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Brazilian coastal defense ship Deodoro

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Deodoro during the Rio de Janeiro visit of the US Great White Fleet in 1908
History
Brazil
NameMarshal Deodoro
NamesakeDeodoro da Fonseca
Ordered1890s
BuilderSociété Nouvelle des Forges et Chantiers de la Méditerranée, La Seyne, France
Laid down1896
Launched1898
Completed1900
FateSold to Mexico, 1924
Mexico
NameAnáhuac
Acquired19 April 1924
Decommissioned1938
FateScrapped
General characteristics
TypeCoastal defense ship
Displacement3,162 tons standard
Length267 feet 6 inches (81.5 m)
Beam47 feet 3 inches (14.4 m)
Draught13 feet 2 inches (4.0 m)
Propulsion
Speed15.5 knots (29 km/h; 18 mph) maximum
Complement200
Armament
Armour
  • Belt: 5 feet 6 inches (1.68 m) depth, 13.75 inches (349 mm) tapering to 4 inches (100 mm) thick
  • Deck: 1.3 inches (33 mm)
  • Casemate: 2.9 in (74 mm)
  • Turret face: 8.6 in (220 mm)

Deodoro, also known as Marshal Deodoro, was a coastal defense ship built for the Brazilian Navy at the end of the nineteenth century. It was the lead ship of its class, alongside Floriano. Deodoro was one of several ships that rebelled in the 1910 Revolt of the Lash, and it was used for neutrality patrols during the First World War. It was sold to Mexico in 1924, and broken up for scrap in 1938.

Service

Deodoro was laid down by the French shipbuilding company Société Nouvelle des Forges et Chantiers de la Méditerranée in 1896, supervised by Admiral José Cândido Guillobel. Its construction was temporarily suspended by the Brazilians while they modified its design. It was launched on 18 June 1898, after a ceremony that was attended by representatives from Brazil, the French Navy, and a Russian gunboat. Its christening was accomplished with an electric button, which sent a signal to cut a cord and let a bottle of champagne break on the ship. At the beginning of the Spanish–American War (1898), officials from both participants traveled to France to inspect the incomplete Deodoro and sister ship Floriano in view of purchasing them for the conflict. Neither was close enough to completion to make such an acquisition worthwhile.

Deodoro was completed in 1900, and its trials were successful, including a 24-hour trial with a mean speed of 14 knots (26 km/h; 16 mph). After the ship was handed over to Brazil, the ship left France en route for Brazil, stopping along the way in the Spanish Canary Islands. A nearby British warship, which was at that time engaged in the Second Boer War, suspected the ship of being a Boer-chartered privateer heading south to interfere with British merchant ships plying along the coast of southern Africa. Although the Brazilians were able to convince the British of their identity, they steamed with lights off for the next night or two in an effort to avoid further confusion with any other warships. Deodoro arrived in Brazil on 18 February 1900.

Deodoro saw its first action in 1904, when it shelled rebelling soldiers at the military school at Praia Vermelha [pt]. Six years later, its crew rebelled as part of the Revolt of the Lash. The Brazilian Navy at the time was heavily segregated between white officers and broadly black or mulatto enlisted sailors, and the former would often violently punish the latter for even minor transgressions. Tensions came to a head in November 1910, when sailors aboard the new dreadnought Minas Geraes rebelled, and the crews of Deodoro, another new dreadnought (São Paulo), a new cruiser (Bahia), and several smaller vessels joined. The revolt ended peacefully, and the mutineers were granted an amnesty that was later cancelled.

In 1912, the Brazilian Navy overhauled Deodoro in Rio de Janeiro, fitting a new propulsion system and armament. In September and October 1913, the ship took part in a major naval exercise with the majority of the Brazilian fleet, which was observed by the country's president, naval minister, and other politicians.

During the First World War, the navy placed Deodoro in its northern squadron, which was responsible for neutrality patrols in the area between the states of Amazonas (located up the Amazon River) and Sergipe. Deodoro, the detachment's flagship, was joined in this task by Floriano, two cruisers, two destroyers, and the six vessels of Brazil's Amazon River flotilla.

On 19 April 1924, Brazil sold the ship to the Mexican Navy, where it was renamed Anáhuac. The Brazilians used the money gained (eight thousand contos) to purchase a submarine from Italy, Humaytá. No further upgrades were made to Anáhuac in its remaining service life, and the Mexican Navy sold it for scrap in 1938.

Footnotes

  1. Lyon says the ship carried six of these guns, and does not list the 1-pounders.
  2. The Brazilian Navy originally named the ship Ipiranga in January 1896, but changed it in December.

Endnotes

  1. ^ Brassey, Naval Annual, 1897, 49.
  2. ^ Lyon, Conway's 1860–1905, 407.
  3. ^ "Deodoro," Serviço de Documentação da Marinha — Histórico de Navios.
  4. "Notes and Queries of Service Afloat and Ashore," Navy & Army Illustrated, 401.
  5. Brassey, Naval Annual, 1900, 57.
  6. "The New Brazilian Armorclad 'Marshal Deodoro'," Scientific American, 184.
  7. ^ "Encouraçado Guarda-Costas Deodoro," Navios De Guerra Brasileiros.
  8. Morgan, Legacy, 200–59.
  9. Gardiner and Gray, Conway's 1906–21, 404.
  10. Scheina, Naval History, 92.
  11. ^ Gardiner and Chesneau, Conway's 1922–46, 414.
  12. Scheina, Naval History, 136.

Bibliography

Further reading

  • "The Cruise of the 'Deodoro' and 'Floriano'." Revista Maritima Brasileira. September–October 1903.
  • Paloczi-Horvath, George. From Monitor to Missile Boat: Coast Defence Ships and Coastal Defence Since 1860. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1996. ISBN 1557502706. OCLC 605087104.
Deodoro-class coastal defense ships
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