The three
Indiana-class battleships were the first
battleships to be built by the
United States Navy that were comparable to contemporary European ships, such as the British . Authorized in 1890 and commissioned between November 1895 and April 1896, they were relatively small battleships with heavy armor and ordnance that pioneered the use of an intermediate battery. Specifically intended for
coastal defense, their
freeboard was insufficient to deal well with the waves of the open ocean. Their
turrets lacked counterweights, and the main
belt armor was placed too low to be effective under most conditions.