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Reinhard Scheer

Carl Friedrich Heinrich Reinhard Scheer (30 September 1863 – 26 November 1928) was an Admiral in the Imperial German Navy (Kaiserliche Marine). Scheer joined the navy in 1879 as an officer cadet and progressed through the ranks, commanding cruisers and battleships, as well as senior staff positions on land. At the outbreak of World War I, Scheer was the commander of the II Battle Squadron of the High Seas Fleet. He then took command of the III Battle Squadron, which consisted of the newest and most powerful battleships in the navy. In January 1916, he was promoted to Admiral and given control of the High Seas Fleet. Scheer led the German fleet at the Battle of Jutland on 31 May – 1 June 1916, one of the largest naval battles in history.

Reinhard Scheer
Reinhard Scheer
Born(1863-09-30)30 September 1863
Obernkirchen, Electorate of Hesse
Died26 November 1928(1928-11-26) (aged 65)
Marktredwitz, Weimar Republic
Allegiance German Empire
Service/branch Imperial German Navy
Years of service1879–1918
RankAdmiral
Commands heldSMS Gazelle
SMS Elsass
II Battle Squadron
III Battle Squadron
High Seas Fleet
Chief of Naval Staff
Battles/wars
AwardsSee below

Following the battle, Scheer joined those calling for unrestricted submarine warfare against the Allies, a move the Kaiser eventually permitted. In August 1918, Scheer was promoted to the Chief of Naval Staff; Admiral Franz von Hipper replaced him as commander of the fleet. Together they planned a final battle against the British Grand Fleet, but war-weary sailors mutinied at the news and the operation was abandoned. Scheer retired after the end of the war.

A strict disciplinarian, Scheer was popularly known in the Navy as the "man with the iron mask" due to his severe appearance.[1] In 1919, Scheer wrote his memoirs; a year later they were translated and published in English. He wrote his autobiography in 1925. Scheer died at Marktredwitz. He is buried in the municipal cemetery at Weimar. The admiral was commemorated in the renascent Kriegsmarine by the heavy cruiser Admiral Scheer, built in the 1930s.

Early career edit

Scheer was born in Obernkirchen, present-day Lower Saxony.[2] He came from a middle-class background, which initially hampered his naval career, as the Kaiserliche Marine was dominated by wealthy families.[3]

Reinhard Scheer entered the navy on 22 April 1879 aged 15 as a cadet. His first sea assignment was aboard the sail-frigate SMS Niobe. His first cruise aboard Niobe lasted from June to September 1879. During the cruise he was trained in navigation and engineering. Following his return to Germany in September, Scheer was assigned to the Naval School in Kiel to continue his officer training. He received only a "satisfactory" rating on his cadet evaluation in 1879, but received the second highest grade in his class for the Sea Cadet's Exam the following year. Following his graduation from the Naval School, Scheer embarked on a six-month-long special training program for gunnery, torpedo warfare, and infantry training. Afterward, he was assigned to the gunnery training ship SMS Renown.[2] Scheer was for a short time assigned to the armored frigate SMS Friedrich Carl. For his last year in cadet training, he was assigned to the frigate SMS Hertha, which conducted a world tour. The ship sailed to Melbourne, Australia, Yokohama, Kobe, and Nagasaki in Japan, and Shanghai, China during the trip.[4]

Following his commission into the German navy, he was transferred to the East Africa Squadron; his first tour with the unit lasted from 1884 to 1886. He was assigned to the crew of the frigate SMS Bismarck. Here he was promoted to Leutnant. He also made important connections in Africa; among those he befriended was Leutnant Henning von Holtzendorff, who would later serve as commander of the High Seas Fleet.[4] During the assignment, in December 1884, Scheer participated in a landing party that suppressed a pro-British indigenous chieftain in Kamerun.[5]

After his return to Germany in 1886, Scheer took part in torpedo training aboard SMS Blücher, from January to May 1888. In May 1888, Scheer returned to the East Africa Squadron as a torpedo officer aboard the corvette SMS Sophie. This tour lasted until early summer 1890, at which point Scheer returned to Germany, where he was made an instructor at the Torpedo Research Command in Kiel. Thus far in his career, Scheer had made a strong reputation for himself as a torpedo specialist. While stationed in Kiel, Scheer met Alfred von Tirpitz, who took note of his expertise. In 1897, following Tirpitz's promotion to State Secretary of the Imperial Navy Office, he transferred Scheer to the Reichsmarineamt (RMA) to work in the Torpedo Section.[4]

