Second Battle of Heligoland Bight

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Second Battle of Heligoland Bight
Part of the First World War
HMS 'Calypso' at the Second Battle of the Heligoland Bight, 17 November 1917 RMG PW1812.jpg
HMS Calypso at the battle, during which she was severely damaged, drawn by William Lionel Wyllie
Date17 November 1917
Location 54°10′N8°04′E / 54.167°N 8.067°E / 54.167; 8.067
Result Indecisive
Belligerents
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  United Kingdom Flag of the German Empire.svg  German Empire
Commanders and leaders
Naval Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg Trevylyan Napier
Naval Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg William Pakenham
War Ensign of Germany 1903-1918.svg Ludwig von Reuter
Strength
3 battlecruisers
8 light cruisers
10 destroyers
2 battleships
4 light cruisers
8 destroyers
14 minesweepers
Casualties and losses
22 men killed, 43 wounded
1 light cruiser damaged
21 men killed, 40 wounded, 22 prisoners of war
1 minesweeper sunk
1 light cruiser damaged
North Sea location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Heligoland Bight
Location of the engagement

The Second Battle of Heligoland Bight, also the Action in the Helgoland Bight and the Zweite Seeschlacht bei Helgoland, was an inconclusive naval engagement fought between British and German squadrons on 17 November 1917 during the First World War.

Contents

Background

British minelaying

The British used sea mining defensively to protect sea lanes and trade routes and offensively to impede the transit of German submarines and surface ships in the North Sea, the danger of which was illustrated on 17 October 1917 by the sortie of the German Brummer-class cruisers SMS Brummer and SMS Bremse (the action off Lerwick) against the Scandinavian Convoy. (During 1917, six U-boats were sunk by British mines and in two years, the German minesweeping counter-effort suffered the loss about 28 destroyers and 70 minesweepers and other ships.) [1]

The Germans had been forced into minesweeping up to 150 nmi (170 mi; 280 km) into the Heligoland Bight and in the southern Baltic Sea, covered by light cruisers and destroyers, with occasional distant support by battleships. [1] After the action off Lerwick, several proposals for attacks on the German minesweepers and escorts were canvassed at the Admiralty. [2] On 31 October, the British sent a large force of cruisers and destroyers into the Kattegat, which sank Kronprinz Wilhelm, an armed merchant ship and nine trawlers. [3] [4]

German test trips

The prolific British laying of mines and net barrages outside the main German mine belts between Horns Reef and Terschelling, close to the bases of the High Seas Fleet (Hochseeflotte) forced the Kaiserliche Marine into surveying the British minefields, to find routes through them for transit into and back from the North Sea. Test trips were carried out, being substantial operations with ships to find the mines, minesweepers, torpedo boats (usually a continental term for destroyers), U-boats, barrier breakers and light cruisers, with air reconnaissance by Zeppelins and seaplanes. The Test trips were also protected by battleships on routes known to be free of mines. [3]

Prelude

North Sea operations

On 20 October, the British code breakers of Room 40, part of the Naval Intelligence Division of the Admiralty, decrypted orders to the submarine UB-61 to scout to the north of Bergen to find the new route of the Scandinavian Convoy. Agent reports from Copenhagen disclosed an imminent German attack by seven light cruisers and 36 destroyers. [5] During the week ending 11 November, British light cruisers, destroyers and a battlecruiser escort, conducted an abortive sweep along the fringe of the Heligoland Bight minefields. [3] By mid-November the Admiralty had obtained enough intelligence to intercept one of the big German minesweeping operations, provided that the ships based at Rosyth, in Scotland, could sail in time. The Admiralty decided that an offensive operation should begin on 17 November. [2]

Test trip, 17 November

Map showing the location of Borkum in the East Frisian Islands Ostfriesische Inseln (Karte).png
Map showing the location of Borkum in the East Frisian Islands

The Germans planned a Test trip for 17 November 1917, comprising the 2nd and 6th Auxiliary Mine Sweeper Half-Flotillas, the 12th and 14th Torpedo Boat Half-Flotillas, Barrier Breaking Division IV and light cruisers of Scouting Group Division II, commanded by Rear-Admiral ( Konteradmiral ) Ludwig von Reuter from the 6th Mine Sweeper Half-Flotilla. The Kaiser-class battleships, SMS Kaiser and SMS Kaiserin from Squadron IV, each with ten 12 in (300 mm) guns, led by Captain ( Kapitän zur See ) Kurt Graßhoff in Kaiserin, were to act as covering force for the group. The battleships were to reach a point west of Heligoland by 7.00 a.m. while the Test trip group rendezvoused in the Heligoland Bight about half-way between Horns Reef and Terschelling. With poor weather grounding Zeppelins and making it impossible for light cruisers embark seaplanes, after they had alighted on the sea, the Test trip relied on reconnaissance patrols by two land-based seaplanes from Borkum on the German coast, just east of the Netherlands, for reconnoitring ahead of the group. [6]

British plan

Diagram showing the Frisian Islands, including Terschelling and Borkum (bottom left) and Sylt in the North Frisian Islands (top right), both part of the Wedden Sea archipelago Waddeneilanden.PNG
Diagram showing the Frisian Islands, including Terschelling and Borkum (bottom left) and Sylt in the North Frisian Islands (top right), both part of the Wedden Sea archipelago

The German Test trip had been revealed by the code breakers of Room 40, allowing the British to plan an ambush. [7] On 16 November, orders for an attack on the Test trip were sent to Admiral Sir David Beatty, Commander-in-Chief of the British Grand Fleet. On 17 November 1917 a force of cruisers under Vice Admiral Trevylyan Napier was sent to attack the German minesweepers as they were mineweeping. [8]

Battle

The action began at 7:30 a.m., roughly 65 nmi (75 mi; 120 km) west of Sylt, when Courageous sighted German ships. She opened fire at 7:37 a.m. Reuter advanced with four light cruisers and eight destroyers towards the British ship to cover the withdrawal of the minesweepers, with all but the trawler Kehdingen (1906)  [ de ], escaping the British detachment. [lower-alpha 1] A stern chase ensued as the German forces, making skillful use of smokescreens, withdrew south-east at their best speed, under fire from the 1st Cruiser Squadron, the 1st Light Cruiser Squadron and the 6th Light Cruiser Squadron. Repulse was detached from the 1st Battle Cruiser Squadron and came up at high speed to join the battle. Both sides were hampered in their manoeuvres by the presence of naval minefields.

