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WW1 Incidents in Home Waters PtII 

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Sea fights of the Great War By W.L. Wyllie R.A. & M.F. Wren

The Bombardment of the Belgian Coast-The Raids-The Dogger Bank Action

           Incidents in home waters have been given down to the end of October 1914.  The bombardment of the Belgian coast was commenced in that month, continued without cessation into November, and has been repeated frequently since.

           In August and September 1914, the Germans concentrated their mainland effort on the attempt to overwhelm the French Army and to break the line between Paris and Verdun.  Their attempt failed, and the Germans retreated to a prearranged position on the Aisne.  The alignment in Belgium was, however, not definitely fixed, and during October the Germans tried to force back the Allied left, and to capture the coast as far as Calais.  Probably they wished the right of their line to reach the heights that run in a northwesterly direction, terminating at Cape Grisnez.  Had this been accomplished the position would have been serious for England.  The small base of Zeebrugge has caused us a great deal of trouble.  With the enemy at Calais the position would have been a hundred times worse.  Looking back, it seems miraculous that the Germans did not break through, considering the forces they used against our weak line, which was so ill supplied with munitions.  Nothing but good leadership and the splendid fighting qualities of the troops saved the situation.

           At the commencement of October the Belgians had abandoned Brussels.  The evacuation of Antwerp began on the 7th, and the German occupied the town on the 9th, at the end of the siege realising an army of 60,000 trained men under General von Besseler for main operations in the south of the low-flying Flanders coast.  There were four possible lines of advance towards Calais for the Germans: through Arras, La Bassee, Ypres, and along the coast.  The Germans, with their huge numbers, were able to attempt all four lines simultaneously, finally developing their strategy into a supreme effort at Ypres.  The Germans from Antwerp tried to force the line along the coast.  Their failure to achieve this object was due to the bombardment from the sea, and the inundation of the Yser Canal by the Belgians.  This was partly a naval and partly a land defence.

           Three monitors, Severn, Mersey, and Humber carried out our earliest attack.  These ships rendezvoused in Downs on October 10th, and the next day at dawn they proceeded to Ostend, which the Germans had not yet reached.  There they waited events.

           On the 12th arrangements were discussed for embarking troops, and the coast as examined to find the best place for that purpose, but nothing ws definitely settled, the operation not being easy.

           On the 13th the monitors steamed up the coast, locating landmarks on shore and marking the ranges.  During the next few days the last of the troops and wounded from Antwerp were embarked in transports at Ostend; numbers of the civil population also left by other steamers.

           The bombardment of the coast began on October 17th.  Von Besseler’s army on that day moved from Middelkerke and Westende and bivouacked a little to the east of Nieuport.  The Belgians were being heavily attacked when the monitors arrived and commenced firing.  The squadron had been added to, and then consisted of Attentive, flying the flag of Rear-Admiral the Hon. Horace Hood, in command of the Dover Patrol; Foresight, another ship of the same type; the three monitors, with six British and four French destroyers.  On the 18th the flotilla proceeded from off Nieuport pier, where they passed the night, and went up the coast bombarding the “Bains” of Middlekerke and Westende.  Spotting was arranged from naval balloons on shore, and the damage done was considerable.  Batteries were put out of action, and a number of Germans must have been killed.  The enemy replied, but as their guns were of smaller calibre and could hardly reach ships, the effect proved inconsiderable.

           The same programme was carried out day after day.  The ships fired off all their ammunition and returned in the evening to Dunkirk, filled up again with ammunition and coal as necessary, and stopped till before dawn.  The crews slept in their clothes and got very little rest.

