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Battle of Jutland

The Battle of Jutland (German: Skagerrakschlacht, the Battle of the Skagerrak) was a naval battle fought between Britain's Royal Navy Grand Fleet, under Admiral Sir John Jellicoe, and the Imperial German Navy's High Seas Fleet, under Vice-Admiral Reinhard Scheer, during the First World War. The battle unfolded in extensive manoeuvring and three main engagements (the battlecruiser action, the fleet action and the night action), from 31 May to 1 June 1916, off the North Sea coast of Denmark's Jutland Peninsula.[2] It was the largest naval battle and the only full-scale clash of battleships in that war. Jutland was the third fleet action between steel battleships, following the Battle of the Yellow Sea in 1904[3][4] and the Battle of Tsushima in 1905,[5] during the Russo-Japanese War. Jutland was the last major battle in history fought primarily by battleships.[6]

Battle of Jutland
Part of World War I

The Battle of Jutland, 1916
Date31 May – 1 June 1916
Location56°42′N 5°52′E / 56.700°N 5.867°E / 56.700; 5.867
Result Inconclusive, though both have since claimed victory; see § Outcome
Belligerents
 United Kingdom  German Empire
Commanders and leaders
Strength
Casualties and losses
  • 6,094 killed
  • 674 wounded
  • 177 captured
  • 3 battlecruisers sunk
  • 3 armoured cruisers sunk
  • 8 destroyers sunk
  • (113,300 tons sunk)[1]
  • 2,551 killed
  • 507 wounded
  • 1 battlecruiser sunk
  • 1 pre-dreadnought battleship sunk
  • 4 light cruisers sunk
  • 5 torpedo-boats sunk
  • (62,300 tons sunk)[1]

Germany's High Seas Fleet intended to lure out, trap, and destroy a portion of the British Grand Fleet, as the German naval force was insufficient to openly engage the entire British fleet. This formed part of a larger strategy to break the British blockade of Germany and to allow German naval vessels access to the Atlantic. Meanwhile, Great Britain's Royal Navy pursued a strategy of engaging and destroying the High Seas Fleet, thereby keeping German naval forces contained and away from Britain and her shipping lanes.[7]

The Germans planned to use Vice-Admiral Franz Hipper's fast scouting group of five modern battlecruisers to lure Vice-Admiral Sir David Beatty's battlecruiser squadrons into the path of the main German fleet. They stationed submarines in advance across the likely routes of the British ships. However, the British learned from signal intercepts that a major fleet operation was likely, so on 30 May Jellicoe sailed with the Grand Fleet to rendezvous with Beatty, passing over the locations of the German submarine picket lines while they were unprepared. The German plan had been delayed, causing further problems for their submarines, which had reached the limit of their endurance at sea.

On the afternoon of 31 May, Beatty encountered Hipper's battlecruiser force long before the Germans had expected. In a running battle, Hipper successfully drew the British vanguard into the path of the High Seas Fleet. By the time Beatty sighted the larger force and turned back towards the British main fleet, he had lost two battlecruisers from a force of six battlecruisers and four powerful battleships—though he had sped ahead of his battleships of 5th Battle Squadron earlier in the day, effectively losing them as an integral component for much of this opening action against the five ships commanded by Hipper. Beatty's withdrawal at the sight of the High Seas Fleet, which the British had not known were in the open sea, would reverse the course of the battle by drawing the German fleet in pursuit towards the British Grand Fleet. Between 18:30, when the sun was lowering on the western horizon, back-lighting the German forces, and nightfall at about 20:30, the two fleets—totalling 250 ships between them—directly engaged twice.

