The Montana-Class: The U.S. Battleships Built Too Late to Sail

Share This Post

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

The Montana-class battleships were the final great vision of a time when naval dominance was measured in terms of gargantuan armor belts and the thunder of enormous naval guns. They were planned as the ultimate advancement of U.S. battleship building, which was going to surpass even the great Iowa class in terms of protection and firepower. But as grand as their plans were, they never moved beyond blueprints, surpassed by a new vision of war.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

A Break from the Shackles of Treaty Constraints

International naval treaties during most of the early 20th century controlled what battleships could and could not be—how much displacement, gun caliber, and armor they could have. The Montana class broke those restraints overboard. At 121 feet in beam, they were so broad they could not fit through the original Panama Canal locks, leading to plans for a new, wider set of locks to service them.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

Planning commenced even prior to the entry of America into World War II, with Congress approving the first two ships in 1939. The design of Montana adopted the Navy’s traditional philosophy—maximum protection and maximum firepower—even if it cost it the speed characteristic of the Iowa class.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

Armor: The Heaviest Ever on a U.S. Battleship

If they were constructed, the Montanas would have been the most armoured ships ever in the history of the U.S. Navy. Their armour was designed to brush aside the enormous 2,700-pound Mark 8 “superheavy” shells—ordnance more formidable than anything the Iowa or South Dakota class had been designed to meet.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

They featured their principal armor belt, a whopping 16.1 inches in thickness, externally mounted and inclined at 19 degrees for added effective resistance. Below that, another armored belt protected against “diving shells”—armor-piercing shells with the ability to go underwater and hit beneath the waterline.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

Above, the layered deck armor gave excellent protection against aerial attack. A 2.25-inch weather deck, a 7.05-inch main armor deck, and a splinter deck up to 1 inch thick together protected against plunging fire and armor-piercing bombs.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

The turrets were just as effective—faces as much as 22.5 inches thick, three inches greater than the Iowas, with barbettes from 18 to 21.3 inches thick. No other American battleship design was comparable in terms of turret protection.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

Built to Survive Underwater Assaults

Below the waterline, the Montana class had a four-layered torpedo defense system, with liquid-filled and air-filled compartments alternating in order to absorb and distribute explosive force from torpedoes or mines. The depth of this system was among the most well-thought-out for any battleship of the period—another testament to the philosophy of the class: to endure punishment and fight on.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

The Montana class would have been a steel and firepower behemoth. But before war production priorities began turning towards aircraft carriers and fast battleships, their day had passed, leaving them as legends that never sailed.

More related images you may be interested in:

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons
Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

Related Posts

7 Biggest Box Office Highs and Lows of Margot Robbie’s Career

Margot Robbie's not only an actress—she's a force of...

Robin Williams: The Spark of Madness That Changed Film and Comedy Forever

Robin Williams was the type of actor who could...

Jennifer Hudson’s Journey: Faith, Tragedy, and Triumph in Hollywood

If you're a fan of powerhouse voices and tales...

Top 10 TV Catchphrases That Made History

Catchphrases are the TV version of magic glue—the one-liners...

10 Grown-Ups Who Shockingly Passed as Teenagers on TV

Hollywood has a not-so-secret obsession: casting full-grown adults as...

10 Iconic Traits of ’80s Teen Movies

Get in the DeLorean, press play on that cassette...