Oktyabrskaya
Revolutsiya in 1934, after her modernization.
Imperial Russian Battleship Gangut was laid
up on 9 November 1918 for lack of manpower and was renamed Oktyabrskaya
Revolutsiya (October Revolution) on 27 June 1925 while she was being refitted.
She was recommissioned on 23 March 1926 and began a partial reconstruction on
12 October 1931, incorporating the lessons from the earlier modernizations of
her sisters Marat and Parizhskaya Kommuna. The tubular tower-mast of Marat was
replaced by a larger and sturdier structure with a KDP-6 fire control director,
equipped with two 6-meter (20 ft) Zeiss rangefinders positioned on top. The aft
superstructure was enlarged and a new structure was built just forward of it,
with another KDP-6 director surmounting it, which required the repositioning of
the mainmast 9 meters (30 ft) forward. This did not leave enough room for a
derrick, as was used on Marat, so two large boat cranes were mounted on each
side of the mainmast. Her funnel was curved to the rear rather than angled like
Marat. Each turret received Italian 8-meter (26 ft) rangefinders and their roof
armor was increased to 152-millimeter (6.0 in) in thickness. A new forecastle
was fitted, much like that Marat's, to improve seakeeping. Six 76.2-millimeter (3.00
in) 34-K anti-aircraft (AA) guns were added, three on the roofs of the fore and
aft turrets. All twenty-five of her old boilers were replaced by a dozen
oil-fired boilers originally intended for the Borodino-class battlecruiser
Izmail. The space saved was used to add another inboard longitudinal watertight
bulkhead that greatly improved her underwater protection. Her original Pollen
Argo Clock mechanical fire-control computer was upgraded with a copy of a
Vickers Ltd fire-control computer, designated AKUR by the Soviets, as well as a
copy of a Sperry stable vertical gyroscope. These changes increased her
displacement to 26,690 tonnes (26,270 long tons; 29,420 short tons) at full
load and her overall length to 184.9 meters (607 ft). Her metacentric height
decreased to 1.67 meters (5 ft 6 in) from her designed 1.76 meters (5 ft 9 in)
as a result of her enlarged superstructures.
She finished her reconstruction on 4 August
1934. Her participation in the Winter War was limited to a bombardment of
Finnish 10-inch (254 mm) coast defense guns on 18 December 1939 at Saarenpää in
the Beryozovye Islands before the Gulf of Finland iced over. She failed to
inflict any permanent damage before she was driven off by near misses.
Oktyabrskaya Revolutsiya sailed to Tallinn shortly after the Soviets occupied
Estonia, but she was refitted in February–March 1941 in Kronstadt and her
anti-aircraft armament was reinforced. Two twin 76.2-mm 81-K mounts were
mounted on her quarter deck. The magazines for these guns were probably situated
in the rearmost casemates on each beam, which lost their 120-mm guns and twelve
automatic 37-millimeter (1.5 in) 70-K guns were also added, three guns each on
the middle turrets and the other six in the fore and aft superstructures. Four
twin and four single 12.7-millimeter (0.50 in) DShK machine guns and two AA
directors were also fitted. The large cranes were replaced by smaller ones
taken from the ex-German heavy cruiser Petropavlovsk to make room for the
anti-aircraft guns.
On 22 June 1941 Oktyabrskaya Revolutsiya
was in Tallinn when the Germans invaded the Soviet Union, but she was forced to
sail for Kronstadt by the advancing Germans. She opened fire on troop positions
of the German 18th Army on 8 September from the channel between Leningrad and
Kronstadt, and probably landed four 120-millimeter (4.7 in) guns on the
following day for use ashore. She was badly damaged on 21 September by three
bomb hits on her bow that knocked out two turrets and she was sent to the
Ordzhonikidze Yard on 23 October for repairs. The Soviets took advantage of
this time to add four more 37-mm 70-K AA guns and another twin 76.2-mm K-81 gun
mount between February and April 1942. She was hit again by one heavy and three
medium bombs dropped by Heinkel He 111s of KG 4 during the night of 4–5 April
and again by three bombs on 24 April. Her repairs were completed in November
1942, although a quadruple 37-mm 46-K gun mount was added in September. She
supported Soviet forces during the Siege of Leningrad, the Leningrad–Novgorod
Offensive in January 1944 and the Vyborg–Petrozavodsk Offensive in June 1944.
She received a Lend-Lease British Type 279 air-warning radar sometime during
1944. On 22 July 1944 she was awarded the Order of the Red Banner.
She was reclassified as a 'school
battleship' on 24 July 1954 and stricken on 17 February 1956. She was slowly
scrapped and her hulk still survived in May 1958.
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