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Frigates of the Napoleonic Wars
 
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Frigates of the Napoleonic Wars [Paperback]

Robert Gardiner
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 208 pages
  • Publisher: Chatham Publishing; New edition edition (15 Aug 2006)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1861762925
  • ISBN-13: 978-1861762924
  • Product Dimensions: 25.6 x 21.8 x 1.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 328,878 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Robert Gardiner
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Product Description

Product Description

For every naval officer, in fiction or reality, the frigate was the ideal and much sought-after command. As dashing as a modern destroyer, the frigate offered the excitement of independent service, with the prospect of a glorious single-ship battle or a fortune to be made in prize money. Their actions have been the stuff of history and sea fiction for generations, but the ships themselves are hardly documented at all. This book seeks to redress the balance, to describe the design, construction, armament and fitting of individual classes, to look at the factors influencing their development, and to analyse the many roles they were expected to perform. Backing the main narrative are detailed tabular data on all classes, including the prizes captured from opposing navies - French, Spanish, Dutch, Danish and American - with comparative information on aspects like performance under sail. The book is largely based on new research, and while primarily devoted to frigates has much original material on more general issues, like the constructional experiments prior to the adoption of Seppings diagonal system, and the improvements to guns, mountings and powder during the wars of 1793-1815. Illustrated in depth mainly with the original plans, the book also includes photographs of models and contemporary prints. With the information provided here, for the first time readers can now discover not only which were the most highly regarded frigates in the fleet, but also why.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
36 of 36 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
Covering the period 1801-1815, this primarily focuses on the British frigates of the period, but also includes references to previous designs for background, and to captured vessels. It is astonishingly informative and an easy read, though some of the technical terms could be explained a little better and could be mystifying even to some who know a little of the background.

Alongside the copious plans and draughts, this also includes details of variations of the ships within each class. As well as an extensive historical overview, the book contains chapters on Design issues, Construction Methods (and evolution), Wartime Modifications (even including some costs, where available), Performance, Armament details, and how and when Frigates were used. Almsot as an afterthought it also contains an interesting overview of the frigate dispositions in several years.

Often difficult to find, I don't think anyone with any interest in the frigates of the period will be disappointed with this book.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
I support halfbat's review of this book it is truely excellent. I have owned it for several years and after initially reading it from cover to cover it has been an excellent reference book ever since.
The reason for my title is that it should be seen as part of a series currently three in number. The two previous ones cover the history of the 18th century frigate from its inception to this volume. The other two are in the same style and are equally as good. Sadly there appears to be no incentive to produce a fourth volume from 1815 until the end of the sailing frigate era perhaps Mr Gardiner could be persuaded to complete the work.
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Amazon.com:  6 reviews
21 of 21 people found the following review helpful
Outstanding 9 July 2002
By Mike Daplyn - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
I think a fair summary of Gardiner's book would be: It's ALL there - but some of it takes a little finding. Rather like the odd upperworks of a rasée 74, its shape betrays a process of conversion. According to the foreword, it was originally intended as the sequel to his 1995 book on heavy frigates, and to carry the story well beyond 1815. For various reasons it ended up dealing with all frigates, and restricted to the Napoleonic period. Gardiner says he used the enforced delay in publication to do more research: I would humbly submit that he could have made his readers' lives easier by using some of the time to review the flow of his book. I confess to having been myself a little daunted at first sight.

As examples: the very first chapter heading, "The Return to Moderate Dimensions" only makes sense if one is familiar, from Gardiner's earlier book or other sources, of the Royal Navy's flirtation with large frigates in the 1790s, and the chapter charges straight into the subject without a word of recapitulation. The internal structuring of the book is also a little odd. The whole first section of the book is titled 'Design History', but what it really covers is the procurement history of the Royal Navy's frigates. The real history of design evolution is covered in the second chapter - confusingly, also titled 'Design' - of the second section of the book. The first chapter of the second section covers construction techniques; since these are the means by which design is translated into tangible form, the design chapter might have been better placed first.

All this, however, is mere quibbling, for, again like the rasée 74, the end product packs a huge punch, whatever its shape. It is magnificently comprehensive, scholarly in the very best sense of the word (everything backed up by chapter and verse, evidence carefully sifted, no concealed suppositions), and well (often wittily) written. Every individual chapter is excellently done, and one has only to dive in, in order to find a wealth of information logically ordered and intelligently discussed.

Section 1 (what I would term the procurement history) has comprehensive tabulations and illustrations of every class of frigate built for the Navy, or taken in as prizes, while the text gives an excellent analysis of the conflicting factors - strategic requirements, cost, foibles of First Lords of the Admiralty - which governed the number and type of frigates constructed. This interesting stuff, though some readers might find it a trifle dry - speaking strictly for me, there is a limit to the number of sheer plans I can digest.

The book really takes off and flies in the second section. The chapters here cover construction, design, wartime modifications, armament, sailing performance, and the use of the frigates in action. All are packed with goodies. The overall picture is of a strong impetus towards innovation - in construction methods, gun design, water stowage, boats, hen-coops ... the list is almost endless, and Gardiner discusses them all, with excellent illustrations, nearly all contemporary. He describes entertainingly the technical debates, which ran fast and furious on many of these issues, with professional reputations rapidly made and as rapidly broken, and lawsuits flying like grapeshot between rival inventors. The Admiralty (which was directly responsible and politically accountable for meeting strategic needs) generally favoured innovation, and was open to suggestions both from serving officers and outsiders, while its supporting technical Boards (the Navy Board which designed and built the ships, and the Ordnance Board which armed them) tended to be more conservative. Neither side was was right all the time.