After promotion to Korvettenkapitän, Scheer commanded the light cruiser SMS Gazelle.[1] Scheer was promoted to Kapitän zur See in 1905 and took command of the battleship SMS Elsass in 1907, a command he held for two years.[6] A report dated 1 December 1909 recommended Scheer for promotion; he became chief of staff to the commanding officer of the High Seas Fleet, Admiral Holtzendorff,[7] under whom Scheer had served on the cruiser SMS Prinzess Wilhelm.[8] Scheer reached flag rank less than six months after taking his post on Holtzendorff's staff, at the age of 47. He held the Chief of Staff position until late 1911, when he was transferred back to the RMA under Tirpitz. Here, he held the position of Chief of the General Naval Department through 1912.[7] Following this appointment, Scheer returned to a sea command, in the form of squadron commander for the six battleships of the II Battle Squadron of the High Seas Fleet in January 1913.[9]

World War I edit

 
Reinhard Scheer

On 9 December 1913, Scheer was promoted to Vizeadmiral. He remained with the II Battle Squadron until January 1915, by which time World War I had begun. He thereafter took command of the III Battle Squadron,[10] which consisted of the most powerful battleships in the German fleet: the dreadnoughts of the Kaiser and König classes.[11] Scheer advocated raids on the British coast to lure out portions of the numerically superior Royal Navy so they could be overwhelmed by the German fleet. He was highly critical of Admiral Friedrich von Ingenohl, who he felt was overcautious.[10]

Following the bombardment of Scarborough, Hartlepool and Whitby, during which Ingenohl had withdrawn instead of attacking a weaker British squadron, Scheer remarked, "[Ingenohl] had robbed us of the opportunity of meeting certain divisions of the enemy according to the prearranged plan, which was now seen to be correct."[10] Following the loss of SMS Blücher at the Battle of Dogger Bank in January 1915, the Kaiser removed Ingenohl from his post on 2 February.[12] Admiral Hugo von Pohl replaced him as commander of the fleet. Pohl was exceedingly cautious; in the remainder of 1915, he conducted only five ineffective fleet actions, all of which remained within 120 nautical miles of Helgoland.[13]

Command of the High Seas fleet edit

Vice Admiral Scheer became Commander in chief of the High Seas Fleet on 18 January 1916 when Pohl became too ill to continue in that post.[14] Upon promotion to the position, Scheer wrote Guiding Principles for Sea Warfare in the North Sea, which outlined his strategic plans. His central idea was that the Grand Fleet should be pressured by higher U-boat activity and zeppelin raids as well as increased fleet sorties. The Grand Fleet would be forced to abandon the distant blockade and would have to attack the German fleet; the Kaiser approved the memorandum on 23 February 1916. Now that he had approval from the Kaiser, Scheer could use the fleet more aggressively.[15]

Following the Kaiser's order forbidding unrestricted submarine warfare on 24 April 1916, Scheer ordered all of the U-boats in the Atlantic to return to Germany and abandon commerce raiding.[16] Scheer intended to use the submarines to support the fleet by stationing the U-boats off major British naval bases. The U-boats would intercept British forces leaving the ports when provoked by a bombardment by the I Scouting Group battlecruisers under the command of Vice Admiral Franz von Hipper.[17] Scheer planned the operation for 17 May, but damage to the battlecruiser SMS Seydlitz from the previous month, coupled with condenser trouble on several of the battleships of III Battle Squadron caused the plan to be delayed, ultimately to 31 May.[18]

Battle of Jutland edit

Admiral Scheer's fleet, composed of 16 dreadnoughts, six pre-dreadnoughts, six light cruisers, and 31 torpedo boats departed the Jade early on the morning of 31 May. The fleet sailed in concert with Hipper's five battlecruisers and supporting cruisers and torpedo boats.[19] The British navy's Room 40 had intercepted and decrypted German radio traffic containing plans of the operation, and so sortied the Grand Fleet, totaling some 28 dreadnoughts and 9 battlecruisers, the night before in order to cut off and destroy the High Seas Fleet.[20]

At 16:00 UTC, the two battlecruiser forces encountered each other and began a running gun fight south, back towards Scheer's battle fleet.[21] Upon reaching the High Seas Fleet, Vice Admiral David Beatty's battlecruisers turned back to the north to lure the Germans towards the rapidly approaching Grand Fleet, under the command of Admiral John Jellicoe.[22] During the run to the north, Scheer's leading ships engaged the Queen Elizabeth-class battleships of the 5th Battle Squadron.[23] By 18:30, the Grand Fleet had arrived on the scene, and was deployed into a position that would cross Scheer's "T" from the northeast. To extricate his fleet from this precarious position, Scheer ordered a 16-point turn to the south-west.[24] At 18:55, Scheer decided to conduct another 16-point turn to launch an attack on the British fleet;[25] he later explained his reasoning:

It was as yet too early to assume 'night cruising order.' The enemy could have compelled us to fight before dark, he could have prevented our exercising our initiative, and finally he could have cut off our return to the German Bight. There was only one way of avoiding this: to inflict a second blow on the enemy with another advance carried through regardless of cost...It also offered the possibility of a last attempt being made to bring help to the hard-pressed Wiesbaden, or at least of rescuing her ship's company.[25]

