Otter under sail | |
Class overview | |
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Preceded by | Wespe class |
Succeeded by | Wolf class |
History | |
Name | Otter |
Builder | Schichau-Werke, Elbing |
Laid down | 1877 |
Launched | 7 June 1877 |
Commissioned | 1 April 1878 |
Decommissioned | 18 March 1907 |
Stricken | 27 May 1907 |
Fate | Broken up, 1926 |
General characteristics | |
Type | Gunboat |
Displacement | |
Length | 31 m (102 ft) |
Beam | 6.15 m (20 ft 2 in) |
Draft | 1.63 m (5 ft 4 in) |
Installed power |
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Propulsion |
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Speed | 8 knots (15 km/h; 9.2 mph) |
Complement |
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Armament |
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SMS Otter was a gunboat built for the German Kaiserliche Marine (Imperial Navy) in the 1870s. Originally intended for use in Chinese waters against local pirates, she instead remained in Germany through her career as a training ship. This was the result of the ship's very poor seaworthiness, which prevented her from making the long voyage to China. In German waters, she operated as a tender for the artillery school from 1880 to 1886; from 1887 to 1897, she served in the Ship Inspection Commission; and then from 1898 to 1907, Otter was assigned to the Mine Testing Commission. The ship became part of the torpedo school from 1907 to 1912, when she was converted into a coal storage barge. She was then sold into private service in 1914, ultimately to Anschütz & Co., which used Otter for compass testing. She was eventually broken up in 1926.
By the mid-1870s, German economic interests in China had significantly increased, and German businesses had begun to come under attack by local pirates. Because the pirates operated out of rivers and shallow bays, larger cruising warships could not be used to attack them, necessitating a small, purpose-built warship. In the mid-1870s, Germany stationed four to ten warships in the Pacific, in part to combat piracy in Chinese waters, but all were larger corvettes or ocean-going gunboats. Other naval powers, such as the British Royal Navy, stationed more than a hundred small gunboats for use in shallow coastal and riverine waters, and by 1876, the Kaiserliche Marine (Imperial Navy) had decided that Germany should station at least one such vessel in Chinese waters. The contract for the ship was awarded to Schichau-Werke, the first time a German shipbuilding was contracted to build a warship for the fleet. [1] [2] Schichau had done the design work on a speculative basis, before the contract had been awarded, and the ship was acquired outside the normal process that required the navy to adhere to the fleet plan that Albrecht von Stosch had laid out in 1872. [3]
Otter was 29.1 meters (95 ft 6 in) long at the waterline and 31 m (101 ft 8 in) long overall. She had a beam of 6.15 m (20 ft 2 in) and a draft of 1.13 to 1.63 m (3 ft 8 in to 5 ft 4 in). Her hull was constructed with transverse iron frames, and was divided into four watertight compartments. [4] Her hull had a flat bottom, which made it suitable for inshore work. [5] She displaced 130 metric tons (130 long tons ) as designed and 164 t (161 long tons) at full load. [4]
The ship's crew consisted of 1 officer and 42 enlisted men. She carried a yawl and a dinghy. Steering was controlled by a single rudder. The ship handled poorly in heavy seas and made severe leeway. She was nevertheless very maneuverable and answered commands from the helm well. [4]
She was powered by a pair of 2-cylinder marine steam engines that drove a pair of 4-bladed screw propellers that were 1 m (3 ft 3 in) in diameter. Steam was provided by a single coal-fired, cylindrical fire-tube boiler. Her propulsion system was rated to provide a top speed of 8 knots (15 km/h; 9.2 mph) at 140 metric horsepower (140 ihp ). She carried 15 t (15 long tons; 17 short tons) of coal for the boiler. At a cruising speed of 7 knots (13 km/h; 8.1 mph), she could steam for 1,181 nautical miles (2,187 km; 1,359 mi). To supplement the steam engines on longer voyages, she was fitted with a two-masted schooner rig with a total sail area of 325 m2 (3,500 sq ft). [4]
Otter carried a single 12 cm (4.7 in) K L/23 built-up gun mounted in her bow. [4] She also carried a pair of 8 cm (3.1 in) built-up guns. [6] All of these guns were removed in 1880 after an accident during shooting practice. [1]
The keel for Otter was laid down in 1877 at the Schichau-Werke shipyard in Elbing, under construction number 110. She was launched on 7 June 1877, [4] and was named for the eponymous mammal. After fitting out, she was commissioned on 11 March 1878 to begin sea trials. The ship's first commander was Leutnant zur See (Lieutenant at Sea) Max Piraly. Otter's poor seaworthiness was quickly realized, and a planned transfer from Elbing to Wilhelmshaven on Germany's North Sea coast, which was to have taken the ship around Denmark, had to be cancelled. Instead, she was sent through the Eider Canal, and after arriving in Wilhelmshaven, she was decommissioned on 19 June. Otter was drawn into the controversy between the Chief of the Admiralty, General Albrecht von Stosch, and the Reichstag (Imperial Diet), which had begun with the sinking of the ironclad Grosser Kurfürst in 1878. The original plan, to dismantle Otter, ship the components to China, and then reassemble her there, proved to be impossible, and the ship was unable to make the long voyage herself, given her very poor seaworthiness. [7]