           The constant destruction done compelled the Germans to withdraw out of range.  We then had to send larger ships in with heavier guns.  Old ships were chosen: Venerable, battleship, armed with four 12-inch guns; Brilliant, a cruiser; Rinaldo, a gunboat; Bustard, a “flatiron.”  Sirius, Vestal, Submarines C 32, C 33, and a number of destroyers arrived on different dates.  The four French boats continued in company during the period.  The destroyers were to act as a screen, their proper function, for the larger ships against submarine attack.  The bombardment was extended as far as Ostend, and the coast was swept by devastating fire for about six miles inshore.  Against this the Germans could, at the time, do little or nothing, as they had no heavy siege artillery to bring against the ships.  The main attack, therefore, shifted to the Yser Canal, where desperate fighting took place.  The Belgians met this stroke by playing their last card.  Heavy rain had been falling, so by damming the lower reaches of the canal and cutting the banks they caused an inundation of the country.  The flood was not impassable, however, and therefore the dykes were cut, and the Germans had to withdraw, leaving many of their troops drowned behind them.  The Belgians attempted to advance along the coast, but were beaten back, and the line was finally consolidated by the beginning of November with our left resting on Nieuport, which was protected by ships at sea.

           After this the operations entered a new phase.  Bombardment was carried out not to prevent the German advance, but to co-operate in attacks on their entrenched line.  In April 1915, Vice-Admiral Sir A.H.S. Bacon replaced Rear Admiral the Hon. Horace Hood.  In August an attack was made on the coast with eighty vessels.  The large monitors, Lord Clive, Sir John Moore, Prince Rupert, General Crawford, Marshal Ney, and others, including armed yachts, mining trawlers, and old warships-all took part.  Several attacks were carried out, and the whole coast was bombarded.  Aeroplane raids were also made.  Much damage was undoubtedly done, but Zeebrugge and the entrances to the canals were not totally destroyed.  The bombardments have been repeated periodically, as Zeebrugge had proved rather a thorn in our side-an indication of what might have happened if the Germans had reached Calais.  Later events, however, will tell their own story.  Nothing in the end proves impossible to English naval power. 

 

The Raids

 

           These possibilities of the Germans raiding out coasts had been recognised before the war, and our arrangements on mobilisation had always included defence against an attempted landing of a force of troops, either for a raid or a major operation of invasion.  Apart from the precautions few people, if any, thought that Germany would ever send warships over to bombard open towns for an hour or less, and then withdrew at full speed to avoid an action.  The unexpected happened on four occasions, thrice within the first year of war.  The first raid miscarried, the second was fully successful from the German point of view, and the third was intercepted, ending in the action of the Doger Bank. 

           It was the second of these raids, which gave the Germans the name of  “baby killers,” and earned for their navy the reputation for callous brutality, which will probably never be effaced from the pages of history.

           The first raid took place on November 3rd 1914.  The German ships which undertook it were: Seydlitz, Moltke, and Von der Tann, battle cruisers; armoured cruisers Blucher, Yorck, and Kolberg; Strassburg and Graudens, and three light cruisers of the German “Town” class.  Yorck, apparently, kept well behind the others; probably on account of her slow speed.

           The squadron started for England, probably from Wilhelmshaven, late in the afternoon on the 2nd, and steaming at about twenty knots arrived off Yarmouth at 7 a.m. the following morning.  At dawn it had passed at high speed through a fishing fleet.  A little later Halcyon used before the war for fishery protection, and at the time on patrol duty, met the squadron and was fired at.  Haleyon, of course, steamed off, and the Germans passed on, not troubling about her further, possibly because one of their first shots brought down their wireless, and they thought her momentarily out of action.  On arrival off Yarmouth they began on the town, but all their shots fell short, never reaching the land.  The Germans kept well off shore, outside the banks, keeping up fire for fifteen to twenty minutes, and then withdrew, dropping mines as they sped homeward.  Two destroyers and two submarines went off in pursuit of them.  One of the submarines, D 5, struck a mine and foundered.  Her consort was not otherwise interfered with.  On the return voyage of the Germans, or soon after it, Yorck went over a mine off the German coast, and was lost.  The raid, therefore, was not at all successful from the enemy point to view.  There had been no loss of life among non-combatants, no international laws or recognised rules of humanity had been actually broken, and no one in England took any notice of the incident.  In addition, Germany had lost a cruiser against the loss of one of our submarines.