It all comes together in the last chapter, which not merely describes, but analyses, all the multifarious tasks the frigates had to perform. Strategic and tactical reconnaissance (well illustrated by the examples of the Trafalgar and Nile campaigns), the increasing involvement of frigates in fleet and squadron actions (facilitated by their rapid rise in size relative to the 74s), blockade, coastal and amphibious operations, sea control, dogsbody work like hauling live cattle to provision the fleet - it is a wonderful corrective to the works, both fact and fiction, which see the solo cruise and single-ship combat as the essence of a frigate's work. The independent cruise is not neglected, with examples from famous exponents including Pellew and Cochrane, but again these are properly put in context: it was not by random search, but by expert analysis of wind systems and sailing times, that the successful cruising captains found their targets. It is only a shame that space has limited this chapter to one or two examples of each type of frigate work. The subject really demands a book-length treatment done with the thoroughness that Gardiner can give it. I sincerely hope he gets round to writing it one day.

9 of 9 people found the following review helpful
Outstanding 9 July 2002
By Mike Daplyn - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
I think a fair summary of Gardiner's book would be: It's ALL there - but some of it takes a little finding. Rather like the odd upperworks of a rasée 74, its shape betrays a process of conversion. According to the foreword, it was originally intended as the sequel to his 1995 book on heavy frigates, and to carry the story well beyond 1815. For various reasons it ended up dealing with all frigates, and restricted to the Napoleonic period. Gardiner says he used the enforced delay in publication to do more research: I would humbly submit that he could have made his readers' lives easier by using some of the time to review the flow of his book. I confess to having been myself a little daunted at first sight.

As examples: the very first chapter heading, "The Return to Moderate Dimensions" only makes sense if one is familiar, from Gardiner's earlier book or other sources, of the Royal Navy's flirtation with large frigates in the 1790s, and the chapter charges straight into the subject without a word of recapitulation. The internal structuring of the book is also a little odd. The whole first section of the book is titled 'Design History', but what it really covers is the procurement history of the Royal Navy's frigates. The real history of design evolution is covered in the second chapter - confusingly, also titled 'Design' - of the second section of the book. The first chapter of the second section covers construction techniques; since these are the means by which design is translated into tangible form, the design chapter might have been better placed first.

All this, however, is mere quibbling, for, again like the rasée 74, the end product packs a huge punch, whatever its shape. It is magnificently comprehensive, scholarly in the very best sense of the word (everything backed up by chapter and verse, evidence carefully sifted, no concealed suppositions), and well (often wittily) written. Every individual chapter is excellently done, and one has only to dive in, in order to find a wealth of information logically ordered and intelligently discussed.

Section 1 (what I would term the procurement history) has comprehensive tabulations and illustrations of every class of frigate built for the Navy, or taken in as prizes, while the text gives an excellent analysis of the conflicting factors - strategic requirements, cost, foibles of First Lords of the Admiralty - which governed the number and type of frigates constructed. This interesting stuff, though some readers might find it a trifle dry - speaking strictly for me, there is a limit to the number of sheer plans I can digest.

The book really takes off and flies in the second section. The chapters here cover construction, design, wartime modifications, armament, sailing performance, and the use of the frigates in action. All are packed with goodies. The overall picture is of a strong impetus towards innovation - in construction methods, gun design, water stowage, boats, hen-coops ... the list is almost endless, and Gardiner discusses them all, with excellent illustrations, nearly all contemporary. He describes entertainingly the technical debates, which ran fast and furious on many of these issues, with professional reputations rapidly made and as rapidly broken, and lawsuits flying like grapeshot between rival inventors. The Admiralty (which was directly responsible and politically accountable for meeting strategic needs) generally favoured innovation, and was open to suggestions both from serving officers and outsiders, while its supporting technical Boards (the Navy Board which designed and built the ships, and the Ordnance Board which armed them) tended to be more conservative. Neither side was was right all the time.

It all comes together in the last chapter, which not merely describes, but analyses, all the multifarious tasks the frigates had to perform. Strategic and tactical reconnaissance (well illustrated by the examples of the Trafalgar and Nile campaigns), the increasing involvement of frigates in fleet and squadron actions (facilitated by their rapid rise in size relative to the 74s), blockade, coastal and amphibious operations, sea control, dogsbody work like hauling live cattle to provision the fleet - it is a wonderful corrective to the works, both fact and fiction, which see the solo cruise and single-ship combat as the essence of a frigate's work. The independent cruise is not neglected, with examples from famous exponents including Pellew and Cochrane, but again these are properly put in context: it was not by random search, but by expert analysis of wind systems and sailing times, that the successful cruising captains found their targets. It is only a shame that space has limited this chapter to one or two examples of each type of frigate work. The subject really demands a book-length treatment done with the thoroughness that Gardiner can give it. I sincerely hope he gets round to writing it one day.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Good but limited 20 July 2008
By John McCoy - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Within it's limits, this is an excellent book. However, the title is misleading: rather than being about "Frigates of the Napoleanic Wars", it covers only British frigates of the larger classes (those of 30 guns or more). There is no coverage of the smaller frigates. There is, likewise, virtually no discussion of French, Spanish, etc vessels, except insofar as captured ships became part of the British fleet.

That said, within it's chosen bounds the book is exceedingly detailed and comprehensive. Someone seeking to understand the technical side of the subject would be entirely satisfied.

Unfortunately, like all books from Chatham Press, the paperback version of this title suffers from an incredibly poor binding. Purchasers of the paperback version should anticipate the book falling apart before they have finished reading it.
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