This maneuver again put Scheer in a dangerous position; Jellicoe had turned his fleet south and again crossed Scheer's "T."[26] A third 16-point turn followed, which was covered by a charge by Hipper's mauled battlecruisers.[27] Scheer then ordered the fleet to adopt the night cruising formation, which was completed by 23:40.[28] A series of ferocious engagements between Scheer's battleships and Jellicoe's destroyer screen ensued, though the Germans managed to punch their way through the destroyers and make for Horns Reef.[29] The High Seas Fleet reached the Jade between 13:00 and 14:45 on 1 June; Scheer ordered the undamaged battleships of the I Battle Squadron to take up defensive positions in the Jade roadstead while the Kaiser-class battleships were to maintain a state of readiness just outside Wilhelmshaven.[30]

Post-Jutland edit

 
Scheer, from the frontispiece of his memoirs

After the battle was finished, Scheer wrote an assessment of the engagement for the Kaiser; in it, he strongly urged for the resumption of the unrestricted submarine warfare campaign in the Atlantic. He argued that it was the only option to defeat Great Britain. Scheer spent the majority of the remainder of the year debating the issue with the naval command.[31] Ultimately, Scheer and his allies prevailed and the unrestricted submarine campaign was resumed in February 1917.[32] Despite his conviction that only the U-boats could defeat Britain, Scheer continued to utilize the surface fleet. On 18–19 August 1916, the High Seas Fleet again sortied in an attempt to draw out and defeat Admiral Beatty's battlecruiser squadron. The Royal Navy again intercepted German communications and sent the Grand Fleet out. In this case, however, Scheer's reconnaissance worked as intended, and warned him of the Grand Fleet's approach in time to retreat back to Germany.[33] In later 1917, Scheer began to use light elements of the fleet to raid British convoys to Norway in the North Sea. This forced the British to deploy battleships to escort the convoys, which presented Scheer with the opportunity to attempt to isolate and destroy several battleships of the Grand Fleet.[34] On 23 April 1918, Scheer sent the entire High Seas Fleet to intercept one of the convoys. However, Hipper's battlecruisers crossed the convoy's path several times without sighting any ships; it was later discovered that German intelligence had miscalculated the date the convoy would depart Britain. The German fleet turned south and reached their North Sea bases by 19:00.[35]

Chief of Naval Staff edit

In June 1918, Scheer was informed that the state of Admiral Holtzendorff's health would not permit him to remain in his post as chief of the naval staff much longer.[36] On 28 July, Scheer was informed that Holtzendorff had submitted his resignation to the Kaiser.[37] Two weeks later, on 11 August 1918, Scheer was promoted to the Chief of Naval Staff; his subordinate Franz von Hipper succeeded him in command of the High Seas Fleet.[38] The following day, Scheer met with Field Marshal Paul von Hindenburg and General Erich Ludendorff to discuss the deteriorating war situation. The three agreed that the U-boat campaign would be the sole hope for a German victory, as the German army had been pushed to the defensive.[39] Scheer then called for a crash program to build a vastly increased number of U-boats. He stipulated that, at a minimum, at least 16 additional U-boats be constructed per month in the last quarter of 1918. This was to increase to at least an additional 30 per month by the third quarter of 1919.[40] In total, the plan called for 376 to 450 new U-boats. However, German naval historian Holger Herwig suggested the program was "a massive propaganda effort designed to have an effect at home and abroad."[41]

In October, with the war largely lost, Scheer and Hipper envisioned one last major fleet advance to attack the British Grand Fleet. Scheer intended to inflict as much damage as possible on the British navy, to achieve a better bargaining position for Germany regardless of the cost to the navy.[42] The plan involved two simultaneous attacks by light cruisers and destroyers, one on Flanders and another on shipping in the Thames estuary; the five battlecruisers were to support the Thames attack while the dreadnoughts remained off Flanders. After both strikes, the fleet was to concentrate off the Dutch coast, where it would meet the Grand Fleet in battle. While the fleet was consolidating in Wilhelmshaven, however, war-weary sailors began deserting en masse.[43] As Von der Tann and Derfflinger passed through the locks that separated Wilhelmshaven's inner harbor and roadstead, some 300 men from both ships climbed over the side and disappeared ashore.[44] On 24 October 1918, the order was given to sail from Wilhelmshaven. Starting on the night of 29 October, sailors on several battleships mutinied; three ships from the III Squadron refused to weigh anchors, and acts of sabotage were committed on board the battleships Thüringen and Helgoland. In the face of open rebellion, the order to sail was rescinded and the planned operation was abandoned.[45] In an attempt to suppress the mutiny, the High Seas Fleet squadrons were dispersed.[44]