           The next raid, which took place on December 10th, was, however, completely successful.  All the objects attempted at Yarmouth were actually achieved at Scarborough, Whitby, and Hartlepool.  German “frightfulness” was literally brought home to our countrymen, and the young German Navy won an evil name it will never lose.  The German Press voiced the exultation of the nation on the success of the exploit; not merely the gutter press, but newspapers of standing, such as the Cologne Gazette and the Tagliche Rundschau, joining in the general rejoicing.  “Mr Punch” published a cartoon in which Captain von Muller, of S.M.S. Emden, is made to call the exploit “dirty work”; but apparently, no condemnation of savage brutality has emanated from a German source.  The ancient castle of Scarborough was apparently considered sufficient to give that watering place the character of a “fortress.”  Needless to say, no twenty-four hours notice of bombardment was given.  Not even half an hour was given for people to vacate the neighbourhood of the sea front.  The Germans rejoiced because all England, as they imagined, was quaking before their ruthlessness.  As a matter of fact, the outrage filled the recruiting stations to overflowing at a time when the first enthusiasm at the outbreak of war was beginning to flag.  It is the English character to resent bitterly any departure, even in war, from the rules of sport.

           There is doubt as to the composition of the German squadron.  Derfflinger, one of the latest additions to the fleet, is believed to have been present or in the background.  Blucher was certainly there.  Five large ships took part.  The others were probably Moltke, Seydlitz, and Von der Tann.  One of the earliest of the War Office telegrams mentioned a small cruiser bombarding Scarborough and Whitby, while a subsequent telegram from the same source said a battle and an armoured cruiser were off these places.  So, possibly, the force was composed of three battle cruisers, with Blucher and an armoured cruiser.  Probably light cruisers may also have formed part of the squadron, although they did not appear off the coast.  Rear-Admiral Funke was in command.

           The bombardment of Scarborough and Whitby merits description in detail.  These places are purely open towns, and no shadow of excuse existed for attacking them.  At Hartlepool there was a battery at the mouth of the harbour, so bombarding the place did not break the letter of international law, though the spirits of the law was certainly outraged as want only as possible.

           Shortly before eight o’clock two cruisers arrived off Scarborough from the north.  Approaching to within very close range of the town they opened a deliberate and well-judged fire.  First of all some thirty shots were fired at a small coastguard signal station, which was destroyed before it was struck three times; Scarborough Castle, which has been in ruins for some centuries, was next shelled, without loss of life, of course, as the place was deserted only its dead history remained for enemy maliciousness.  Some barrack buildings near by were also shelled.  These had been unoccupied for some years.  Indiscriminate fire was soon begun; the town was raked from end to end.  The Grand Hotel, plainly visible from off shore, was shelled mercilessly.  Falsgrave, a suburb of Scarborough, was under fire for some time; there was a wireless station near it, but this was not destroyed, whatever the intention may have been.  The central portion of the town was most damaged, especially the Esplande, the Crescent, and the wealthy residential parts.  The northern and southern portions were aimed at, but less continuously.  Churches were not omitted.  St. Martin’s Church, on South Cliff, was hit while Communion service was being held-that early morning service so sacred to Church people.

           Having plastered the town thoroughly with shell and slaughtered a number of inhabitants, the cruisers proceeded to Whitby.  The bombardment there necessarily lasted a shorter time-probably not more than fifteen minutes.  Again the fire was first directed at a coastguard station, which could have been demolished by a couple of shots from small guns, whereas from sixty to a hundred shells of the largest calibre were wasted on it.  The ships steamed in close to the shore, and were faced by a cliff two hundred to two hundred and fifty feet high.  Considerable elevation had, therefore, to be given to the guns to reach the town, and shots, which carried over the cliff, went far inland and were useless.  Had the coastguard station really been the objective, half a dozen shots from one only of the German 24-pounders, with which the ships were armed, could have smashed the place to smithereens.  Firing with heavy guns at such an objective proves that it was used as a mere excuse for wholesale slaughter-a subterfuge of murderous villainy pure and simple.

