WHAT IS A TREATY CRUISER?

Imagine a time where many nations of the world are engaged in an arms race, an arms race so expensive it threatens to disrupt economies and faces constant debate.  Sound like the recent past?  Actually, I'm talking about the post-WWI period.  And, initially, I'm talking about battleships.  What started this process?  The Dreadnought.

The Dreadnought (meaning, fear nothing) was a British battleship introduced in 1906.  It radically changed the prior designs by being very fast and having a lot of, and nothing but, same-size very big guns as its main armament, as contrasted with the range of different sizes otherwise seen on the prior, slower battleships. 

The end of WWI saw many nations suffering economically, desiring to limit inducements to any more wars, but wanting to ensure that their own navy was not smaller than it should be, and that it had enough of these battleships with enormous firepower.  The result was the Washington Naval Treaty of 1922. 

The Washington Naval Treaty stated that the U.S., Great Britain, Japan, France and Italy would maintain battleships in the ratio of 5:5:3:1.7:1.7.  Germany was not included as it was still limited by the Treaty of Versailles to 10,000 tons and 11" guns, although those limits were adjusted by subsequent treaties.  Battleships were limited to 35,000 tons standard displacement and guns no larger than 16 inches.  To prevent escalation in the scale of cruisers, the next largest class of ship, cruisers were limited to 10,000 tons and 8" guns.  There was a limitation of replacements of existing ships and no new battleships were to be built through 1931.  Other provisions included a limitation on total tonnage and a freeze on fortifications of locations in the Pacific.

With the advent of the Great Depression and changed political considerations, the London Naval Treaty of 1930 was signed.  This treaty, among many other provisions, established a maximum of 6" guns for any new cruiser.  These cruisers became known as Light Cruisers (with a hull designation of CL) to differentiate them from the prior Heavy Cruisers (with a hull designation of CA). 

There were various escape and escalation clauses in the treaties, and, of course, eventually all limitations imposed by the treaties became irrelevant.

Both the Tuscaloosa and the Wichita were built under the provisions of the Washington Naval Treaty, and are sometimes referred to as treaty cruisers.  As they were built, they were within the 10,000 ton displacement and had 8" guns as their largest guns.  Wichita was the last heavy cruiser built under the treaty restrictions and was the transition ship to the post-treaty Baltimore class of heavy cruisers.

Isolationism caused the U.S. to delay serious construction of treaty cruisers until after the other major powers.  The ability to review the treaty cruisers of other countries and the number of navy yards permitted, and sometimes dictated, a variety of modifications between and among the classes of treaty cruisers.



     Here is a table summarizing the U.S. treaty cruisers:

Heavy Cruisers
Hull # Name Launch Commission
Pensacola Class:
CA-24 Pensacola19291930
CA-25Salt Lake City19291929
Northampton Class:
CA-26Northampton1929 1930
CA-27Chester19291930
CA-28Louisville19301931
CA-29Chicago19301931
CA-30Houston19291930
CA-31Augusta19301931
Portland Class:
CA-33Portland19321933
CA-35Indianapolis19311932
New Orleans Class:
CA-32New Orleans19331934
CA-34 Astoria19331934
CA-36Minneapolis19331934
CA-37Tuscaloosa19331934
CA-38San Francisco19331934
CA-39Quincy19351936
CA-44Vincennes19361937
Wichita Class:
CA-45Wichita19371939
Light Cruisers
Hull #NameLaunchCommission
Brooklyn Class:
CL-40Brooklyn19361937
CL-41Philadelphia19361937
CL-42Savannah19371938
CL-43Nashville19371938
CL-46Phoenix19381938
CL-47Boise19361938
CL-48Honolulu19371938
St. Louis Class:
CL-49 St. Louis 19381939
CL-50Helena19381939
Atlanta Class:
CL-51Atlanta19411941
CL-52Juneau19411942
CL-53San Diego19411942
CL-54San Juan1942 1942


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