Orm
Posts: 22154
Joined: 5/3/2008 From: Sweden Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: warspite1 Given the discussion above, please see attached the write up for Graf Spee, which is finished subject to any comment. [4784 Graf Spee - by Robert Jenkins] .B Engine(s) output: 54,000 hp .B Top Speed: 28 knots .B Main armament: 6 x 11-inch (280mm), 8 x 5.9-inch (150mm) guns .B Displacement (full load): 16,200 tons .B Thickest armour: 3-inch (belt) .P Under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles, the German Navy was allowed to build warships up to a 10,000 ton displacement and with 11-inch main armament. These limitations were designed to restrict the type of vessel that the Germans could realistically build. Nothing more than a coastal defence type unit was likely to be achieved within these limitations..or so it was thought. .P However, the German designers came up with a design that met the restrictions but provided a useful, modern, surface raider. The key principle was that the ships had to be more powerful than any faster ship and faster than any more powerful ship, and this was true at the time they were built, with the exception of the three Royal Navy battlecruisers: Hood, Repulse and Renown. .P The ships used diesel engines, which were more economical than steam turbines, something necessary for a surface raider. The use of diesel also meant that the engines produced less smoke; again a bonus given their planned deployment. .P To the Germans, these were panzerschiffe or armoured ships. To the British they became known as pocket-battleships. However, as with all ships, there were compromises to be made. The class were thinly armoured and had all their main armament concentrated in just two turrets. .P Up to eight ships were planned originally, but only three were laid down and completed before the appearance of the French Dunkerque-class made the Germans re-think future ships. .P In 1940 they were re-classified as heavy cruisers. .P Graf Spee was completed in January 1936. She set out for her first deployment on the 21st August 1939, eleven days before the outbreak of the Second World War. Her task was to get herself in position in the South Atlantic to await the order to begin attacking Allied merchant shipping. To assist her operation, the supply ship Altmark had sailed at the beginning of August for the USA where she loaded up with fuel and other stores for the Graf Spee`s future use (see Transport Counter 4822). .P It was only on the 26th September that Graf Spee was given the opportunity to attack but Captain Langsdorff, in command of the Graf Spee, was also given orders not to attack enemy naval vessels, even if more lightly armed than his own. Furthermore, his ability to attack merchant shipping was restricted because of the Prize Regulations. After the propaganda disaster that was the U-30`s attack on the liner Athenia, no attacks on passenger vessels were allowed either. .P The British and French formed eight hunting groups to try and track down the surface raiders. These hunting groups initially consisted of four aircraft carriers, three battlecruisers and thirteen cruisers that were spreadout to cover the vast expanses of the North, South and Indian Oceans. It was like looking for needle in a haystack. .P In the period September to December 1939, the Graf Spee sank nine merchant ships totalling just over 50,000 GRT in the South Atlantic and the Indian Oceans. During these nine sinkings, no Allied sailors were killed, as Langsdorff followed the Prize Regulations. The merchant sailors captured were then transferred to the Altmark as and when Graf Spee rendezvoused with her supply ship. .P In early December, Langsdorff decided it was time to head back to Germany. Graf Spee was starting to feel the effects of almost four months at sea and her engines needed maintenance. Langsdorff decided to sail for the rich pickings to be found off the River Plate estuary on the South American trade route, before beginning the voyage back to Germany. .P This was where the Royal Navy`s Commodore Henry Harwood, had guessed that Graf Spee would go next. Harwood was in command of Force G that consisted of the heavy cruiser Exeter and the light cruisers Achillies and Ajax. Harwood had devised a plan of attack to beat the pocket-battleships using a cruiser force before the war; this plan was about to be put into effect. .P Langsdorff had grown increasingly frustrated by his orders which were clear; he could not engage with enemy naval forces. Contrary to popular belief, it was not Harwood that spotted and then attacked Graf Spee; rather it was Langsdorff that spotted the Royal Navy cruisers and chose to do battle. His decision to engage on the morning of the 13th December was a risky one as he needed to sink or sufficiently cripple his opponents. If he did not, Graf Spee would not have the speed to shake off a subsequent shadowing by the cruisers who would bring every available ship down on the panzerschiffe. .P The battle started at 0617hrs when Graf Spee opened up her 11-inch guns at just over 21,500 yards. She headed at top speed toward the cruisers in order to close the range. Exeter took the brunt of Graf Spee`s initial salvos which were deadly accurate, but three minutes later, Exeter was able to return fire and scored a hit on one of the German 4.1-inch anti-aircraft guns and her fresh water plant. Graf Spee then scored a direct hit on Exeter`s B turret and splinters from this shell smashed into her bridge killing almost everyone there. Exeter`s Captain Bell was wounded, but was able to continue giving orders from the secondary control position. .P Meanwhile, the light cruisers had begun opening fire at 0622hrs and at about 0630hrs, with Exeter having taken severe punishment, Langsdorff turned his attention to Ajax and Achilles. While the three ships fired at each other, Exeter used the respite to launch an unsuccessful torpedo strike. Graf Spee then turned her attention back to the heavy cruiser once more and for about ten minutes the two ships, Exeter with just four guns left, duelled. The Graf Spee was hit twice more but by now Exeter had just one turret operational. Graf Spee switched target once more and Achilles was badly damaged by an 11-inch shell near missing her. Her director control tower became a bloody mass of bodies. This damage affected the firing accuracy of Achilles and both she and Ajax were having problems hitting their target. After this, Graf Spee switched back one final time to Exeter, resulting in the heavy cruiser breaking off the engagement at 0729hrs when her third and final turret went out of action. .P However, Graf Spee had not got away unscathed and her forward turret had given her problems intermittently during the battle. The two remaining cruisers started to hit the German ship more frequently, although many of the British shells were simply bouncing off the German ship`s armour belt. Graf Spee responded with a shell that took out both X and Y turret on Ajax. It was now 0730hrs and the range was 11,000 yards. Ajax launched a torpedo strike, as did Graf Spee but neither were successful. The fighting continued until 0740hrs, when Harwood decided to withdraw in order to attack at night; but Graf Spee did not follow. Instead Langsdorff headed west towards the River Plate, shadowed by the two bruised and bloodied light cruisers. From time to time the pursuers strayed into range of the enemy guns and had to withdraw under smokescreen, but they ensured that they remained sufficiently close to Graf Spee so as not to lose her. Surprisingly, Langsdorff made for the neutral country of Uruguay and Montevideo harbour rather than the more friendly Argentina. .P Once there, he asked the Uruguayans for time to effect repairs to his ship. However, under international law Graf Spee could only remain in the neutral port for 24 hours. In addition, she could not leave port less than 24 hours after a merchant ship belonging to a country she was at war with had left port. The British, acutely aware that there were no capital ships close to Uruguay at that time told the captains of British and French merchant vessels in Montevideo to leave at 24 hour intervals in order to keep Graf Spee holed up. However, Langsdorff was in no hurry to go anywhere. He could not know there were no other warships anywhere close to Montevideo other than the two light cruisers that Graf Spee had just evaded, but he seemed to convince himself there were. No doubt false intelligence fed to the Germans that this was the case did nothing to dispel such thoughts, and it was rumoured that a large force of capital ships, including an aircraft carrier, were anchored off the River Plate. In the end, Langsdorff decided to scuttle his ship rather then have her interned in Uruguay or have her fight a hopeless battle against what he thought were superior forces. Langsdorff killed himself shortly after the scuttling. Superb, as always. Thanks to, as always, well informed forum members I learned that Graf Spee was one of few ships that had radar at the outbreak of the war. Maybe that Graf Spee had radar is worth mentioning?
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