Post-war edit

 
Scheer's funeral at Weimar, November 1928

Scheer wrote his memoirs of the Great War in 1919,[46] which were translated into English the following year.[47] In October 1920, an intruder broke into Scheer's house and murdered his wife, Emillie, his maid, and injured his daughter Else. The man then committed suicide in the cellar. Following the incident, Scheer retreated into solitude.[48] He wrote his autobiography, entitled Vom Segelschiff zum U-Boot (From Sailing Ship to Submarine), which was published on 6 November 1925.[49]

In 1928, Scheer accepted an invitation to meet his adversary from Jutland, Admiral of the Fleet Jellicoe, in England. However, at the age of 65, Scheer died at Marktredwitz before he could make the trip. He was buried in the municipal cemetery at Weimar.[48] His tombstone reads: hier ruht admiral reinhard scheer [Here rests Admiral Reinhard Scheer] — with the dates of his life, his flag in metal applique and the single word skagerrak (the German name for the Battle of Jutland).[50]

The heavy cruiser Admiral Scheer was named after Reinhard Scheer and christened by his daughter Marianne. The ship was ordered and funded by the Reichsmarine of the Weimar Republic and launched in 1933.[51]

Decorations and awards edit

German honours
Foreign honours

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b Herwig, p. 139
  2. ^ a b Sweetman, p. 389
  3. ^ Tarrant, p. 49
  4. ^ a b c Sweetman, p. 390
  5. ^ Sandler, p. 318
  6. ^ Sweetman, pp. 391–392
  7. ^ a b Sweetman, p. 392
  8. ^ Massie, p. 554
  9. ^ Sweetman, pp. 392–393
  10. ^ a b c Sweetman, p. 393
  11. ^ Tarrant, p. 286
  12. ^ Tarrant, p. 43
  13. ^ Tarrant, pp. 43–44
  14. ^ Sweetman, p. 394
  15. ^ Tarrant, p. 50
  16. ^ Karau, p. 65
  17. ^ Tarrant, p. 55
  18. ^ Tarrant, pp. 55–56
  19. ^ Tarrant, p. 62
  20. ^ Tarrant, pp. 63–64
  21. ^ Campbell, p. 34
  22. ^ Bennet, p. 73
  23. ^ Tarrant, p. 116
  24. ^ Tarrant, p. 153
  25. ^ a b Tarrant, p. 165
  26. ^ Bennett, p. 106
  27. ^ Tarrant, pp. 177–181
  28. ^ Campbell, p. 275
  29. ^ Campbell, p. 274
  30. ^ Tarrant, p. 263
  31. ^ Scheer, p. 246
  32. ^ Scheer, p. 248
  33. ^ Massie, pp. 682–683
  34. ^ Massie, p. 747
  35. ^ Massie, p. 748
  36. ^ Scheer, p. 324
  37. ^ Scheer, p. 330
  38. ^ Scheer, pp. 332–333
  39. ^ Scheer, p. 333
  40. ^ Scheer, p. 334
  41. ^ Herwig, p. 222
  42. ^ Tarrant, pp. 280–281
  43. ^ Massie, p. 774
  44. ^ a b Massie, p. 775
  45. ^ Tarrant, pp. 281–282
  46. ^ Sweetman, p. 401
  47. ^ Scheer
  48. ^ a b Butler, p. 221
  49. ^ Grange, p. 208
  50. ^ Dodge, Russ (23 September 2003). "Reinhard Scheer". Findagrave.com. Retrieved 29 April 2010.
  51. ^ Williamson, p. 32
  52. ^ a b "Ritter-orden", Hof- und Staatshandbuch der Österreichisch-Ungarischen Monarchie, Vienna: Druck und Verlag der K.K. Hof- und Staatsdruckerei, 1918, pp. 75, 265

References edit

External links edit

Military offices
Preceded by Commander-in-Chief of High Seas Fleet
January 23, 1916-August 1918
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chief of the Admiralty Staff of the Imperial German Navy
11 August 1918-14 November 1918
Succeeded by
Position dissolved