           At Hartlepool much the same programme was carried out, but at this place there was a light battery at the mouth of the harbour, and some soldiers of the Durham Light Infantry were stationed in the town.  German battle cruisers can fire from five to seven 6-inch guns on the broadside, and a single broadside could have dealt with all the opposition the defences could possibly offer.  The devastating effect of 6-inch shells at close quarters has already been noted in the Cameroons, at Sheik Said, in Mesopotamia, and the Rufiji delta.  The shots from the shore could not penetrate the ships armour.  But merely demolishing a battery and killing a few infantry can never be pretended to have been the German object.  Three battle cruisers arrived at 8 a.m.  Two English destroyers, Doon and Hardy, were off the harbour.  They were fired at, and, of course, fled at once from such a force.  Both came under fire and were damaged, but neither was sunk.  The Germans evidently had orders to bombard the town, and not to be led away from their object by engaging men-o-war.  Their purpose was never to dispute or fight for the command of the sea.  They approached under cover of darkness and fled at full speed from the bombardment.  What approached under cover of darkness and fled at full speed from the bombardment.  What comment is necessary?

           Fire was opened from all guns and was kept up for fifty minutes.  The number of rounds fired must have been about 1,500.  Great damage was done, of course.  As at Scarborough, the town was thoroughly raked, and fire was not confined to the battery of harbour.  Some shots fell far inland.  German gun layers apparently especially noticed churches.  St. Hilda, St. Mary’s, the Baptist Chapel and the Scandinavian Church were all badly damaged, as if the German God and the Kaiser’s partner waged war against the God of all Christians.  One hundred and thirteen persons were reported killed, and over three hundred were wounded.  If the nature of the firing is considered, it is wonderful that the casualties were so few-fewer far, it may be imagined, than was intended. 

           Having given vent to their hate, the ships fled towards their harbour, sowing mines broadcast as they went.  They were fortunate in their weather, which was thick and hazy all over the North Sea.  Two British squadrons attempted to cut off their flight, but the Germans slipped safely through in the fog.  They were actually sighted once, but the haze did them again, and a change of course enabled them to escape all retribution.  Their triumph was trumpeted abroad without disguise, until it was found that neutral opinion was outraged.  The German officials then tried to “hedge,” but the truth had gone too far.  The mayor of Scarborough, writing with great restraint considering the circumstances, correctly voiced public opinion probably the wide world over:

         

 “Our surprise at the attack was greater as we were led to believe from the conduct of the plucky commander of Emden that German sailors understood something about the glorious old traditions of the sea.  Some new comers into honourable professions first learn the tricks and lastly the traditions.  As their commanders get older in the service, they will find that an iron cross pinned on their breasts even by King Herod will not shield them from the shafts of shame and dishonour.”

 

           A third raid was attempted, but luckily intercepted, and resulted in the action of the Dogger Bank.

           The German squadron consisted of the same battle cruisers: Derfflinger, Seylitz, Moltke, and the armoured cruiser Blucher, six light cruisers, and destroyers.  There was obviously a desire to pile dishonour on dishonour.  A Zeppelin and a seaplane did observation in the latter part of the action forced on Germany.  Submarines also participated near the German coast.  Rear-Admiral Hipper was in command.

           In the grey dawn of January 24th 1915, Aurora, a light cruiser, was patrolling with her four destroyers some way off the English coast when she sighted in the distance a strange man-o-war.  Aurora turned her searchlight in the direction of the new comer and called her up.  The reply of Kolberg was a salvo, and, as usual, our enemies picked up the range, 8,000 yards, almost at once.  The British guns crews closed up and a very spirited little action began.  Aurora’s fire steadily improved all the time, while the Germans aim gradually became more erratic as the British shells found their mark.

           After a while three or four German battle cruisers made their appearance beyond Kilberg, and Aurora’s searchlight was again swung round and a signal made to Vice-Admiral Sir David Beatty, commanding the “Cat Squadron,” which on this occasion consisted of Lion (flag), Tiger, Princess Royal, New Zealand, and Indomitable.

           At first the German ships had been steering to the northwest, but when they sighted the British battle cruisers advancing they turned at once and made for home at full speed.  Once more “discretion was the better part of valour.”

           So a chase began, and we can fancy how the engine room staffs worked the force pursuing squadrons to their utmost speed.  As the morning mists the masts and funnels of the flying Germans could be made quite clearly; they seemed to be steaming in line abreast, making a great cloud of smoke, which partly obscured the ships to leeward.  Farther to the south another smoke pall marked the track of the German light cruisers and destroyers, at this time quite hull down.  All were steering to the Southeast making for the protection of their minefield and coast batteries.

