French cruiser Lavoisier

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File:Lavoisier-Bougault.jpg
Career (France) French Navy Ensign
Name: Lavoisier
Namesake: Antoine Lavoisier
Laid down: 1893
Launched: 17 April 1896
Completed: 1897
In service: December 1897
Out of service: 14 December 1917
Struck: 07 June 1920
Fate: Sold for scrap
General characteristics
Class and type: Cruiser
Displacement: 2300 tonnes
Length: 100.6 metres
Beam: 10.7 metres
Draught: 5.5 metres
Installed power: 7400 shp
Propulsion: 2 Indret steam engines, 16 boilers
Speed: 20 knots
Complement: 250
Armament:

4 x 164mm guns
2 x 100mm guns
10 misc guns

2 torpedo tubes

The Lavoisier was a protected cruiser of the French Navy, named in honour of Antoine Lavoisier.

Launched in Rochefort in April 1896, Lavoisier entered the service in December 1987. She was then sent to Toulon as a replacement for the ageing Cosmao.

In 1903, she replaced the Isly as division chief at the station of Newfoundland.

During the First World War, Lavoisier patrolled the Atlantic and the English Channel, before being sent in Eastern Mediterranean in 1915.

In 1919, she was appointed to the station of Syria.

She was struck in 1920, and sold for scrap the next year.

Sources and references

  • Dictionnaire des bâtiments de la flotte de guerre française de Colbert à nos jours, Tome II, 1870-2006, LV Jean-Michel Roche, Imp. Rezotel-Maury Millau, 2005