italy similar programs were 2.4 percent of the national income and for Russia 3.3 percent. While none of the figures for developing European countries come close the Japanese battleship construction, which Trebilcock estimates at a 10.3 percent of the 1903 national income, they are incomparably greater than these states had spent before the battleship race and large enough to have a significant and lasting economic impact. The skills learned in the great rush to complete battleships were for the most part transferable to other industries. This is particularly true of precision metal working (Trebilcock, 1969). Grand Adm iral Tirpitz (1919, I, 193) makes this point when he writes of the engineering skills developed in the navy which were transfered to civilian occupations. It is important to remember that turn-of-thecentury shipbuilding was an extremely 48 labor intensive activity. In 1914 the Armstrong-Whitworth yards near Newcastle-on-Tyne, had 25,000 workers including those at associated steel works and ordinance facilities. On the west coast of England the Vickers works at employed some Barrow-in-Furness 16,000 workers. (Jane's, 1914, 22.) The major private German yards engaged in battleship construction (as will be seen later, government owned shipyards were also producing battleships) had over 50,000 workers in 1914 (Jane's, 1914, 108-109). Of course, not all of these workers were engaged in the construction of battleships, but the building of large first-line warships occupied a very substantial portion of their effort. Even though guns and armor were usually made in other locations, such facilities were few in number and operated on a very large scale. In turn-of-the-century Europe great sums of money and vast amounts of technical effort were being funneled into a very limited number of locations. This would have lasting geographical consequences. MAPPING BATTLESHIP CONSTRUCTION Before examining the maps which show the changing geography of European battleship construction something must be said about the data which were used and their limitations. The data used reflect the 297 battleships launched for the fleets of European countries between 1884 and 1921. Information on their construction has been gathered from a number of sources (Jane's, various dates; Gibbons, 1983; Parkes, 1966; Preston, 1972; Silverstone, 1984; Tomitch, 1968; Weyer, 1905 and 1918). The small number of battleships built in European yards and actually delivered to non-European states have been excluded as have instances where such ships were begun but never reached the stage of launching . Some of the ships launched were never completed. Some ships, especially at the very end of the period were launched simply to clear the building ways with no intention of ever finishing them. However, the fact that a battleship reached the point where it could be launched indicates that a substantial amount of work had been done and therefore prevents a serious undercounting for countries where military or political problems prevented a large number of ships from ever entering service. To aid in comparisons all maps show 1914 boundaries. By 1884 the use of the term battleship had become fairly standardized. This investigation generally follows the practice of the followed at the time. That is, it includes both battleships and battlecrusiers-the later group being as large and expensive as battleships with similar main armament but usually with somewhat greater speed and thinner armor. Marginal cases have required individual decisions with which some may disagree. For example, although the Netherlands officially rated the Zeven Provincien and the Heemskerck as "battleships" they were one third the size of contemporary battleships, with proportionately slower speed and smaller ar- mament and were of less fighting value than many crusiers launched in the same year. They have been excluded along with similar coast defense "battleships" built in Scandanavia. These exclusions are in accord with practice in most referenced material. While most of the work on the battleships was done at the building yard, substantial parts were often manufactured at other locations. The most important of these were the complex main armament turret mechanisms which stretched deep into the hull of the ship and which were, in fact, the whole reason for its existence. Construction of a set of guns and gun turrets would generally take as long as the construction of the hull and the engines of the ship; the rate at which these guns and turrets could be produced generally was the most critical factor in determining the speed of battleship construction. Frequently such mechanisms were produced at locations far removed from the shipyards. The Germans centralized all