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| - The Montcalm was an armoured cruiser of the French Navy. Built in la Seyne from 27 September 1898, she was launched on 27 March 1900 and was commissioned on 24 March 1902, before completing her trials, to ferry the President of the Republic, Émile Loubet, to Russia. She arrived in Kronstadt on 20 May 1902, receiving Tsar Nicholas II for lunch aboard on the 23rd. Montcalm took part in the Australian capture of Rabaul in September 1914, details in the Australian Official History of the 1914-18 War, Volume Ten. There was some comment on the profile of the ship, bows and stern sections effectively identical, it being thought that this was an attempt to confuse enemy range-finders.
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abstract
| - The Montcalm was an armoured cruiser of the French Navy. Built in la Seyne from 27 September 1898, she was launched on 27 March 1900 and was commissioned on 24 March 1902, before completing her trials, to ferry the President of the Republic, Émile Loubet, to Russia. She arrived in Kronstadt on 20 May 1902, receiving Tsar Nicholas II for lunch aboard on the 23rd. Montcalm took part in the Australian capture of Rabaul in September 1914, details in the Australian Official History of the 1914-18 War, Volume Ten. There was some comment on the profile of the ship, bows and stern sections effectively identical, it being thought that this was an attempt to confuse enemy range-finders. She later cruised in the China Sea, notably ferrying Marshal Joseph Joffre in November 1921. She was decommissioned on the 28 October 1926 and used as a school ship hulk, Tremintin, in 1934. She was still docked in Brest in 1940 and was destroyed during the Occupation in 1943.
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