           Sir David did not follow in the German wake, but edged away to the southward, thus keeping clear of any floating mines which might have been dropped, and also shaping course to work round the enemy’s right flank.

           Lion, Tiger, Princess Royal, and New Zealand steamed in a line of bearing, the flagship leading, and to the southeast.  In this formation each battle cruiser could use all her guns on the port side.  Indomitable was farther to the north, together with Arethusa and Undaunted, with their destroyers.  Beyond again were the light cruisers, Nottingham, Birmingham, Lowestoft, and Southampton.  The sky was dull, and the sea was at first calm, but the easterly wind increased as the day wore on.

           Soon after nine o’clock a shot from Lion hulled Blucher, the most northerly of the German cruisers.  She was steaming as she had never steamed before, but, nevertheless, was evidently falling behind her consorts.  By half past nine New Zealand was also able to reach Blucher, and Lion and Tiger shifted their fire to Seydlitz, while Princess Royal began on Derflinger.  Moltke apparently was partially hidden in the other ships smoke, and received consequently very little damage.  For more than an hour the long stern chase continued, and at eleven it was evident that Blucher was crippled.  She turned out of line towards the north, and Indomitable was ordered to say behind and sink her.  Sometime later Arethusa closed on Blucher and finished her off with a torpedo.  There was a terrible explosion, and the German ship began to list over to port, her crew clustering thick upon her docks, cheering and singing patriotic songs.  They were dauntless enough when it came to the point.  Great fires were burning forward and amidships.  Then, as their ship began to slowly over, hundreds of men crawled out upon her battered broadside.  Columns of steam burst as the water poured into the burning ship, which went right over, leaving the swaying mass of humanity struggling in the icy sea.  Only a hundred and twenty med had been picked up when a Zeppelin dropping bombs on the rescuers interrupted the work.  Apparently the airmen took Blucher, which had tripod mast, for a British ship, and so destroyed their own countrymen.  The loss of life was very heavy, as the German ships were carrying a great number of extra men.

           Just at this moment the flying ships altered course towards the east, and the enemy destroyers made a demonstration as though to attack, but nothing came of it.  German submarines were also seen, but they were avoided. Then the Hun destroyers steamed to windward of their battle cruisers, which were now on fire in several places, and evidently in distress.  A heavy fire had been kept up on them with 13.5 and 12-inch guns, and their losses must have been very severe.  Such a storm of metal would be tremendous. 

           At a little past eleven an   unlucky shot, falling steeply, struck Lion, passing through her decks, letting the sea water into the starboard feed tank, and thus putting the boilers on that side out of action.  Sir David Beatty called the destroyer Attack to him, and sprang aboard without waiting for the Jacob’s ladder, going at once in chase of the battle cruisers.  Time, however, had been lost, and it was twenty past twelve before he could reach them, to find that the battle had already been broken off.

           Lion afterwards took a bad list, but was taken in tow and brought safely to port.

           A young officer who was on board Aurora has given the following account of the battle:

           “I have much news to give you and could well write a small book, only I must confine myself to very general remarks on account of censorship, and not regale you with myself to very general remarks on account of censorship, and not regale you with an account of all the incidents of out action with the German Fleet last Sunday.

           “ You will, of course, have read a good deal in the papers, and I daresay have wondered much, though I hope not worried, whether we were in it.

           “Well, we were, and a very interesting and exciting time we had, both on our own account and as spectators of the big ship action which followed.  Sunday morning was rather misty and dark, with a calm sea and little wind-entirely propitious for fighting purposes; and after little sleep, we were up at 6 a.m. in case daybreak should show us any enemy ships prowling round.  It was just about 7 a.m. in the semi-darkness when we saw one of the enemy light cruisers, the Kolberg, with some destroyers under her wing, away on the starboard beam.  It was no easy matter to say in that light whether she was friend or foe, but we got the men to action stations as quickly as possible, still hardly believing that the ship was an enemy or that ‘Der Tag’ could be arriving.  One gets so used to false alarms now days, and this might be one.

           “However a lighter background, and opened fire on us with the decision.  We replied, and then ensued a very pretty little engagement.

