Captain Coles contributed to the International Exhibition models of his ship; admitting (he states) from 7 to 8 degrees depression. In two this is obtained by the deck on each side of the turret sloping at the necessary angle, to admit of the required depression; in the other two it is obtained by the centre of the deck on which the turret is surmounted being raised sufficiently to enable the shot, when the gun is depressed, to pass clear of the outer edge of the deck. A drawing published in 1860, of the midship section from which these models were made, also gives a section of the Warrior, by which it will be seen that supposing the guns of each to be 10 feet out of water, and to have the usual depressions of guns in the Navy (7 degrees), the Warrior’s guns on the broadside will throw the shot 19 feet further from the side than the shield ship with her guns placed in the centre, that being the distance of the latter from the edge of the ship: thus, with the same depression, the shield ship will have a greater advantage, this being an important merit of the invention, which Captain Coles has already applied to the Royal Sovereign. The construction of these turrets, the guns, and the turn-tables on which they are placed, with the machinery to work them, is very interesting; but its details would occupy more space than is at our command. (See Times, Sept. 8, 1863.)

Captain Coles, in a communication to the Times, dated November 4, 1863, thus urges the application of the turret to sea-going vessels, and quotes the opinion of the present Contractor of the Navy on the advantages his (Captain Coles’) system must have over the old one, in strength, height out of water, and stability, and consequent adaptation for sea-going ships. The Captain states:

“I believe I have already shown that on my system of a revolving turret, a heavier broadside can be thrown than from ships armed on the broadside; but it possesses this further advantage, that my turrets can be adapted to the heaviest description of ordnance; indeed, no other plan has yet been put in practice, while it is impossible to adapt the broadside ships to them, without the enlargement of the ports, which would destructively weaken the ships, and leave the guns’ crew exposed to rifles, grape-shot or shells.” Captain Coles then quotes the armaments of the Prince Albert (now constructing at Millwall,) and the Warrior, and shows that although the broadside of the Prince Albert is nominally reduced to 1120 lbs. (still in excess of the Warrior’s if compared with tonnage); it still gives this great advantage, that whereas late experiments have demonstrated that 4½-inch plates can be made to resist 68-pounder and 110-pounder shot, they have also shown that the 300-pounder smashes them when formed into a “Warrior target” with the greatest ease. The Prince Albert, therefore, can smash the Warrior, though the Warrior carries no gun that can injure her; nor can she, as a broadside ship, be altered to carry heavier guns.

The Engraving represents Captain Coles’s Ship cleared for action, and the bulwarks down.


CONTENTS.


I.—[Historico-Political Information], 1-56:

[Politics not yet a Science], —[The Philosopher and the Historian], 1. —[Whig and Tory Ministries], 2. —[Protectionists], —[Rats, and Ratting], —[The Heir to the British Throne always in Opposition], 4. —[Legitimacy and Government], —“[The Fourth Estate],” 5. —[Writing for the Press], —[Shorthand Writers], 7. —[The Worth of Popular Opinion], 8. —[Machiavelism], —[Free-speaking], 9. —[Speakers of the Houses of Parliament], 10. —[The National Conscience], 11. —[“The Nation of Shopkeepers],” 12. —[Results of Revolutions], 13. —[Worth of a Republic], —“[Safe Men],” 14. —[Church Preferment], —[Peace Statesmanship], —[The Burial of Sir John Moore], 15. —[The Ancestors of Washington], 16. —[The “Star-spangled Banner],” —[Ancestry of President Adams], 18. —[The Irish Union], 19. —[The House of Bonaparte], 20. —[Invasion of England projected by Napoleon I.], 21. —[Fate of the Duc d’Enghien], 24. —[Last Moments of Mr. Pitt], 25. —[What drove George III. mad], 27. —[Predictions of the Downfal of Napoleon I.], 29. —[Wellington predicts the Peninsular Compaign], 30. —[The Battle of Waterloo], 31. —[Wellington’s Defence of the Waterloo Campaign], 32. —[Lord Castlereagh at the Congress of Vienna], 33. —[The Cato-street Conspiracy], 34. —[Money Panic of 1832], 36. —[A great Sufferer by Revolutions], —[Origin of the Anti-Corn-Law League], 37. —[Wellington’s Military Administration], 38. —[Gustavus III. of Sweden], 39. —[Fall of Louis Philippe], 40. —[The Chartists in 1848], 41. —[Revival of the French Emperorship], 43. —[French Coup d’Etat Predictions], —[Statesmanship of Lord Melbourne], 44. —[Ungraceful Observance], 45. —[The Partition of Poland], 46. —[The Invasion of England], 47. —[What a Militia can do], 48. —[Whiteboys], 49. —[Naval Heroes], —[How Russia is bound to Germany], 50. —[Count Cavour’s Estimate of Napoleon III.], 51. —[The Mutiny at the Nore], 52. —[Catholic Emancipation and Sir Robert Peel], —[The House of Coburg], 53. —[A few Years of the World’s Changes], 55. —[Noteworthy Pensions], 56.