reinhard, scheer, admiral, scheer, redirects, here, warship, german, cruiser, admiral, scheer, carl, friedrich, heinrich, september, 1863, november, 1928, admiral, imperial, german, navy, kaiserliche, marine, scheer, joined, navy, 1879, officer, cadet, progres. Admiral Scheer redirects here For the warship see German cruiser Admiral Scheer Carl Friedrich Heinrich Reinhard Scheer 30 September 1863 26 November 1928 was an Admiral in the Imperial German Navy Kaiserliche Marine Scheer joined the navy in 1879 as an officer cadet and progressed through the ranks commanding cruisers and battleships as well as senior staff positions on land At the outbreak of World War I Scheer was the commander of the II Battle Squadron of the High Seas Fleet He then took command of the III Battle Squadron which consisted of the newest and most powerful battleships in the navy In January 1916 he was promoted to Admiral and given control of the High Seas Fleet Scheer led the German fleet at the Battle of Jutland on 31 May 1 June 1916 one of the largest naval battles in history Reinhard ScheerReinhard ScheerBorn 1863 09 30 30 September 1863Obernkirchen Electorate of HesseDied26 November 1928 1928 11 26 aged 65 Marktredwitz Weimar RepublicAllegiance German EmpireService wbr branch Imperial German NavyYears of service1879 1918RankAdmiralCommands heldSMS GazelleSMS ElsassII Battle SquadronIII Battle SquadronHigh Seas FleetChief of Naval StaffBattles warsWorld War I Lowestoft raid Battle of JutlandAwardsSee below Following the battle Scheer joined those calling for unrestricted submarine warfare against the Allies a move the Kaiser eventually permitted In August 1918 Scheer was promoted to the Chief of Naval Staff Admiral Franz von Hipper replaced him as commander of the fleet Together they planned a final battle against the British Grand Fleet but war weary sailors mutinied at the news and the operation was abandoned Scheer retired after the end of the war A strict disciplinarian Scheer was popularly known in the Navy as the man with the iron mask due to his severe appearance 1 In 1919 Scheer wrote his memoirs a year later they were translated and published in English He wrote his autobiography in 1925 Scheer died at Marktredwitz He is buried in the municipal cemetery at Weimar The admiral was commemorated in the renascent Kriegsmarine by the heavy cruiser Admiral Scheer built in the 1930s Contents 1 Early career 2 World War I 2 1 Command of the High Seas fleet 2 1 1 Battle of Jutland 2 1 2 Post Jutland 2 2 Chief of Naval Staff 3 Post war 4 Decorations and awards 5 Footnotes 6 References 7 External linksEarly career editScheer was born in Obernkirchen present day Lower Saxony 2 He came from a middle class background which initially hampered his naval career as the Kaiserliche Marine was dominated by wealthy families 3 Reinhard Scheer entered the navy on 22 April 1879 aged 15 as a cadet His first sea assignment was aboard the sail frigate SMS Niobe His first cruise aboard Niobe lasted from June to September 1879 During the cruise he was trained in navigation and engineering Following his return to Germany in September Scheer was assigned to the Naval School in Kiel to continue his officer training He received only a satisfactory rating on his cadet evaluation in 1879 but received the second highest grade in his class for the Sea Cadet s Exam the following year Following his graduation from the Naval School Scheer embarked on a six month long special training program for gunnery torpedo warfare and infantry training Afterward he was assigned to the gunnery training ship SMS Renown 2 Scheer was for a short time assigned to the armored frigate SMS Friedrich Carl For his last year in cadet training he was assigned to the frigate SMS Hertha which conducted a world tour The ship sailed to Melbourne Australia Yokohama Kobe and Nagasaki in Japan and Shanghai China during the trip 4 Following his commission into the German navy he was transferred to the East Africa Squadron his first tour with the unit lasted from 1884 to 1886 He was assigned to the crew of the frigate SMS Bismarck Here he was promoted to Leutnant He also made important connections in Africa among those he befriended was Leutnant Henning von Holtzendorff who would later serve as commander of the High Seas Fleet 4 During the assignment in December 1884 Scheer participated in a landing party that suppressed a pro British indigenous chieftain in Kamerun 5 After his return to Germany in 1886 Scheer took part in torpedo training aboard SMS Blucher from January to May 1888 In May 1888 Scheer returned to the East Africa Squadron as a torpedo officer aboard the corvette SMS Sophie This tour lasted until early summer 1890 at which point Scheer returned to Germany where he was made an instructor at the Torpedo Research Command in Kiel Thus far in his career Scheer had made a strong reputation for himself as a torpedo specialist While stationed in Kiel Scheer met Alfred von Tirpitz who took note of his expertise In 1897 following Tirpitz s promotion to State Secretary of the Imperial Navy Office he transferred Scheer to the Reichsmarineamt RMA to work in the Torpedo Section 4 After promotion to Korvettenkapitan Scheer commanded the light cruiser SMS Gazelle 1 Scheer was promoted to Kapitan zur See in 1905 and took command of the battleship SMS Elsass in 1907 a command he held for two years 6 A report dated 1 December 1909 recommended Scheer for promotion he became