FANFARE July 2016 | Page 12

JUTLAND 31st May 1916 The Royal Navy’s A passenger steamer cruising off the Danish coast on 2nd June 1916 ran into a vision from hell: more than 500 lifeless, bloated bodies floating on the waves, the human detritus of the most titanic clash of battleships in history. The armoured fleets that clashed off Jutland in 1916 included dozens of warships that were the most formidable naval vessels the world had ever seen. Massively armoured and bristling with an array of up to 15-inch calibre guns, these capital ships were designated Dreadnoughts, for obvious reasons. They could fire shells at ranges of up to 16,000 yards, and were unmatched by any other nation. They made big guns the decisive factor in naval warfare until the emergence of carrier-borne war planes. As it turned out, the titanic encounter of Skaggerak Strait, as the Germans designated the battle, ended indecisively, with both sides claiming victory. The Admiralty succeeded in keeping the German High Seas Fleet bottled up in their Heligoland harbours for the rest of the war. But by the same token, the Royal navy, too, was largely immobilised in its watching brief at Rosyth and Scapa Flow. The German Imperial Navy proved more than a match for the British Grand Fleet in terms of ships and tactics. Indeed, the British navy’s reluctance to press home its advantage in numbers was largely the result of the German’s superior gunnery and tactical mastery of a new weapon, the torpedo. As Admiral Sir David Beatty was said to have exclaimed in the heat of battle, “There seems to be something wrong with our bloody ships today…” as he watched 10 More than 6,000 British sailors — including the youngest VC — died in the most titanic naval battle in history. The German navy lost half as many men and ships in the first — and last — encounter between Dreadnoughts. Dan Morris reports two great ships under his command explode and disintegrate. Within minutes of both fleets opening fire, the Indefatigable exploded, blown up by a single shell, and it sank with the loss of all but two of her 1,017 crew. Little more than 20 minutes later, one of the Royal navy’s most powerful battlecruisers the Queen Mary exploded in similarly dramatic fashion. Both ships’ armour-plating, designed to survive multiple hits, counted for nothing. The exchange of shellfire took place at a range of 12,000-16,000 yards, and on the German side involved the Von der Tann and the Derfflinger. The Queen Mary and the Indefatigable were just two of the 14 ships lost by the British Grand Fleet at Jutland. They included three battlecruisers, three heavy cruisers, seven destroyers and one flotilla lead ship. Casualties among British seamen totalled 6,097 dead. The Grand Fleet had sailed into battle with 28 dreadnoughts, nine battlecruisers, eight heavy and 26 light cruisers, 78 destroyers and one minelayer. On the German side the High Seas Fleet lost one battlecruiser, one battleship, four light cruisers and five destroyers sunk for the loss of 2,551 sailors. The prelude to Jutland had been a series of cat-and-mouse raids over 18 months by elements of the German High Seas Fleet which attempted to divide the British battlecruiser squadrons commanded by Vice-Admiral Beatty based at Rosyth from the rest of the Grand Fleet and its Dreadnoughts at Scapa Flow under Admiral Sir John Jellicoe. The British admirals knew they faced a formidable foe, and as a result, caution proved the guiding watchword in the clash that had been signalled two years earlier. British Admiralty guests at Germany’s renowned Kiel regatta in 1914 were told to spy on Kaiser Wilhelm II’s fleet. What the British spies would have had confirmed was that Germany was catching up fast in the arms race that had begun in 1905 when work started on the Royal Navy’s first Dreadnought. By 1910, 25 per cent of all defence expenditure was going to the Admiralty. And on the outbreak of the First World War, Britain had amassed 42 Dreadnoughts to ensure Britannia would go on ruling the waves as she had done since Trafalgar. But the Kaiser was determined that legacy would not go unchallenged, and by the outbreak of war, Germany had no fewer than 26 capital ships in the Dreadnought class. Today, Kiel has become a major maritime centre of Germany, and the city’s annual Kiel Week is the biggest sailing event in the world. Not a warship in sight.