Fourteen British and eleven German ships sank, with a total of 9,823 casualties. After sunset, and throughout the night, Jellicoe manoeuvred to cut the Germans off from their base, hoping to continue the battle the next morning, but under the cover of darkness Scheer broke through the British light forces forming the rearguard of the Grand Fleet and returned to port.[8]

Both sides claimed victory. The British lost more ships and twice as many sailors but succeeded in containing the German fleet. The British press criticised the Grand Fleet's failure to force a decisive outcome, while Scheer's plan of destroying a substantial portion of the British fleet also failed. The British strategy of denying Germany access to both the United Kingdom and the Atlantic did succeed, which was the British long-term goal.[9] The Germans' "fleet in being" continued to pose a threat, requiring the British to keep their battleships concentrated in the North Sea, but the battle reinforced the German policy of avoiding all fleet-to-fleet contact. At the end of 1916, after further unsuccessful attempts to reduce the Royal Navy's numerical advantage, the German Navy accepted that its surface ships had been successfully contained, subsequently turning its efforts and resources to unrestricted submarine warfare and the destruction of Allied and neutral shipping, which—along with the Zimmermann Telegram—by April 1917 triggered the United States of America's declaration of war on Germany.[10]

Subsequent reviews commissioned by the Royal Navy generated strong disagreement between supporters of Jellicoe and Beatty concerning the two admirals' performance in the battle. Debate over their performance and the significance of the battle continues to this day.

Background and planning

German planning

With 16 dreadnought-type battleships, compared with the Royal Navy's 28, the German High Seas Fleet stood little chance of winning a head-to-head clash. The Germans therefore adopted a divide-and-conquer strategy. They would stage raids into the North Sea and bombard the English coast, with the aim of luring out small British squadrons and pickets, which could then be destroyed by superior forces or submarines.

In January 1916, Admiral von Pohl, commander of the German fleet, fell ill. He was replaced by Scheer, who believed that the fleet had been used too defensively, had better ships and men than the British, and ought to take the war to them.[11] According to Scheer, the German naval strategy should be:

to damage the English fleet by offensive raids against the naval forces engaged in watching and blockading the German Bight, as well as by mine-laying on the British coast and submarine attack, whenever possible. After an equality of strength had been realised as a result of these operations, and all our forces had been made ready and concentrated, an attempt was to be made with our fleet to seek battle under circumstances unfavourable to the enemy.

 
Reinhard Scheer, German fleet commander

On 25 April 1916, a decision was made by the German Imperial Admiralty to halt indiscriminate attacks by submarines on merchant shipping. This followed protests from neutral countries, notably the United States, that their nationals had been the victims of attacks. Germany agreed that future attacks would only take place in accord with internationally agreed prize rules, which required an attacker to give a warning and allow the crews of vessels time to escape, and not to attack neutral vessels at all. Scheer believed that it would not be possible to continue attacks on these terms, which took away the advantage of secret approach by submarines and left them vulnerable to even relatively small guns on the target ships. Instead, he set about deploying the submarine fleet against military vessels.[12]

It was hoped that, following a successful German submarine attack, fast British escorts, such as destroyers, would be tied down by anti-submarine operations. If the Germans could catch the British in the expected locations, good prospects were thought to exist of at least partially redressing the balance of forces between the fleets. "After the British sortied in response to the raiding attack force", the Royal Navy's centuries-old instincts for aggressive action could be exploited to draw its weakened units towards the main German fleet under Scheer. The hope was that Scheer would thus be able to ambush a section of the British fleet and destroy it.[13]

Submarine deployments

A plan was devised to station submarines offshore from British naval bases, and then stage some action that would draw out the British ships to the waiting submarines. The battlecruiser SMS Seydlitz had been damaged in a previous engagement, but was due to be repaired by mid-May, so an operation was scheduled for 17 May 1916. At the start of May, difficulties with condensers were discovered on ships of the third battleship squadron, so the operation was put back to 23 May. Ten submarines—U-24, U-32, U-43, U-44, UC-47, U-51, U-52, U-63, U-66, and U-70—were given orders first to patrol in the central North Sea between 17 and 22 May, and then to take up waiting positions. U-43 and U-44 were stationed in the Pentland Firth, which the Grand Fleet was likely to cross when leaving Scapa Flow, while the remainder proceeded to the Firth of Forth, awaiting battlecruisers departing Rosyth. Each boat had an allocated area, within which it could move around as necessary to avoid detection, but was instructed to keep within it. During the initial North Sea patrol the boats were instructed to sail only north–south so that any enemy who chanced to encounter one would believe it was departing or returning from operations on the west coast (which required them to pass around the north of Britain). Once at their final positions, the boats were under strict orders to avoid premature detection that might give away the operation. It was arranged that a coded signal would be transmitted to alert the submarines exactly when the operation commenced: "Take into account the enemy's forces may be putting to sea".[14]