chief of staff to the commanding officer of the High Seas Fleet Admiral Holtzendorff 7 under whom Scheer had served on the cruiser SMS Prinzess Wilhelm 8 Scheer reached flag rank less than six months after taking his post on Holtzendorff s staff at the age of 47 He held the Chief of Staff position until late 1911 when he was transferred back to the RMA under Tirpitz Here he held the position of Chief of the General Naval Department through 1912 7 Following this appointment Scheer returned to a sea command in the form of squadron commander for the six battleships of the II Battle Squadron of the High Seas Fleet in January 1913 9 World War I edit nbsp Reinhard Scheer On 9 December 1913 Scheer was promoted to Vizeadmiral He remained with the II Battle Squadron until January 1915 by which time World War I had begun He thereafter took command of the III Battle Squadron 10 which consisted of the most powerful battleships in the German fleet the dreadnoughts of the Kaiser and Konig classes 11 Scheer advocated raids on the British coast to lure out portions of the numerically superior Royal Navy so they could be overwhelmed by the German fleet He was highly critical of Admiral Friedrich von Ingenohl who he felt was overcautious 10 Following the bombardment of Scarborough Hartlepool and Whitby during which Ingenohl had withdrawn instead of attacking a weaker British squadron Scheer remarked Ingenohl had robbed us of the opportunity of meeting certain divisions of the enemy according to the prearranged plan which was now seen to be correct 10 Following the loss of SMS Blucher at the Battle of Dogger Bank in January 1915 the Kaiser removed Ingenohl from his post on 2 February 12 Admiral Hugo von Pohl replaced him as commander of the fleet Pohl was exceedingly cautious in the remainder of 1915 he conducted only five ineffective fleet actions all of which remained within 120 nautical miles of Helgoland 13 Command of the High Seas fleet edit Vice Admiral Scheer became Commander in chief of the High Seas Fleet on 18 January 1916 when Pohl became too ill to continue in that post 14 Upon promotion to the position Scheer wrote Guiding Principles for Sea Warfare in the North Sea which outlined his strategic plans His central idea was that the Grand Fleet should be pressured by higher U boat activity and zeppelin raids as well as increased fleet sorties The Grand Fleet would be forced to abandon the distant blockade and would have to attack the German fleet the Kaiser approved the memorandum on 23 February 1916 Now that he had approval from the Kaiser Scheer could use the fleet more aggressively 15 Following the Kaiser s order forbidding unrestricted submarine warfare on 24 April 1916 Scheer ordered all of the U boats in the Atlantic to return to Germany and abandon commerce raiding 16 Scheer intended to use the submarines to support the fleet by stationing the U boats off major British naval bases The U boats would intercept British forces leaving the ports when provoked by a bombardment by the I Scouting Group battlecruisers under the command of Vice Admiral Franz von Hipper 17 Scheer planned the operation for 17 May but damage to the battlecruiser SMS Seydlitz from the previous month coupled with condenser trouble on several of the battleships of III Battle Squadron caused the plan to be delayed ultimately to 31 May 18 Battle of Jutland edit Main article Battle of Jutland Admiral Scheer s fleet composed of 16 dreadnoughts six pre dreadnoughts six light cruisers and 31 torpedo boats departed the Jade early on the morning of 31 May The fleet sailed in concert with Hipper s five battlecruisers and supporting cruisers and torpedo boats 19 The British navy s Room 40 had intercepted and decrypted German radio traffic containing plans of the operation and so sortied the Grand Fleet totaling some 28 dreadnoughts and 9 battlecruisers the night before in order to cut off and destroy the High Seas Fleet 20 At 16 00 UTC the two battlecruiser forces encountered each other and began a running gun fight south back towards Scheer s battle fleet 21 Upon reaching the High Seas Fleet Vice Admiral David Beatty s battlecruisers turned back to the north to lure the Germans towards the rapidly approaching Grand Fleet under the command of Admiral John Jellicoe 22 During the run to the north Scheer s leading ships engaged the Queen Elizabeth class battleships of the 5th Battle Squadron 23 By 18 30 the Grand Fleet had arrived on the scene and was deployed into a position that would cross Scheer s T from the northeast To extricate his fleet from this precarious position Scheer ordered a 16 point turn to the south west 24 At 18 55 Scheer decided to conduct another 16 point turn to launch an attack on the British fleet 25 he later explained his reasoning It was as yet too early to assume night cruising order The enemy could have compelled us to fight before dark he could have prevented our exercising our initiative and finally he could have cut off our return to the German Bight There was only one way of avoiding this to inflict a second blow on the enemy with another advance carried through regardless of cost It also offered the possibility of a last attempt being made to bring help to the hard pressed Wiesbaden or at least of rescuing her ship s company 25 This maneuver again put Scheer in a dangerous position Jellicoe had turned his fleet south and again crossed Scheer s T 26 A third 16 point turn followed which was