The launch in 1906 of HMS Dreadnought, the world’s first all-big-gun battleship, rendered all existing battle fleets obsolete while at the same time wiping out the Royal Navy’s numerical advantage. Brita...

Buy Now From Amazon

The launch in 1906 of HMS Dreadnought, the world’s first all-big-gun battleship, rendered all existing battle fleets obsolete while at the same time wiping out the Royal Navy’s numerical advantage. Britain urgently needed to build an entirely new battle fleet of these larger, more complex and more costly vessels. In this she succeeded spectacularly: in little over a decade fifty such ships were completed, almost exactly double what Germany achieved. This heroic achievement was made possible by the country’s vast industrial nexus of shipbuilders, engine manufacturers, armament firms and specialist armor producers, whose contribution to the creation of the Grand Fleet is too often ignored.

  • Used Book in Good Condition
  • Used Book in Good Condition

Similar Products

Clydebank Battlecruisers: Forgotten Photographs from John Brown's ShipyardGerman Battlecruisers of World War One: Their Design, Construction and OperationsA Shipyard at War: Unseen Photographs from John Brown's Clydebank, 1914-1918The Kaiser's Battlefleet: German Capital Ships 1871-1918The British Battleship: 1906-1946British and German Battlecruisers: Their Development and OperationsJutland 1916: The Archaeology of a Naval BattlefieldBritish Battleships 1919-1945: New Revised Edition