Additionally, UB-27 was sent out on 20 May with instructions to work its way into the Firth of Forth past May Island. U-46 was ordered to patrol the coast of Sunderland, which had been chosen for the diversionary attack, but because of engine problems it was unable to leave port and U-47 was diverted to this task. On 13 May, U-72 was sent to lay mines in the Firth of Forth; on the 23rd, U-74 departed to lay mines in the Moray Firth; and on the 24th, U-75 was dispatched similarly west of the Orkney Islands. UB-21 and UB-22 were sent to patrol the Humber, where (incorrect) reports had suggested the presence of British warships. U-22, U-46 and U-67 were positioned north of Terschelling to protect against intervention by British light forces stationed at Harwich.[15]

On 22 May 1916, it was discovered that Seydlitz was still not watertight after repairs and would not now be ready until the 29th. The ambush submarines were now on station and experiencing difficulties of their own: visibility near the coast was frequently poor due to fog, and sea conditions were either so calm the slightest ripple, as from the periscope, could give away their position, or so rough as to make it very hard to keep the vessel at a steady depth. The British had become aware of unusual submarine activity, and had begun counter-patrols that forced the submarines out of position. UB-27 passed Bell Rock on the night of 23 May on its way into the Firth of Forth as planned, but was halted by engine trouble. After repairs it continued to approach, following behind merchant vessels, and reached Largo Bay on 25 May. There the boat became entangled in nets that fouled one of the propellers, forcing it to abandon the operation and return home. U-74 was detected by four armed trawlers on 27 May and sunk 25 mi (22 nmi; 40 km) south-east of Peterhead. U-75 laid its mines off the Orkney Islands, which, although they played no part in the battle, were responsible later for sinking the cruiser Hampshire carrying Lord Kitchener, the Secretary of State for War on 5 June, killing him and all but 12 of the crew. U-72 was forced to abandon its mission without laying any mines when an oil leak meant it was leaving a visible surface trail astern.[16]

Zeppelins

 
The throat of the Skagerrak, the strategic gateway to the Baltic and North Atlantic, waters off Jutland, Norway and Sweden

The Germans maintained a fleet of Zeppelins that they used for aerial reconnaissance and occasional bombing raids. The planned raid on Sunderland intended to use Zeppelins to watch out for the British fleet approaching from the north, which might otherwise surprise the raiders.[17]

By 28 May, strong north-easterly winds meant that it would not be possible to send out the Zeppelins, so the raid again had to be postponed. The submarines could only stay on station until 1 June before their supplies would be exhausted and they had to return, so a decision had to be made quickly about the raid.[18]

It was decided to use an alternative plan, abandoning the attack on Sunderland but instead sending a patrol of battlecruisers to the Skagerrak, where it was likely they would encounter merchant ships carrying British cargo and British cruiser patrols. It was felt this could be done without air support, because the action would now be much closer to Germany, relying instead on cruiser and torpedo boat patrols for reconnaissance.[19]

Orders for the alternative plan were issued on 28 May, although it was still hoped that last-minute improvements in the weather would allow the original plan to go ahead. The German fleet assembled in the Jade River and at Wilhelmshaven and was instructed to raise steam and be ready for action from midnight on 28 May.[20]

By 14:00 on 30 May, the wind was still too strong and the final decision was made to use the alternative plan. The coded signal "31 May G.G.2490" was transmitted to the ships of the fleet to inform them the Skagerrak attack would start on 31 May. The pre-arranged signal to the waiting submarines was transmitted throughout the day from the E-Dienst radio station at Bruges, and the U-boat tender Arcona anchored at Emden. Only two of the waiting submarines, U-66 and U-32, received the order.[21]

British response

Unfortunately for the German plan, the British had obtained a copy of the main German codebook from the light cruiser SMS Magdeburg, which had been boarded by the Russian Navy after the ship ran aground in Russian territorial waters in 1914. German naval radio communications could therefore often be quickly deciphered, and the British Admiralty usually knew about German activities.