such work at the Krupp works at Essen in the Rhur Valley. The Royal and Imperial Austro-Hungarian Navy was largely supplied with guns from the Skoda works in what is now Czechoslovakia . Engines were often constructed by the builders, but it was also quite common for a separate concern, usually another major shipyard and sometimes one located in a quite different part of the country, to supply this part of the battleship's essential equipment. Other items, from armor plate to fuel oil lines to icemaking machines, would be drawn from hundreds of manufacturers which might be widely scattered. When looking at the maps it must always be remembered that the European armaments industry of this period was integrated in such a way that technology flowed very quickly from one country to another. British armaments were the technical guarantors and sponsors of almost all Spanish and Italian warship builders and were deeply involved in Russian warship and armaments firms . French firms were deeply involved in Russian enterprises. The Krupp firm had become a major stockholder in the Aus49 tro-Hungarian Skoda works . Patents and technologies were quickly shared , even among potential rivals. One of the major technological innovations of HMS Dreadnought was her revolutionary steam tubine propulsion : within a year and a half of HMS Dreadnought's com missioning the British firm of Parsons which had developed the turbines, had sold licenses to produce such turbines to the German Admiralty (June 17; 1908, 4) . The battlesh ips included were either constructed directly by governments or by private shipyards. In the earlier years government navy yards dominated battleship construction, but w ith the passage of time private yards became more important. This transition would have some importance in the location of battleship construction , but it is important to remember that navy yards and private builders engaged in battleship construction were interrelated at several levels. Warsh ip plans were almost al ways the responsibility of government bod ies and government inspectors were present at private yards . Encouragement, and frequently subsidation of privately owned shipbuilding firms was common policy among European governments. THE CHRONOLOGY OF BATTLESHIP PRODUCTION Figure 3 shows the number of battleships launched at two year intervals from 1884 to 1921 . While there are fluctuations, the overall trend is clear : from 1884 to 1914 the number of launchings rose from about 12 every two years in the 1880s to over 30 just before the outbreak of World War I. Once the fighting had started the number of launchings dropped. This drop was due to several factors . Foremost was the generally held belief that the war would be so short that sh ips under construction would play no role . Resources were therefore diverted to uses where they could more immediately influence the struggle. Second was a much clearer definition of what the alignments would be. For example, once the French were certain that the Royal Navy would be fighting at their side, they 50 brought a halt to virtually all heavy warship construction . Only later, after the lessons of early fighting had been learned, did the vulnerability of battleships to underwater attack by mines and torpedos begin to impact on battleship construction . In examining Figure 3 it must be remembered that launchings reflect decisions made several years previously . Contemporary legend has it that HMS Dreadnought was ready in 366 days after construction was begun , but this is an exaggeration . The British were often able to build battleships is less than two years. The Germans took a little longer, and the French, Ital ians, Russians might take up to five years. To this t ime must be added the lag between the time of the political decision to begin construction and the time work actually began. Thus, the chart reflects events two or more years before the date of launching . Figure 3 and the maps that follow (Figures 4, 5, 6 and 7) are based on the number of ships launched. An alternate approach would be to use tons launched. Such numbers would reflect the same general pattern but would be more heavily skewed toward the later years. At the start of the period under consid eration the average battleship displacement was about 9,000 tons . However, by 1905 it had risen to 13,000 tons, and by the middle of the war displacement was over 32,000 tons. The size of ships reflected, in part, the geographical position of the country involved. The Italians and Austro-Hungarians could build for the milder weather conditions of the Mediterranean. The German fleet was primarily designed for Baltic or North Sea operations where extended range was not a primary consideration . On the other hand, the Royal navy, which had to plan for worldwide operations, placed more emphasis on range and sea-keeping qualities. Therefore, in any given year, British ships were somewhat larger than their contemporaries . 