Instead of her planned deployment abroad, Otter would remain in home waters. As a result, her sailing rig was removed. From 1880 to 1886, Otter served as a tender for the artillery training school. During this period, she was not actively commissioned. On 16 July 1880, several deck planks were damaged during shooting practice, which led to the ship being disarmed. This made Otter not only the smallest warship ever to sail under the Reichskriegsflagge (Imperial War Flag), but the only one capable of firing just salutes. On 25 November 1884, Otter was reclassified from a 2nd class gunboat to an artillery school ship tender. [1]
Otter was recommissioned on 11 July 1887 to be transferred from Wilhelmshaven to Kiel in the Baltic Sea to join the Ship Inspection Commission. Unlike her initial period in service, this time, Otter's crew made the voyage through the North Sea and around Denmark. She was decommissioned there on 22 July. The ship returned to active service on 1 September, under the command of LzS Carl Friedrich. Over the next decade, a number of future admirals commanded the ship, including Johannes Stein from April 1890 to March 1891; Fritz Sommerwerck from August to September 1891; Johannes Schröder from September 1895 to August 1897; and Walter Engelhardt from November to December 1897. In May 1897, Otter passed through the Kaiser Wilhelm Canal before the passageway formally opened. [1]
In 1898, Otter was transferred to the Mine Testing Commission, which was created on 3 January. She served in this unit for the rest of her active career, which ended on 18 March 1907. Another series of future admirals commanded Otter during this period, including: Engelhardt returned to the ship from January 1898 to October 1900; Albertus Petruschky from March to October 1901; Theodor Eschenburg from March to October 1901; and Paul Wolfram from March 1906 to March 1907. [8] On 27 May 1907, Otter was struck from the naval register. She was thereafter used as a stationary training hulk in company with the torpedo training ship Württemberg, and from 1912, was converted into a coal storage barge for use at the Kaiserliche Werft (Imperial Shipyard) in Wilhelmshaven. She was sold to a company in Brake, Lower Saxony on 11 February 1914, and which resold Otter to Anschütz & Co. in Kiel later that year. Anschütz used the ship for compass testing for the next decade. She was eventually broken up in 1926. [4] [9]
SMS Seeadler was an unprotected cruiser of the Bussard class, the third member of a class of six ships built by the German Kaiserliche Marine. Her sister ships included Bussard, the lead ship, along with Falke, Condor, Cormoran, and Geier. Seeadler was built at the Kaiserliche Werft in Danzig in late 1890, launched in February 1892, and commissioned in August of that year. Intended for colonial service, Seeadler was armed with a main battery of eight 10.5-centimeter (4.1 in) guns and had a top speed of 15.5 knots.
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SMS Gazelle was the lead ship of the ten-vessel Gazelle class of light cruisers that were built for the German Kaiserliche Marine in the late 1890s. The Gazelle class was the culmination of earlier unprotected cruiser and aviso designs, combining the best aspects of both types in what became the progenitor of all future light cruisers of the Imperial fleet. Built to be able to serve with the main German fleet and as a colonial cruiser, she was armed with a battery of ten 10.5 cm (4.1 in) guns and a top speed of 19.5 knots. Her Niclausse boilers proved to be troublesome in service, and these were later replaced in the mid-1900s.
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SMS Medusa was a member of the ten-ship Gazelle class of light cruisers that were built for the German Kaiserliche Marine in the late 1890s and early 1900s. The Gazelle class was the culmination of earlier unprotected cruiser and aviso designs, combining the best aspects of both types in what became the progenitor of all future light cruisers of the Imperial fleet. Built to be able to serve with the main German fleet and as a colonial cruiser, she was armed with a battery of ten 10.5 cm (4.1 in) guns and a top speed of 21.5 knots. Medusa served in all three German navies—the Kaiserliche Marine, the Reichsmarine of Weimar Germany, and the Kriegsmarine of Nazi Germany—over the span of over forty years.
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SMS Basilisk was a Camäleon-class gunboat of the Prussian Navy that was launched in 1862. A small vessel, armed with only three light guns, Basilisk served during all three wars of German unification in the 1860s and early 1870s. The ship was present during the Battle of Heligoland in May 1864 during the Second Schleswig War, but was too slow to engage the Danish squadron. During the Austro-Prussian War of 1866 and the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–1871, Basilisk was stationed in the North Sea to help defend the coast, but she did not see action during either conflict. Between 1873 and 1875, she was employed experimentally as the first torpedo-armed warship of the German fleet. Basilisk was decommissioned in 1875, renamed "Mine Barge No. 1", and converted into a naval mine storage hulk. The details of her fate are unrecorded, but she was still in service in that capacity at least as late as 1900. Sometime thereafter, she was broken up.
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