The British Admiralty's Room 40 maintained direction finding and interception of German naval signals. It had intercepted and decrypted a German signal on 28 May that provided "ample evidence that the German fleet was stirring in the North Sea".[22] Further signals were intercepted, and although they were not decrypted it was clear that a major operation was likely. At 11:00 on 30 May, Jellicoe was warned that the German fleet seemed prepared to sail the following morning. By 17:00, the Admiralty had intercepted the signal from Scheer, "31 May G.G.2490", making it clear something significant was imminent.[23]

Not knowing the Germans' objective, Jellicoe and his staff decided to position the fleet to head off any attempt by the Germans to enter the North Atlantic or the Baltic through the Skagerrak, by taking up a position off Norway where they could potentially cut off any German raid into the shipping lanes of the Atlantic or prevent the Germans from heading into the Baltic. A position further west was unnecessary, as that area of the North Sea could be patrolled by air using aircraft.[citation needed]

 
John Jellicoe, British fleet commander

Consequently, Admiral Jellicoe led the sixteen dreadnought battleships of the 1st and 4th Battle Squadrons of the Grand Fleet and three battlecruisers of the 3rd Battlecruiser Squadron eastwards out of Scapa Flow at 22:30 on 30 May. He was to meet the 2nd Battle Squadron of eight dreadnought battleships commanded by Vice-Admiral Martyn Jerram coming from Cromarty. Beatty's force of six ships of the 1st and 2nd Battlecruiser Squadrons plus the 5th Battle Squadron of four fast battleships left the Firth of Forth at around the same time;[24] Jellicoe intended to rendezvous with him 90 mi (78 nmi; 140 km) west of the mouth of the Skagerrak off the coast of Jutland and wait for the Germans to appear or for their intentions to become clear. The planned position would give him the widest range of responses to likely German moves.[25] Hipper's raiding force did not leave the Outer Jade Roads until 01:00 on 31 May, heading west of Heligoland Island following a cleared channel through the minefields, heading north at 16 knots (30 km/h; 18 mph). The main German fleet of sixteen dreadnought battleships of 1st and 3rd Battle Squadrons left the Jade at 02:30, being joined off Heligoland at 04:00 by the six pre-dreadnoughts of the 2nd Battle Squadron coming from the Elbe River.

Naval tactics in 1916

The principle of concentration of force was fundamental to the fleet tactics of this time. As outlined by Captain Reginald Hall in 1914, tactical doctrine called for a fleet approaching battle to be in a compact formation of parallel columns, allowing relatively easy manoeuvring, and giving shortened sight lines within the formation, which simplified the passing of the signals necessary for command and control.[26]

A fleet formed in several short columns could change its heading faster than one formed in a single long column. Since most command signals were made with flags or signal lamps between ships, the flagship was usually placed at the head of the centre column so that its signals might be more easily seen by the many ships of the formation. Wireless telegraphy was in use, though security (radio direction finding), encryption, and the limitation of the radio sets made their extensive use more problematic. Command and control of such huge fleets remained difficult.[26][27]

Thus, it might take a very long time for a signal from the flagship to be relayed to the entire formation. It was usually necessary for a signal to be confirmed by each ship before it could be relayed to other ships, and an order for a fleet movement would have to be received and acknowledged by every ship before it could be executed. In a large single-column formation, a signal could take 10 minutes or more to be passed from one end of the line to the other, whereas in a formation of parallel columns, visibility across the diagonals was often better (and always shorter) than in a single long column, and the diagonals gave signal "redundancy", increasing the probability that a message would be quickly seen and correctly interpreted.[26]

However, before battle was joined the heavy units of the fleet would, if possible, deploy into a single column. To form the battle line in the correct orientation relative to the enemy, the commanding admiral had to know the enemy fleet's distance, bearing, heading, and speed. It was the task of the scouting forces, consisting primarily of battlecruisers and cruisers, to find the enemy and report this information in sufficient time, and, if possible, to deny the enemy's scouting forces the opportunity of obtaining the equivalent information.[26]