1884-1895: BRITAIN AND GERMANY Figure 4 shows construction during the early years of the battleship race . Overall British dominance is clear, but al - EUROPEAN BATTLESHIPS LAUNCHED 1884 - 1921 ~ .----------------------------------. 30 C/) Il. I C/) LL o 25 20 II: W ~ 15 ::::> z 10 5 85 87 89 91 93 95 97 99 1 5 9 13 17 21 3 7 11 15 19 YEAR FIGURE 3. The number of battleships launched between 1884 and 1921 . The increase in the early years is even more dramatic when the steady growth in size and cost are considered . ready the Germans have become important players, and Russian production , especially in the St. Petersburg yards, is significant. However, the British share of battleship production would never come close to its complete dominance of merchant ship production. In 1895 British yards accounted for 78 percent of all the world 's shipbuilding (Pollard and Robertson , 1979) but only were accounting for only about half of the world's battleship launchings. Most of the yards which eventually built battleships were already showing some signs of activity, but as will be seen, a number of the shipbuilding locations later dropped from production . The pattern of battleship building in the British Isles was distinctive and changed greatly in subsequent periods. Figure 4 reveals that concentration in 1884-1895 was focused in southern England. At this time merchant ship production had shifted overwhelmingly to northern yards, Tyneside and the Clyde yards which were producing tramp steamers and specialized merchant vessels at unprecedented rates. However, warship production remained stubbornly in the south . This southern concentration reflected a high percentage of all battleships built in navy yards . Historically Chatham on the Thames had been the fitting out and repair yard for battle damaged vessels from the English Channel to Scotland while the Portsmouth or the Devonport yards handled the same functions for the south coast. (Pollard and Robertson, 1979). During this period the southern navy yards Chatham , Portsmouth and Pembroke in south Wales, dominated British battleship con struction. Earlier in the century const ruction in navy yards had been regarded as inefficient and overly expensive, but by this period costs were probably not much different than in private yards (Pollard and Robertson , 1979). There was some construction of British battleships by private builders during the 1884-1895 period such as at the Thames Iron Works. The various Clyde 51 1884-1895 Seale 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 •• 8 g RUSSI A ATLAIfl'IC OCEAN •• 10 e _ 11 12 13 Figure 4. Distribution and number of battleship constructed between 1884 and 1895. Most locations later to be important have already entered the battleship business. 1896-1907 Seale 1 2 3 • • • 4 5 6 • • 8.• 7 g 10 11 RUSSIA ATLAIfl'IC OCEAN • •• e 13 _ 12 Figure 5. Distribution and number of battleship constructed between 1896 and 1907. Some change in production are already evident such as a northward shift in Britain. 52 1908-1919 Scal. 1 2 3 • • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8.9. 10. 11e e 13_ 12 FIGURE 6. Distribution and number of battleship constructed between 1908 and 1919. A growing intensity of production and a change in locations from the 1884-1895 period are evident. Total 1884-1919 Scal. 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 • • • •• RUSSIA •• • •_ • FIGURE 7. Summary of battleship production and distribution from 1884 to 1919. The effort involved was immense in terms of volume and in geographical scope. 53 and Tyneside yards were expressing a growing interest in warship production, but several centers were notable for their inactivity. The great shipbuilding town of Belfast was already well established wit h the firm of Harland and Wolff gaining fame as a producer of passenger liners, but the yards of Northern Ireland while later producing some large warships, were destined never to be a majo r contributor to the great battleship race. Also missing were the Irish Sea yards at Birkenhead, across from Liverpool , and Barrow-i n-Furness; both would later become battleship building centers. Germany was in a very different position from England during this period. There was no long standing tradition of seafaring , ship construction, or naval dominance. Therefore, the German industry was never supported by massive mercantile construction . As late as 1905, and inspite of extensive government subsidies, German yards were producing only about five percent of the world's ships (Times, January 15, 1906, p. 6). The German navy yards at Kiel, on the east side of the Schleswig Penninsula , and Wilhelmshafen on the Jade estuary in the western part of the country, were not established until 1870 (Barker, 1906). Moreover, while most of the British private yards were close to major steel producing centers, German yards, both private and naval, were far removed from steel production. The distance from Essen in the Ruhr to Wilhelmshafen was some 200 miles and the distance to Hamburg, Bremen and Kiel even further. The eastern Baltic shipbuilding centers of Stettin and Danzig were even more poorly placed . An 1879 survey had found that twenty to thirty percent of the cost of iron products used in German shipbuilding was accounted for by transportation costs, compared to eight to t en percent for comparable British costs (Barker, 1906). Germany tried to counter these costs by providing heavy subsidies to railroads for transporting steel, but the German industry was never really competitive. This meant that throughout the battleship race, warships were always a much more important part 54 of the total shipbuilding program in Germany than in England . The old Prussian navy had been centered in the Baltic Sea with its major yard at Danzig (now Gdansk in Poland). But the Danzig yard was long past its prime and would later be described as the " scrap yard of the navy" (Times, June 16, 1908, p. 7). Still a glance at Figure 4 shows the extent to which the Baltic Sea dominated early German battleship production . At Bredow near Stettin (now Szczecin in Poland) Franz Fruchtenicht and Franz Wilhelm Brock had expanded their Vulcan works from a builder of railroad engines to an important naval and commercial shipyard. At Danzig the Schichau works had launched their first gunboat in 1879 and soon after moved into the battleship business. But Kiel was, and would remain the heavyweight of Baltic shipbuilding. Here, in addition to Germany's most productive naval shipyard, was the Germania works soon to be purchased by the Krupp firm and developed into a massive naval construction facility. Kiel continued to be a key shipbuilding location throughout the battleship race. In contrast to the Baltic, German North Sea yards were as yet unimportant. The Weser firm at Bremen launched two battleships before 1895 as did the navy yard at Wilhelmshafen, but that was the extent of the activity. The firm of Blohm and Voss across the Elbe River from Hamburg had been established in 1877 but had not yet received battleship contracts from the German navy. In 1895 the Imperial German Navy was infinitely stronger than it had been 15 years before. Yet, it still was not in a position to challenge Britain. Its production was Baltic centered . However, roots had been put down which would soon lead massive expansion: of the eight German yards which would ultimately take part in the dreadnought race, two naval and six private yards had already begun producing battleships by 1895. OTHER EUROPEAN NAVAL POWERS : 1884-1895 In the 1884-1895 period, four additional states were involved in European battleship construction. They were France, Russia, Italy, and AustriaHungary. None had the industrial resources of Great Britain or Germany, but major warship production was to have important political and economic consequences for them all. Each had its own set of naval rivals and each had a distinctive geographical pattern of shipbuilding which was already well established by 1895. The French had long been considered the main rivals of British sea power and at the start of this period had the second largest European fleet. French naval shipbuilding was concentrated in two areas: the south side of the Brittany Penninsula at Brest, Lorient, and St. Nazaire and on the Mediterranean Sea at Toulon and La Seyne. Neither of these concentrations was well located with respect to the steel producing centers of northeastern France, but both offered strategic advantages against the three possible foes: Germany, Great Britain, and Italy. Like the other major powers the French built battleships in both privately owned yards and government facilities. Like the British, but unlike the Germans, the French yards had considerable success in obtaining orders from foreign navies at this period. All but one of the French battleship builders, who would later be important in the race, had launched battleships before 1895. The exception is Bordeaux which would later play a fairly minor role in French production. Russia was in a unique position. In no other country was battleship construction so heavily concentrated in a single site. The St. Petersburg yards, both admiralty and private, dominated Russian naval production at this period and would continue to do