...But the greatest fight in history was fought on the first of May,
By Commodore George Dewey, the hero of Manila Bay.
THE HERO OF MANILA BAY.
Copyright, 1898. by Tom J. Quigley.
Latter this month my club will meet for our monthly get
together. We often play games as diverse as WWI air combat, battles near Caen
during Normandy and last time fighting in and around Peking during the Boxer
Rebellion. But this next meet-up will be onboard the USS Olympia, flagship of
Commodore Dewey and the Battle of Manila Bay. The event is being held on April
30th to the morning of May 1st, the anniversary of the
battle.
Now as venues go this is awesome, we not only have a
protected cruiser but a diesel submarine that fought in WWII and than in the
Cold War as a GUPPY Ia class of boats and across the river the battleship New
Jersey. I promise to write more about
the event after this overnighter.
What has me most excited about this weekend event is the
ability to play games from the Spanish American War on this pre-dreadnought
period vessel.
I have in my collection at least three games that cover this
period. Remember the Maine is the name of two games dealing with the Spanish
American War, a conflict that was to move America from being a regional power
to an international player. A third is a land based supplement called Remember
the Maine and to Hell with Spain. It
appears there is not a lot of originality in naming games.
While all are great games and designs for their periods, what
has me coming back to them again and again is the technology of the conflict,
or specifically the wacky ship designs. We have the Spanish battleship Pelayo
(a real ironclad), the American monitor Amphitrite (not a great deal of
freeboard here) and a favorite of many the USS Vesuvius a dynamite cruiser. All
push designs based on new (or old) techniques and materials. We have different
propulsion systems, armor placement covering important areas heavily and in
other cases covering the entire ship in light armour. Gun designs go from being in armoured turrets
to barbettes.
Tactics were also influx.
In The Great War and again in World War Two warships were put into
squadrons based on warships being of the same class or having similar
characteristics, often have a group of four to six battleships in the same
squadron. In the pre-dreadnought period warships were often designed as one
offs trying to determine if they were going to be useful for fleet actions.
This made for squadrons and fleets with interesting characteristics once ships
went to sea to do battle.
Do I look forward to commanding the Vesuvius, Texas or
Carlos V at our games day, absolutely. I also hope I am given a warship that I
am unfamiliar with and that I will have fun learning more about it. Wish me
luck.