           “One could hardly see her outline on account to the dark and smoke, but the flashes of her guns each time she fired left us in no doubt as to where she was, and the fall of her shells some ten seconds later left us in no doubt at all as to her target.

           “It was fascinating, and, perhaps at first, a little disconcerting to see the flashes of the guns and then to wait until the shots should fall, and to wonder whether it would be us or the sea which would check their flight; they fell some distance short for the first few rounds and then got closer, and then again gave food for thought, as, knowing that the last salvo was closer by, say, 400 yards than the one before, one could speculate as to the probable destination of the next to come.  One perhaps took more notice to the detail of their shooting than one did of your own as regards the fall of shot, but I do not doubt that the Germans were given plenty of food for thought, if not for breakfast, b the fall of our shell, for they found that they had got all they wanted after seven or eight minutes of firing, and made off quickly.  At this point their battle cruisers came into view, so we could not chase our late opponent, and, moreover, now had the job of getting our big ships into touch with those of the enemy a far more important thing, of course, than deciding our own personal animosities.

           “We were luckily without any casualties, though hit three or four times; but I do not think that the Germans are likely to be able to say the same, as we distinctly saw some of our shell getting home in a very useful manner indeed.

           It was now about 7:30 a.m. and the next hour was spent by our battle cruisers steaming hard to get within range of those of the enemy-we being of course out of it until the enemy big ships should have a well marked impression made upon them, when there might be a chance of our small ships being able to come in at the finish and give the coup de grace by torpedo or otherwise.  Or, if there should be no lame duck to deal with, then to engage the enemy small ships when no longer protected by big ones.

           “We all remained at our action stations and got some breakfast brought us by little bits, here and there, and to this we did the fullest possible justice so as to be well ready for possible eventualities.

           “ It was about 8.45 a.m. when our battle cruisers got within range and opened fire, and then there ensued an historical action between the most powerful fighting units that man has ever designed, and under conditions which were for us, as witnesses in the background, a remarkable mixture of commonplace routine and awe-inspiring novelty.  I mean by this that there was from one point of view the ordinary drill and procedure with which everyone in the Navy has become familiar at frequent gunnery practice firings in peace time, and from the other point of view the very unusual state of affairs by which the ‘target’ was replying with a continuous and disconcerting stream of unpleasantly dangerous missiles.

           “It was really very wonderful to see our big battle cruisers steaming along at top speed with spurts of flame and brown smoke issuing every minute or so from their bows and sides-and, in the far distance, the enemy’s guns replying flashes-then one could see, as shots fell in the water, tall columns of white spray, or, more ominously, no splash as they scored a hit, which could be plainly seen to cause big volumes of black smoke and bright flashes to rise from the injured craft; it was very exciting; from our position, too, the fall of the enemy’s shell around our ships was most plainly visible, and, of necessity, was the great centre of our attention as one saw many shots fall very close, or, perhaps, out of a salvo, saw one or two fall short, one or two over, and wondered how many had gone between and knocked against something harder than sea-water.

           “For nearly three hours this sort of thing continued with hardly any apparent result or change between any successive five minutes, but gradually, and little by little, it became plain that we were asserting our superiority, with the ultimate result, as you will have seen in the papers, of the total destruction and sinking of the Blucher, and very serious damage to two of their other battle cruisers.

           “We ourselves did not see the actual close of the engagement because we were ordered on other duty, so missed what must have been a very terrible sight.  Nor did we take part in the saving of the Blucher survivors, so had no bombs dropped on us by a Zeppelin, which, with true German generosity, choose as her target the ships which were endeavouring to rescue her own seaman.  She had been hovering overhead and in sight for a considerable time, but waited for this opportunity to make her heroic dash.

           “To make a long story short-they got HELL!

           “Here ended the first and only chapter of our experiences as permitted by the Censor.”

           After this action the war at sea in home waters entered on a new phase.  The Germans used their ships but little, except to grow barnacles, and inaugurated the famous submarine warfare against the traders-neutral as well as hostile.  The Germans clinched their reputation by destroying numbers of passenger steamers without warning.  The sinking of the Cunarder Lusitania on May 7th, off Kinsale Head, with eleven hundred non-combatant men, women and children, was the greatest achievement in the species of essentially German warfare.  Time and America have shown how it added to their glory. 