so throughout the arms race. Reval (now Tallinn in the Estonian SSR) Riga, and Helsingfors (now Helsinki in Finland) on the Baltic produced only minor warships. White Sea production would not assume importance until after World War II and no major units were constructed on the Pacific until the 1930s. Nowhere else in Europe did a major political center also serve as a country's dominant shipbuilding site. Furthermore in no other country, except Austria-Hungary, did the seacoast offer such a limited selection of potential shipbulding sites. In 1884-1895 Russian naval construction relied heavily on foreign investment and technology. A British firm, John Brown, had control of the New Admiralty Yard at Lenningrad and one of the yards at Nikolaiev on the Black Sea. Another British company, Vickers, performed a similar function at the other Nikolaiev shipyard (Polmer, 1986). Russian Black Sea naval activities began in 1784 when a naval base and shipyard were established in the Crimea (Palmer, 1986). By the late nineteenth century most, but not all, major warship construction had been shifted to the town of Nikolaiev on the Bug River. Shipyards here were extensively modernized with French and British assistance and the town has remained up to this day as a major focus of Soviet naval construction. In the early years of the battleship race activities on the Black Sea remained secondary to those on the Baltic Sea, but as Turkish naval activity increased, the Russians would respond with increased shipbuilding in their southern ports. Nowhere did internal political divisions more profoundly influence the location of battleship production as in the duel monarchy of Austria-Hungary. In the Stablemento Technico Triestino the Austrians would soon have one of the finest shipbuilding organizations in Europe; it was a firm whose products and technical skill rivaled any yard in Britain, France, or Germany. But Trieste was located on the Austrian section of the coast and Hungarian representatives were reluctant to vote funds for warship construction unless some of the contracts were let to companies located in Hungary. So a share of warship production would eventually have to be diverted to Fiume (today Rijeka in Yugoslavia) in what was technically Hungarian territory (Gebhard, 1968-1969). Allegations are sometimes made that the work done in the Hungarian yard was decidedly inferior to and slower than that done at Trieste (Gibbons, 1983). Italy was the final European power 55 producing battleshilJs during the 18841895 period. Traditionally Italian warship construction had been in royal dockyards, particularly Taranto and Venice. However, shipbuilding was shifting to the east coast where modern shipyards associated with British firms were under construction. Battleships were launched from Venice in 1884 and again in 1891, but the yard here was not capable of handling the construction of large modern warships. Eventually the focus was beginning to shift to the Naples or the Genoa area. West of Naples the British armaments firm of Armstrong had established a modern facility in 1886 for the construction of guns, gun mountings, armor plate, turrets, torpedo tubes and ammunition hoists (Van Langendonck, 1914); the Armstrong-Pozzuoli firm worked in close conjunction with the nearby Italian naval yard at Castlemare to form a naval construction complex with a potential equal to any in the world. The Italian firm of Ansalado, established in 1853 as an engine works, was also tooling up with British help to enter the battleship business. In 1886 the firm moved its chief works to La Spezia, south of Genoa, where it had constructed five modern slips. Like the Pozzoli works, Ansalado had become part of the worldwide Armstrong armaments conglomerate. Eventually the works south of Genoa would dominate the major Italian warship building . HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENTS: 1896-1907 Figure 5 shows the location and distribution of battleship construction during the 1897-1907 period. When analyzing the map it is important to realize that construction took place against a background of increasing international tension and increasing public interest in naval affairs. The size, gunpower, and cost of battleships escalated dramatically. In 1896 average displacement was about 10,000 tons, roughly the size of a World War II crusier ; by 1907, it had jumped to 16,000 tons. Admirals realized, with increasing alarm, that ships completed as recently as 10 years before would no longer be able to stand up in the line of 56 battle. Navy leagues continually pressured parliaments to vote larger sums for construction. In France, Chamber of Deputies proclaimed that if that country did not immediately begin a new program of battleship