Illustrated with 200 official admiralty photographs, many of them previously unpublished, this book traces the development of Royal Naval ship design in a period of immense change. Opening with the Crimean War, this period saw the gradual transition from sail to steam and screw propulsion; from wood to steel construction; from fixed broadside armaments of bronze muzzle-loaders to turret-mounted steel breech-loaders and torpedoes. The period covered in this volume closes with the launch of HMS Dreadnought, which overnight rendered all existing ships obsolete and signalled the start in earnest of the Anglo-German naval arms race which contributed to the outbreak of WW1. Each photograph is accompanied by full specifications (where available) and a caption detailing any significant design features, while the main text gives an overview of naval developments across the period under discussion, setting the selected ships in context. AUTHOR: Nicholas J Dingle has a lifelong interest in naval history. He also has a degree in War Studies from King's College London and a Masters in Computer Science from Imperial College. He worked for the MoD's Defence Scientific and Technical Laboratory in Portsmouth before recently returning to Imperial College to take up an academic post. SELLING POINTS: * Contains almost 200 archive photographs from a neglected admiralty archive, many previously unpublished. * Covers a fascinating period of RN history, encompassing the transition from sail to steam, from wood to iron and from broadsides of bronze muzzle-loading cannon to turret-mounted breechloaders and torpedoes. * The main text describes the design history of these ships, the process of experimentation, improvisation and refinement as the senior service adapted to technological change. * Each image also has a detailed caption. ILLUSTRATIONS Over 150 images *