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Spanish monitor Puigcerdá

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Name
  
Puigcerdá

Cost
  
₧840,000 pesetas

Commissioned
  
1875

Launched
  
19 November 1874

Namesake
  
Capital of Cerdanya

Laid down
  
28 September 1874

Decommissioned
  
1890

Length
  
41 m

Spanish monitor Puigcerdá httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Builders
  
Société Nouvelle des Forges et Chantiers de la Méditerranée, La Seyne-sur-Mer

The Puigcerdá was the only monitor ever commissioned in the history of the Spanish Armada, and was acquired to defend the estuary of Bilbao and the coast of Cantabria during the Third Carlist War, at a price of ₧840,000.

Contents

Construction and Naming

The acquisition of Puigcerdá was approved on August 25, 1874, by General Serrano and Minister of Marine Rafael Rodriguez Arias. The contract for the construction of the ship was signed September 11, 1874, with the ship to be built in the shipyard of the Societe Nouvelle des Forges et Chantiers de la Mediterranee, in La Seyne, Toulon, France.

By a Royal Order dated October 30, 1874 it was ordered that the ship be given the name:

"...Puigcerdá, thus perpetuating in the Navy one of the memorable events of this civil war that unfortunately divides us"

Third Carlist War service

During the Third Carlist War, Puigcerdá defended the province of Vizcaya against Carlist troops. After the war the ship was laid up at Ferrol with the floating battery Duque de Tetuán, and was decommissioned in 1890.

Spanish–American War

With the breaking out of the Spanish–American War in 1898, Puigcerdá was recommissioned and rearmed, and dispatched for the defense of the Ria de Vigo.

Disposal

In 1900 Puigcerdá was decommissioned, and sold for 30,000 pesetas for civilian use as the small steamer Anita; later it was sold to John Holt & Co. of Liverpool.

References

Spanish monitor Puigcerdá Wikipedia


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