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Lecture

British Large Light Cruisers - Barrow-in-Furness

The Town, Fiji & Minotaur classes in action 1939-1945

Feb
04
04 Feb 2025 /  
7:30pm - 9:30pm

About

During the 1930s, with the London Naval Treaty of 1930 placing limitations on heavy cruiser warship construction and characteristics, the US, Japanese and British navies attempted to circumvent the restrictions on heavy cruiser construction by building light cruisers (vessels with an armament no heavier than 6.1in / 155mm) of similar size and fighting power to conventional heavy cruisers with 8in artillery. In Britain, this resulted first in the 10 Town class vessels, and latterly the reduced Fiji (aka Crown Colony) and Minotaur classes, built to fulfill the obligations of the Second London Naval Treaty of 1936.


Though largely overlooked, other than HMS Belfast for her role in the Battle of the North Cape, and her status as an IWM museum ship, the Towns, Fijis and first-completed Minotaurs played critical roles in the naval war 1939-'45, serving as fleet workhorses in all theatres of the conflict. This talk provides a short overview of these frequently-forgotten vessels and their operations during the conflict.

 

Speaker: Dr. Scott M Lindgren, Naval Historian

Organised by: IET/PESC
Contact: Anne Morris, (anne.morris@ietvolunteer.org)

Design and Manufacturing
Security
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1

Continuing Professional Development

This event can contribute towards your Continuing Professional Development (CPD) hours as part of the IET's CPD monitoring scheme.

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04 Feb 2025 

7:30pm - 9:30pm

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Location

The Forum

28 Duke Street
Barrow
Cumbria
LA14 1HH
GB

Programme

19:00 Registration and Networking
19:30 Talk
21:30 (approx) Conclusion