           Needless to say the submarine warfare never affected our command of the sea.  This was absolute and more complete than it has ever been before in the world’s history.  At the completion of the first year of hostilities the British Navy was far stronger than at the beginning of the war.  The Germans had not attempted a fleet action when their cruisers on foreign stations were busy, and before our Navy had been reinforced by a number of new ships, monitors, and auxiliaries.

           After the outbreak of war we completed the five ships of the “Queen Elizabeth” class.  These ships burn oil-fuel only, and steam twenty-five knots.  Another new feature was the eight 15-inch guns with which they were armed.  Five ships of the “Royal Sovereign” class were laid down during peacetime, and four more battleships were provided for in the 1914 Estimates.

           On the outbreak of war we took over the battleships which were building for Turkey, rechristening them Agincourt and Erin.  Agincourt was armed with ten 13.5-inch guns and sixteen 6-inch, while Erin had fourteen 12-inch and twenty 6-inch.  We also took over a battleship building for Chile, armed with ten 14-inch and ten 6-inch guns, and renamed her Canada.  More light cruisers were added to the fleet, and a lot of smaller craft-destroyers, submarines, auxiliary cruisers, mine-sweepers, trawlers, armed yachts, motor launches, and numberless types of monitors.  The monitors are in interesting comment on our command of the sea.  They are mot sea-going craft, but are designed to be mobile floating batteries, armed with heavy guns, and built with draft shallow enough to enable them to approach a coast and go up rivers.  Their steaming powers are very small, and only enough seaworthiness is provided to permit their making ocean voyages accompanied by a parent ship.  Their presence at sea shows that the enemy’s ships are absolutely driven from the waters in which they should operate.  Monitors have co-operated in most of the landing expeditions on the Belgian coast, in the Dardanelle’s, the Suez Canal, the Persian Gulf, and up the Rufiji delta.  Full description of them cannot be given, but the illustrations show the type of 00

           There is an eastern fable that at the Creation a miscellaneous lot of “surplus parts” remained over, and in order to use them up another animal was put together, and in this way the camel came into being.  Something of the same sort was done at the dockyards in making the monitors.  As an instance, a Greek battleship (Salamis) was building in Germany before the war, and would from part of the German fleet, but her guns were being made in America and could not be delivered.  Those guns are now mounted on our monitors.

           Including minesweepers probably considerably over 3,000 craft have been added to the Navy since the outbreak of the war.  The rulers of England’s destiny had in their generation been wise.  They had remembered the words of a great poet and acted on them without a moment’s hesitation directly there was so much at stake:

 

           “The fleet of England is her all in all,

             Her fleet is in your hands,

             And in her fleet her fate.”                   

 
Everything we obtain for this site is shown on the site, we do not have any more photos, crew lists or further information on any of the ships

  

COPYRIGHT NOTICE. ALL IMAGES DISPLAYED ON THIS WEBSITE ARE PROTECTED BY  COPYRIGHT  LAW, AND ARE OWNED BY CRANSTON FINE ARTS OR THEIR RESPECTIVE OWNERS.  NO REPRODUCTION OR COPYING ALLOWED ON OTHER WEBSITES, BOOKS OR ARTICLES WITHOUT PRIOR AGREEMENT.

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Last modified: July 13, 2007
 

 Military Art

ANCIENT HISTORY
ROMAN PERIOD
VIKING HISTORY
WILLIAM WALLACE
ROBERT THE BRUCE
WAR OF THE ROSES
ENGLISH CIVIL WAR
SEVEN YEARS WAR
18TH CENTURY WARS
JACOBITE RISING
AMERICAN  REVOLUTION
FRENCH REVOLUTION
NAPOLEONIC WARS
PENINSULA WAR