construction, the Germans would be able to control Rotterdam, Antwerp, and Fiume on the Adriatic. (Times, March 7,1906, p. 5). Fiction writers found a ready market for thrillers featuring naval invasions (Marder, 1960). The period came to a climax with the launch of HMS Dreadnought in 1906. Rather than the traditional four main guns, this revolutionary British battleship seen in Figure 1 carried 10 and in place of the usual reciprocating engines were steam turbines which delivered greater power, particularly at sustained speeds. In retrospect, it is clear that many changes embodied in HMS Dreadnought were the inevitable outcome of developments which had been going on for several years . The so-called "semidreadnoughts" which came before the famous ship, were nearly as large and powerful. However, the psychological and political impact, when details of the new British ship became known, are difficult to underestimate. Older designs were quickly abandoned. Within a few years seven European countries, as well as the United States and Japan, had laid down dreadnought-type battleships. The public and politicians alike were infected with dreadnought feve~ The location and distribution of battleship construction between 1896 and 1907 are illustrated in Figure 5. Most of the sites producing battleships are the same as those recorded on Figure 4. However, some new locations and some important shifts in relative importance began to emerge. In the British Isles the increased importance of northern yards, all privately owned, was beginning to be evident. The Clyde and Tyne yards began to increase their share of total production and a new Vickers-owned facil ity on the Irish Sea began to get a portion of Admiralty contracts. Pembroke in south Wales had ceased to produce battleships, but navy yards in southern En gland, such as Chatham, Portsmouth, and Devonport, were still major builders and some battleships were still being built at Thames Iron Works, east of London . In Germany, Kiel had increased its relative dominance, while other Baltic shipyards continued to be important. Perhaps the most striking change was an increase in number of ships launched from the huge navy yard at Wilhelmshafen, a change which foreshadows the rising importance of the North Sea in German naval construction. Russia was passing through the turmoil and naval humiliation of its war with Japan and its production remained overwhelmingly concentrated in the various St. Petersburg yards. France and southern Europe showed much the same pattern that they did in the period 1884-1906. The only new battlesh ip producing location was at Bordeaux where the firm of Chantiers de la Gironde had entered the French battleship construction picture. HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENTS: 1908-1919 Figure 6 shows the European battleship race during the period 1908-1919. The volume of construction is even more impressive when it is remembered that once the First World War actually began, many countries immediately cut back on major warship production. Fear increased and naval budgets soared . In 1908 the Russians spent 90 million rubies on their navy; by 1913 the amount had risen to 228 million rubles (Greger, 1972). In 1910 Admiral Von Chiari of the Austro-Hungarian Navy bluntly informed the public that unless his country approved massive new expenditures the Royal and Imperial Navy would be so inferior to the Italians that it would be better off if it were entirely liquidated (Times, October 25, 1910, p. 5). Von Chiari and the other admirals got their way, but only after the Magyar delegates were promised that 36.4 percent of the money would be spent in the Hungarian part of the duel monarchy (Gebhard, 1968-69). The French produced plans for a force of 28 battleships (Wright, 1980). Above all the Anglo-German rivalry generated battleships in unprecedented numbers. When Figure 6 (1908-1919) is compared with Figure 4 (1884-1895) changes in the location of construction become clear. In Britain production has now shifted decisively to the northern yards. On the Channel coast Portsmouth and Devonport are still important, but high labor costs have almost eliminated production in London. British battleship production now more closely resembled mercantile construction. German production was more heavily concentrated in North Sea yards than ever before. In Hamburg the firm of Blohm and Voss which produced many of Germany's battlecrusiers, has lead that city to the front rank of battleship building locations. In the Baltic, Stettin dropped in importance, but Danzig and Kiel remained major dreadnought building centers. In Russia, St. Petersburg still dominated, but fear of Turkish battleship purchases had lead to major Black Sea battleship