Cascadia class heavy cruiser
The Cascadia class was Antara's first entry into the new cruiser designs that emerged from the Entarro Naval Treaty. Original drafts from 1918-1922 envisioned the class as a lightly armored and armed scout cruiser, but it was eventually decided they wanted a cross between an armored cruiser and fast cruiser. Cascadia thus featured a 100mm belt, 2x3 203/50mm guns (which were replaced with 203mm/55s in 1929)and a triple 610mm torpedo launcher on each side as well as a speed of 33.4 knots on trials. Cascadia was also the last Antaran cruiser to mount torpedo tubes, as they were removed in 1927.
Antara had a policy of operating its older cruisers in the Atlantic during WW2, and as such most of the Cascadias served in the Atlantic Fleet for most of the war, Rica being the only one to have sunk in that theater. Shawville was pulled out the Atlantic in 1943 (she still had her Atlantic camoflauge) and transferred to the Pacific in time for the Battle of Tuscadia, which resulted in her demise. She was crippled by cruiser Choukai and scuttled by ARS Veswood, who in turn was also sunk by the same cruiser.
Following the defeat of Germany in 1945, Isla, St Vincent and Cascadia went on to serve in the Pacific until the end of the war. The remaining ships were sold to foreign navies in 1948.
Displacement - 8700 tonnes
Main battery - 3x2 203mm/50
Secondary battery - 8x1 127mm/50
Armor - 100mm main belt
Speed - 33.4 knots
Range - 8000 nm at 16 knots
Ships in class
Cascadia - Sold to Brazil, 1948
Rica - Torpedoed, 1941
Shawville - Scuttled, 1943
Isla - Sold to Chile, 1948
St Vincent - Sold to Argentina, 1948