 Aviation Art

SUPERMARINE SPITFIRE
HAWKER HURRICANE
BAC LIGHTNING
PHANTOM
JAGUAR
TORNADO
OTHER RAF FIGHTERS
MOSQUITO
AVRO LANCASTER
HALIFAX
WELLINGTON
VULCAN
OTHER RAF BOMBERS
OTHER RAF AIRCRAFT
FLEET AIR ARM
MUSTANG
LIGHTNING
THUNDERBOLT
PHANTOM
F14 TOMCAT
OTHER US FIGHTERS
FLYING FORTRESS
LIBERATOR
MITCHELL
OTHER US BOMBERS
ME109
ME262
FW190
HEINKEL III
OTHER GERMAN AIRCRAFT
RUSSIAN AIRCRAFT
JAPANESE AIRCRAFT
OTHER AIRCRAFT
AIRLINERS
CONCORDE
HELICOPTERS

 
 

Welcome to Cranston Fine Arts, The military and Naval Art print company. Cranston Fine Arts has a network of over 50 websites. showing all aspects of Historical art and information To make life a little more easy, we have made a selection of links to particular subjects which may be of interest to you. please look at the titles. and click on them and you will be transferred to the best pages on our sites for your interests  

MILITARY ARTISTS

NAVAL ARTISTS

AVIATION ARTISTS

CHRIS COLLINGWOOD
MARK CHURMS
LADY BUTLER
J P BEADLE
ROBERT GIBB
ERNEST CROFTS
R C  WOODVILLE
W B  WOLLEN
R HILLINGFORD
DAVID PENTLAND
KEVIN LYLES
STUART LIPTROT
DAVID ROWLANDS
SCOTT KIRKWOOD
BRIAN PALMER
JASON ASKEW
JAMES DIETZ
KEITH ROCCO
ALPHONSE DE NEUVILLE
LOUIS ERNEST MEISSONIER
EDOUARD DETAILLE
HORACE VERNET
J LOUIS DAVID
TOM LOVELL
SIMON SMITH
GRAHAM TURNER
TERENCE CUNEO
RICHARD KNOTEL
CARL ROCHLING
OTHER ARTISTS

RANDALL WILSON 
ANTHONY SAUNDERS
IVAN BERRYMAN
ADRIAN RIGBY
ROBERT TAYLOR
PHILIP WEST
CHARLES DIXON
W L WYLIE
GRAEME LOTHIAN
GEORGE CHAMBERS
NICHOLAS POCOCK
GEOFF HUNT
DAVID SHEPHERD
DEREK GARDNER
GORDON BAUWENS
MONTAGUE DAWSON
SIMON ATACK
E D WALKER
BRIAN WOOD
JOHN YOUNG
RODNEY CHARMAN
OTHER ARTISTS

IVAN BERRYMAN
DAVID PENTLAND
ANTHONY SAUNDERS
ROBERT TAYLOR
NICOLAS TRUDGIAN
GRAEME LOTHIAN
SIMON ATACK
MICHAEL TURNER
BARRY PRICE
GEOFF LEA
FRANK WOOTTON
RONALD WONG
M A KINNEAR
KEITH WOODCOCK
SIMON SMITH
GERALD COULSON
PHILIP WEST
STUART BROWN
ADRIAN RIGBY
STEPHEN BROWN
KEITH ASPINALL
BARRIE CLARK
ROBERT TOMLIN
ROBIN SMITH
MICHAEL RONDOT
OTHER ARTISTS

 

 
 

 Military Art

BATTLE OF WATERLOO
FRANCO - PRUSSIAN WAR
CRIMEAN WAR
AFGHAN CAMPAIGNS
SUDAN CAMPAIGNS
WARS IN INDIA
ZULU WAR
BOER WAR
FIRST WORLD WAR
SECOND WORLD WAR
KOREAN WAR
VIETNAM WAR
FALKLANDS WAR
GULF WAR

 Naval Art

British battleships
HMS HOOD
British aircraft carriers
British cruisers
British destroyers
BRITISH SUBMARINES
BATTLE OF JUTLAND
NELSON AND TRAFALGAR
AGE OF SAIL
US BATTLESHIPS
US AIRCRAFT CARRIERS
US CRUISERS
US DESTROYERS
PEARL HARBOR
OTHER US SHIPS
german navy
BISMARCK
SCHARNHORST
TIRPITZ
GRAF SPEE
U BOATS
japanese navy
OCEAN LINERS
TITANIC