At about the same time, the light cruisers came under fire from Kaiser and Kaiserin, Kaiser-class battleships, which had come up in support of Reuter's ships; Caledon was struck by a 12.0 in (30.5 cm) shell, which damaged a gun turret; shortly afterwards, the British ships gave up the chase as they reached the edge of more minefields. A shell went through the upper conning tower of the light cruiser Calypso, killing the conning tower crew and mortally wounding the Captain, Herbert Edwards, on the bridge and knocking unconscious the navigator, Lieutenant-Commander M. F. F. Wilson. All personnel on the lower bridge were killed and the gunner officer, Lieutenant H. C. C. Clarke took command, which was made more difficult because the shell also cut all electrical communications and reduced the rate of fire. [9] [lower-alpha 2] The battlecruiser Repulse briefly engaged the German ships at about 10:00 a.m., achieving a hit on the light cruiser SMS Königsberg that started a serious fire. [10]

Aftermath

Analysis

French map of the Battle of Jutland (1916) showing (in black) the approximate area of German minefields in the North Sea Carte du Jutland.svg
French map of the Battle of Jutland (1916) showing (in black) the approximate area of German minefields in the North Sea

In 1984, Patrick Beesly wrote that the British operation was daring but that Napier was unjustly blamed for its failure to pursue the German ships with sufficient vigour. Room 40 was well informed about the positions of German minefields and the British fields which the Germans were trying to clear. The information had been added to Room 40's naval charts but the information was denied to Napier, who made decisions based on the charts he did have. Admiralty reluctance to disclose that their information was derived from the decoding of wireless intercepts had led to the naval commander's being ill-informed. The Admiralty did at least supply operational intelligence to the Naval commanders, after Beatty had made an emergency request when he was at sea. Napier was informed in ninety minutes by the Admiralty that German capital ships had sailed at 8:30 a.m. and the location of German cruisers, leading to Königsberg's receiving severe damage. At the least, Room 40 had prevented the British operation degenerating from fiasco to disaster. [7]

Casualties

In 1920, Admiral Reinhard Scheer wrote that the Germans suffered casualties of 21 men killed, ten seriously wounded and thirty men slightly wounded. [11] An Admiralty communiqué listed British casualties as one officer and 21 men killed, four officers and 39 men wounded; 22 prisoners were taken. [12]

Victoria Cross

Able Seaman John Carless of Walsall, aboard Commodore Cowan’s flagship Caledon, was awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross for his bravery in continuing to load and fire his gun despite receiving mortal shrapnel wounds that opened his abdomen. [13]

Orders of battle

Notes

  1. Two of the German destroyers were detached but rejoined during the battle
  2. There is some dispute as to whether it was a 15 cm (5.9 in) or a 12.0 in (30.5 cm) shell which damaged Calypso; since she was hit at 9:40 a.m., before the German battleships opened fire, the former is the more likely.
  3. The principal source for the British order of battle is Newbolt, Naval Operations volume V, page 168–169, footnote 2. [14] Additional organizational details are taken from The Admiralty (1917) Supplement to the Monthly Naval List, November 1917 (London: Harrison and Sons). Commanding officers are from The Admiralty (1917) Monthly Navy List, November 1917.
  4. Repulse, which was faster and of shallower draft than the other British battle cruisers, was detached to support the 1st Light Cruiser Squadron at about 8:00 a.m.; she came into action around 9:00 a.m. and achieved a 15-inch hit on Königsberg at 9:58 a.m. at the end of the engagement. [16]
  5. German large torpedo boats (großer torpedoboote) were of similar size and function to the destroyers in the Royal Navy and are often referred to as such.
  6. The principal source for the German order of battle is Gladisch, pp. 56–57. Commanding officers are from Gladisch, Scheer op. cit., German Wikipedia articles on the cruisers, Dave Alton, Commanding Officers of German Capital Ships 1914-19 (accessed 29 May 2013) and Ehrenrangliste der Kaiserlich-Deutschen Marine 1914–18 [1930] (Konteradmiral a. D. Albert Stoelzel). [17]

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 Beesly 1984, p. 268.
  2. 1 2 Newbolt 2003, pp. 164–165.
  3. 1 2 3 Harkins 2015, p. 32.
  4. Halpern 1995, pp. 376–377; Newbolt 2003, pp. 164–165.
  5. Beesly 1984, p. 279.
  6. Harkins 2015, pp. 32–33.
  7. 1 2 Beesly 1984, p. 280.
  8. Halpern 1995, pp. 376–377.
  9. Newbolt 2003, p. 175.
  10. Newbolt 1931, pp. 175–176; Burt 1986, p. 302.
  11. Scheer 1920, p. 308.
  12. Harkins 2015, pp. 38–39.
  13. Carless, John Henry, Commonwealth War Graves Commission
  14. Newbolt 1931, pp. 168–169.
  15. 1 2 3 Harkins 2015, p. 42.
  16. Newbolt 2003, p. 176.
  17. Stoelzel 1930.

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References

Further reading