French cruiser Jean Bart

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Jean Bart
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Jean Bart off Toulon
History
France
Name: Jean Bart
Namesake: Jean Bart
Ordered: 18 September 1886
Builder: Rochefort shipyard
Laid down: December 1886
Launched: 24 October 1889
Commissioned: 1892
Decommissioned: 1897
In service: 1893
Fate: ran aground and lost on 11 February 1907
General characteristics
Class & type: Alger-class protected cruiser
Displacement: 4100 tonnes
Length: 105.5 m (346 ft)
Beam: 13.2 m (43 ft)
Draught: 6.5 m (21 ft)
Propulsion: 8 Scotch marine boilers,[1] 8000 HP
Speed: 18 knots (33 km/h; 21 mph)
Armament:
  • 4 × 164 mm gun (6.5 inch)
  • 6 × 140 mm guns (5.5 inch)
  • 4 torpedo tubes

Jean Bart was a 4800-tonne first class iron protected cruiser of the French Navy.

She was built in Rochefort in 1886 and commissioned in 1892. 1893 she took part in the naval review during the World's Columbian Exhibition. She was reinstated second class cruiser in 1897 and was sent to East Asia. In 1902, she returned to Lorient to be decommissioned.

She was recommissioned in 1906 and sent to the Caribbean. She ran aground in 1907 at Ras Nouadhibou and became a total loss.

References

  1. Louis-Émile Bertin: Marine boilers—their construction and working, dealing more especially with tubulous boilers - Ed. 2 (1906), tr. and ed. by Leslie S. Robertson. Freely available on the Internet Archive https://archive.org/details/marineboilersthe00bertuoft. page 30

External links