production at Nikolaev. Italy, France, and Austro-Hungary maintained roughly the same geography but the total volume had increased at all sites. In Spain, the British supported facilities at EI Ferrol have, at last, begun launching their first and only class of battleships. Everywhere the dreadnought battleship as both a weapon and a symbol had assumed striking importance. CONCLUSIONS The combined battleship production throughout the 1884-1919 period is illustrated on Figure 7. The map reflects two factors. The overall economic strength of the various countries and the relative importance which they attached to naval strength. England dominates the total picture and has devoted a far greater percentage of her total armaments budget to her navy compared to other European powers. In this respect Britain more closely resembled the United States or Japan than the continental powers. Still, the volume of battleship production throughout Europe was impressive. Even countries like Russia and AustroHungary with limited sea coast's and no overseas colonies devoted significant funding to major warship construction . In two respects the European battleship race had important lasting conse57 quences. The first was economic spin-off; the skills developed by the intense national will to produce battleships could often be transferred to other forms of industrial production. The second is the remarkable continuity shown by the battleship producing locations. Battleships constituted a far smaller percentage of total naval construction in the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s than they had in earlier years, but the same cities arid shipyards for the most part continued as shipbuilding centers in later years. The only locations producing battleships in the years just before 1914 which are not important before World War II, are Danzig, which was dumped into political limbo by the Treaty of Versailles, and Stettin, and Pola. Trieste was transferred to Italy, but produced numerous major warships for Mussolini in the 1930s. Even today with naval budgets in most European countries greatly reduced and the shipbuilding environment European moribund, a substantial part of the remaining production comes from locations which were important in the years of the great dreadnought race. REFERENCES Barker, J . E. 1906. Shipbuilding and Shipping Industries of Germany. Contemporary, 89 :324-329. Jane's Fighting Ships. Various dates. Sampson Low Marston, London. Gebhard, L. A. 1968-1969. Austria-Hungary's Dreadnought Squadron : the Naval Outlay of 1911. Austrian History Yearbook, 4-5 : 245-258. Gibbons, T. 1983. The Complete Encyclopedia of Battleships: A Technical Directory of 58 Capital Ships from 1860 to the Present Day. Crescent, New York. Greger, R. 1972. The Russian Fleet: 1914-1917. Trans. Jill Gearing ; Ian Alan , London . Marder, A. 1960. From Dreadnought to Scapa Flow: The Royal Navy in the Fisher Era, 1904-1979. Vol. 1 The Road to War. Oxford University Press, London . Parkes, O. 1966. British Battleships : A History of Design Construction and Armament. Revised ed.; Seeley Service & Co., London . Pollard, S. and Robertson, P. 1979. The British Shipbuilding Industry: 1870-1914. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA and London. Pol mar, N. 1986. Guide to the Soviet Navy 4th ed.; Naval Institute Press, Annapolis. Preston, Anthony. 1972. Battleships of World War I: An Illustrated Encyclopedia of the Battleships of al/ Nations. Stackpole, Harrisburg, PA. Silverstone, P. 1984. Directory of the World's Capital Ships. Hippocrene, New York. Times. Various Dates. London Times. Tirpitz, A. 1919. My Memoirs. 2 vols ; Dodd, Mead and Company, New York. Tomitch, V. 1968. Warships of the Imperial Russian Navy Vol. 1 Battleships B. T. Publishers, San Francisco. Trebilcock, C. 1973. British Armaments and European Industrialization, 1890-1914. Economic History Review, 26(1} :254-272. Trebilcock, C. 1969. Spin-Off in British Economic History : Armaments and European Industrialization, 1890-1914. Economic History Review, 22(3} :474- 490. Van Langendonck, C. 1914. The Armstrong Pozzuoli Works (Italy) . Engineering Magazine, 47:849- 856. Weyer, B. 1905 and 1918. Taschenbuch der Kriegsflotten. Vols. 6 and 19; C. F. Lehmann's, Munich . Wright, C. 1980. The French Naval Building Program of 1915. Warship International, 17(1}:14-23. THE GEOGRAPHICAL BULLETIN The Geographical Bulletin is published semi-annually (May and November) by Gamma Theta Upsilon. It is available by subscription to individuals for $4.00 (U.S.) per year. Institutional costs are $10.00 (U.S.) annually. Selected volumes/numbers may be purchased from Gamma Theta Upsilon at $2.00 per issue. 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