The Last Days of the High Seas Fleet

The Last Days of the High Seas Fleet
Title The Last Days of the High Seas Fleet PDF eBook
Author Nicholas Jellicoe
Publisher US Naval Institute Press
Pages 0
Release 2019
Genre Scapa Flow Scuttling, Scotland, 1919
ISBN 9781526754585

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Analyzes the fleet mutiny in the last months of the War that precipitated a social revolution in Germany and the eventual collapse of the will to fight. The Armistice terms imposed the humiliation of virtual surrender on the High Seas Fleet, and the conditions under which it was interned are described in detail. Meanwhile the victorious Allies wrangled over the fate of the ships, an issue that threatened the whole peace process.

The Last Days of the High Seas Fleet

The Last Days of the High Seas Fleet
Title The Last Days of the High Seas Fleet PDF eBook
Author Nicholas C. Jellicoe
Publisher Pen and Sword
Pages 533
Release 2019-01-30
Genre History
ISBN 1526754592

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“Much fresh material . . . an excellent historical narrative of the events leading up to the Great Scuttle, the terrible day itself and its aftermath.” —Warships: International Fleet Review On June 21, 1919, the ships of the German High Seas Fleet—interned at Scapa Flow since the Armistice—began to founder, taking their British custodians completely by surprise. In breach of agreed terms, the fleet dramatically scuttled itself, in a well-planned operation that consigned nearly half a million tons, and 54 of 72 ships, to the bottom of the sheltered anchorage in a gesture of Wagnerian proportions. This much is well-known, but more than a century after the “Grand Scuttle” many questions remain. Was von Reuter, the fleet’s commander, acting under orders or was it his own initiative? Why was June 21 chosen? Did the British connive in or even encourage the action? Could more have been done to save the ships? Was it legally justified? And what were the international ramifications? This new book analyzes all these issues, beginning with the fleet mutiny in the last months of the war that precipitated a social revolution in Germany and the eventual collapse of the will to fight. The Armistice terms imposed the humiliation of virtual surrender on the High Seas Fleet, and the conditions under which it was interned are described in detail. Meanwhile the victorious Allies wrangled over the fate of the ships, an issue that threatened the whole peace process. Using much new material from German sources and a host of eyewitness testimonies, the circumstances of the scuttling itself are meticulously reconstructed, while the aftermath for all parties is clearly laid out. The story concludes with “the biggest salvage operation in history” and a chapter on the significance of the scuttling to the postwar balance of naval power. This is an important reassessment of the last great action of the First World War.

Last Days of the German Fleet

Last Days of the German Fleet
Title Last Days of the German Fleet PDF eBook
Author Ludwig Freiwald
Publisher
Pages 340
Release 1932
Genre World War, 1914-1918
ISBN

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The Last Days of the German Imperial High Seas Fleet

The Last Days of the German Imperial High Seas Fleet
Title The Last Days of the German Imperial High Seas Fleet PDF eBook
Author David Neil Shepherd
Publisher
Pages 310
Release 1966
Genre Germany
ISBN

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The Grand Scuttle

The Grand Scuttle
Title The Grand Scuttle PDF eBook
Author Dan Van der Vat
Publisher
Pages 240
Release 1982
Genre Arms race
ISBN 9780340275801

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At Scapa Flow, Orkney, on 21 June 1919, the world's second most powerful navy deliberately sank itself. Four hundred thousand tons of shipping went to the bottom of Scapa Flow on that fateful day in the greatest act of self-immolation ever committed. However, few people are aware that rear-Admiral Ludwig von reuter was the only man in history to sink his own navy because of a misleading report in a British newspaper, that the Royal Navy guessed his intention but could do nothing to thwart it, and that the sinking caused the last casualties and last prisoners of the First World War. Fewer still know that the fragments of the Kaiser's great fleet are now on the moon. This is the story of the Grand Scuttle. Dan van der Vat has made use of previously unused German archive material, eye-witness accounts and the recollections of survivors as well as many contemporary photographs that capture the spectacle of the finest ships of the time being deliberately sunk by their own crews.

The Great Scuttle: The End of the German High Seas Fleet

The Great Scuttle: The End of the German High Seas Fleet
Title The Great Scuttle: The End of the German High Seas Fleet PDF eBook
Author David Meara
Publisher Amberley Publishing Limited
Pages 96
Release 2019-05-15
Genre History
ISBN 1445687011

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Marking the 100th anniversary of the scuttling of the German fleet at Scapa Flow, David Meara draws on archive material - including a previously unpublished first-hand account - to bring the story to life.

Bismarck

Bismarck
Title Bismarck PDF eBook
Author Michael Tamelander
Publisher Casemate
Pages 329
Release 2009-05-26
Genre History
ISBN 1935149822

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The author of Blitzkrieg covers one of the most dramatic events of the Second World War in an “outstanding book about naval warfare” (World War II History). When the German battleship Bismarck—a masterpiece of engineering, well-armored with a main artillery of eight 15-inch guns—left the port of Gotenhafen for her first operation on the night of May 18, 1941, the British battlecruiser Hood and the new battleship Prince of Wales were ordered to find her quickly, as several large convoys were heading for Britain. On May 24, Bismarck was found off the coast of Greenland, but the ensuing battle was disastrous for the British. The Hood was totally destroyed within minutes, with only three crewmen surviving, and Prince of Wales was badly damaged. The chase resumed until the German behemoth was finally caught, this time by four British capital ships supported by torpedo-bombers from the carrier Ark Royal. The icy North Atlantic roiled from the crash of shellfire and bursting explosions until finally the Bismarck collapsed, sending nearly two thousand German sailors to a watery grave. Tamelander and Zetterling’s work rests on stories from survivors and the latest historical discoveries. The book starts with a thorough account of maritime developments from 1871 up to the era of the giant battleship, and ends with a vivid account, hour by hour, of the dramatic and fateful hunt for the mighty Bismarck, Nazi Germany’s last hope to pose a powerful surface threat to Allied convoys. “Exciting story-telling . . . recreat[es] the thrill of the hunt.” —International Journal of Maritime History “[An] epic sea chase and its vivid, human details.” —World War II