covered by a charge by Hipper s mauled battlecruisers 27 Scheer then ordered the fleet to adopt the night cruising formation which was completed by 23 40 28 A series of ferocious engagements between Scheer s battleships and Jellicoe s destroyer screen ensued though the Germans managed to punch their way through the destroyers and make for Horns Reef 29 The High Seas Fleet reached the Jade between 13 00 and 14 45 on 1 June Scheer ordered the undamaged battleships of the I Battle Squadron to take up defensive positions in the Jade roadstead while the Kaiser class battleships were to maintain a state of readiness just outside Wilhelmshaven 30 Post Jutland edit nbsp Scheer from the frontispiece of his memoirs After the battle was finished Scheer wrote an assessment of the engagement for the Kaiser in it he strongly urged for the resumption of the unrestricted submarine warfare campaign in the Atlantic He argued that it was the only option to defeat Great Britain Scheer spent the majority of the remainder of the year debating the issue with the naval command 31 Ultimately Scheer and his allies prevailed and the unrestricted submarine campaign was resumed in February 1917 32 Despite his conviction that only the U boats could defeat Britain Scheer continued to utilize the surface fleet On 18 19 August 1916 the High Seas Fleet again sortied in an attempt to draw out and defeat Admiral Beatty s battlecruiser squadron The Royal Navy again intercepted German communications and sent the Grand Fleet out In this case however Scheer s reconnaissance worked as intended and warned him of the Grand Fleet s approach in time to retreat back to Germany 33 In later 1917 Scheer began to use light elements of the fleet to raid British convoys to Norway in the North Sea This forced the British to deploy battleships to escort the convoys which presented Scheer with the opportunity to attempt to isolate and destroy several battleships of the Grand Fleet 34 On 23 April 1918 Scheer sent the entire High Seas Fleet to intercept one of the convoys However Hipper s battlecruisers crossed the convoy s path several times without sighting any ships it was later discovered that German intelligence had miscalculated the date the convoy would depart Britain The German fleet turned south and reached their North Sea bases by 19 00 35 Chief of Naval Staff edit In June 1918 Scheer was informed that the state of Admiral Holtzendorff s health would not permit him to remain in his post as chief of the naval staff much longer 36 On 28 July Scheer was informed that Holtzendorff had submitted his resignation to the Kaiser 37 Two weeks later on 11 August 1918 Scheer was promoted to the Chief of Naval Staff his subordinate Franz von Hipper succeeded him in command of the High Seas Fleet 38 The following day Scheer met with Field Marshal Paul von Hindenburg and General Erich Ludendorff to discuss the deteriorating war situation The three agreed that the U boat campaign would be the sole hope for a German victory as the German army had been pushed to the defensive 39 Scheer then called for a crash program to build a vastly increased number of U boats He stipulated that at a minimum at least 16 additional U boats be constructed per month in the last quarter of 1918 This was to increase to at least an additional 30 per month by the third quarter of 1919 40 In total the plan called for 376 to 450 new U boats However German naval historian Holger Herwig suggested the program was a massive propaganda effort designed to have an effect at home and abroad 41 In October with the war largely lost Scheer and Hipper envisioned one last major fleet advance to attack the British Grand Fleet Scheer intended to inflict as much damage as possible on the British navy to achieve a better bargaining position for Germany regardless of the cost to the navy 42 The plan involved two simultaneous attacks by light cruisers and destroyers one on Flanders and another on shipping in the Thames estuary the five battlecruisers were to support the Thames attack while the dreadnoughts remained off Flanders After both strikes the fleet was to concentrate off the Dutch coast where it would meet the Grand Fleet in battle While the fleet was consolidating in Wilhelmshaven however war weary sailors began deserting en masse 43 As Von der Tann and Derfflinger passed through the locks that separated Wilhelmshaven s inner harbor and roadstead some 300 men from both ships climbed over the side and disappeared ashore 44 On 24 October 1918 the order was given to sail from Wilhelmshaven Starting on the night of 29 October sailors on several battleships mutinied three ships from the III Squadron refused to weigh anchors and acts of sabotage were committed on board the battleships Thuringen and Helgoland In the face of open rebellion the order to sail was rescinded and the planned operation was abandoned 45 In an attempt to suppress the mutiny the High Seas Fleet squadrons were dispersed 44 Post war edit nbsp Scheer s funeral at Weimar November 1928 Scheer wrote his memoirs of the Great War in 1919 46 which were translated into English the following year 47 In October 1920 an intruder broke into Scheer s house and murdered his wife Emillie his maid and injured his daughter Else The man then committed suicide in the cellar Following the incident Scheer retreated into solitude 48 He wrote his autobiography entitled Vom Segelschiff zum U Boot From Sailing Ship to Submarine which was published on 6 November 1925 49 In 1928 Scheer accepted an invitation to meet his adversary from Jutland Admiral of the Fleet Jellicoe in England However at the age of 65 Scheer died at Marktredwitz before he could make the trip He was buried in the municipal cemetery at Weimar 48 His tombstone reads hier ruht admiral reinhard scheer Here rests Admiral Reinhard Scheer with the dates of his life his flag in metal applique and the single word skagerrak the German name for the Battle of Jutland 50 The heavy cruiser Admiral Scheer was named after Reinhard Scheer and christened by his daughter Marianne The ship was ordered and funded by the Reichsmarine of the Weimar Republic and launched in 1933 51 Decorations and awards editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2016 Learn how and when to remove this message German honours Grand Cross of the Order of the Red Eagle Prussia Pour le Merite military 5 June 1916 with Oak Leaves 1 February 1918 Prussia Iron Cross 1914 1st and 2nd class Knight s Cross of the Royal House Order of Hohenzollern Service Award Prussia Order of the Crown 1st class with Swords Prussia Grand Cross of the Military Order of Max Joseph Kingdom of Bavaria Grand Cross of the House Order of Albert the Bear Anhalt Grand Cross of the Military Merit Order Bavaria Knight s Cross of the Military Order of St Henry 23 June 1916 Saxony Grand Cross of the Albert Order Saxony Grand Cross of the Order of the Griffon Mecklenburg Honorary Grand Cross of the House and Merit Order of Peter Frederick Louis Oldenburg Knight of the Military Merit Order Wurttemberg Military Merit Cross 1st class Mecklenburg Schwerin Foreign honours Knight Grand Cross of the Imperial Austrian Order of Franz Joseph 1911 Austria 52 Knight Grand Cross of the Austrian Imperial Order of Leopold 1916 Austria 52 Order of the Rising Sun 3rd class Japan Grand Officer of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus Italy Order of the Iron Crown 3rd class Austria Order of Saint Stanislaus 2nd classFootnotes edit a b Herwig p 139 a b Sweetman p 389 Tarrant p 49 a b c Sweetman p 390 Sandler p 318 Sweetman pp 391 392 a b Sweetman p 392 Massie p 554 Sweetman pp 392 393 a b c Sweetman p 393 Tarrant p 286 Tarrant p 43 Tarrant pp 43 44 Sweetman p 394 Tarrant p 50 Karau p 65 Tarrant p 55 Tarrant pp 55 56 Tarrant p 62 Tarrant pp 63 64 Campbell p 34 Bennet p 73 Tarrant p 116 Tarrant p 153 a b Tarrant p 165 Bennett p 106 Tarrant pp 177 181 Campbell p 275 Campbell p 274 Tarrant p 263 Scheer p 246 Scheer p 248 Massie pp 682 683 Massie p 747 Massie p 748 Scheer p 324 Scheer p 330 Scheer pp 332 333 Scheer p 333 Scheer p 334 Herwig p 222 Tarrant pp 280 281 Massie p 774 a b Massie p 775 Tarrant pp 281 282 Sweetman p 401 Scheer a b Butler p 221 Grange p 208 Dodge Russ 23 September 2003 Reinhard Scheer Findagrave com Retrieved 29 April 2010 Williamson p 32 a b Ritter orden Hof und Staatshandbuch der Osterreichisch Ungarischen Monarchie Vienna Druck und Verlag der K K Hof und Staatsdruckerei 1918 pp 75 265References editBennett Geoffrey 2006 The Battle of Jutland Barnsley Pen and Sword Military Classics ISBN 1 84415 300 2 Butler Daniel Allen 2006 Distant victory the Battle of Jutland and the Allied triumph in the First World War Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 275 99073 2 Campbell John 1998 Jutland An Analysis of the Fighting London Conway Maritime Press ISBN 1 55821 759 2 Grange William 2008 Cultural Chronicle of the Weimar Republic Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 8108 5967 8 Herwig Holger 1980 Luxury Fleet The Imperial German Navy 1888 1918 Amherst New York Humanity Books ISBN 978 1 57392 286 9 Karau Mark D 2003 Wielding the Dagger The MarineKorps Flandern and the German War Effort 1914 1918 Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 32475 8 Marder Arthur 1961 1970 From the Dreadnought to Scapa Flow 5 Vols London Oxford University Press Massie Robert K 2004 Castles of Steel Britain Germany and the Winning of the Great War at Sea London Jonathan Cape ISBN 0 224 04092 8 Sandler Stanley 2002 Ground Warfare An International Encyclopedia Vol I ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 57607 344 5 Scheer Reinhard 1920 Germany s High Seas Fleet in the World War London Cassell OCLC 2765294 via Archive Foundation Sweetman Jack 1997 The Great Admirals Command at Sea 1587 1945 Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 0 87021 229 1 Tarrant V E 1995 Jutland The German Perspective Cassell Military Paperbacks ISBN 0 304 35848 7 Williamson Gordon 2003 German Pocket Battleships 1939 45 Oxford Osprey ISBN 978 1 84176 501 3 External links edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Media related to Reinhard Scheer at Wikimedia Commons Scheer Reinhold Encyclopaedia Britannica 12th ed 1922 Reinhard Scheer in the German National Library catalogue Reinhard Scheer s memoirs Newspaper clippings about Reinhard Scheer in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Military offices Preceded byHugo von Pohl Commander in Chief of High Seas FleetJanuary 23 1916 August 1918 Succeeded byFranz von Hipper Preceded byHenning von Holtzendorff Chief of the Admiralty Staff of the Imperial German Navy11 August 1918 14 November 1918 Succeeded byPosition dissolved Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Reinhard Scheer amp oldid 1218337451, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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