Ideally, the battle line would cross the intended path of the enemy column so that the maximum number of guns could be brought to bear, while the enemy could fire only with the forward guns of the leading ships, a manoeuvre known as "crossing the T". Admiral Tōgō, commander of the Japanese battleship fleet, had achieved this against Admiral Zinovy Rozhestvensky's Russian battleships in 1905 at the Battle of Tsushima, with devastating results.[28] Jellicoe achieved this twice in one hour against the High Seas Fleet at Jutland, but on both occasions, Scheer managed to turn away and disengage, thereby avoiding a decisive action.

Ship design

Within the existing technological limits, a trade-off had to be made between the weight and size of guns, the weight of armour protecting the ship, and the maximum speed. Battleships sacrificed speed for armour and heavy naval guns (11 in (280 mm) or larger). British battlecruisers sacrificed weight of armour for greater speed, while their German counterparts were armed with lighter guns and heavier armour. These weight savings allowed them to escape danger or catch other ships. Generally, the larger guns mounted on British ships allowed an engagement at greater range. In theory, a lightly armoured ship could stay out of range of a slower opponent while still scoring hits. The fast pace of development in the pre-war years meant that every few years, a new generation of ships rendered its predecessors obsolete. Thus, fairly young ships could still be obsolete compared with the newest ships, and fare badly in an engagement against them.[29]

Admiral John Fisher, responsible for reconstruction of the British fleet in the pre-war period, favoured large guns, oil fuel, and speed. Admiral Tirpitz, responsible for the German fleet, favoured ship survivability and chose to sacrifice some gun size for improved armour. The German battlecruiser SMS Derfflinger had belt armour equivalent in thickness—though not as comprehensive—to the British battleship HMS Iron Duke, significantly better than on the British battlecruisers such as Tiger. German ships had better internal subdivision and had fewer doors and other weak points in their bulkheads, but with the disadvantage that space for crew was greatly reduced.[29] As they were designed only for sorties in the North Sea they did not need to be as habitable as the British vessels and their crews could live in barracks ashore when in harbour.[30]

Order of battle

British German
Dreadnought
battleships
28 16
Pre-dreadnoughts 0 6
Battlecruisers 9 5
Armoured cruisers 8 0
Light cruisers 26 11
Destroyers 79 61
Seaplane carrier 1 0

Warships of the period were armed with guns firing projectiles of varying weights, bearing high explosive warheads. The sum total of weight of all the projectiles fired by all the ship's broadside guns is referred to as "weight of broadside". At Jutland, the total of the British ships' weight of broadside was 332,360 lb (150,760 kg), while the German fleet's total was 134,216 lb (60,879 kg).[31] This does not take into consideration the ability of some ships and their crews to fire more or less rapidly than others, which would increase or decrease amount of fire that one combatant was able to bring to bear on their opponent for any length of time.

Jellicoe's Grand Fleet was split into two sections. The dreadnought Battle Fleet, with which he sailed, formed the main force and was composed of 24 battleships and three battlecruisers. The battleships were formed into three squadrons of eight ships, further subdivided into divisions of four, each led by a flag officer. Accompanying them were eight armoured cruisers (classified by the Royal Navy since 1913 as "cruisers"), eight light cruisers, four scout cruisers, 51 destroyers, and one destroyer-minelayer.[32]

 
David Beatty, commander of the British battlecruiser fleet

The Grand Fleet sailed without three of its battleships: Emperor of India in refit at Invergordon, Queen Elizabeth dry-docked at Rosyth and Dreadnought in refit at Devonport. The brand new Royal Sovereign was left behind; with only three weeks in service, her untrained crew was judged unready for battle. HMS Audacious had been sunk by a German mine on 27 October 1914.[33]

British reconnaissance was provided by the Battlecruiser Fleet under David Beatty: six battlecruisers, four fast Queen Elizabeth-class battleships, 14 light cruisers and 27 destroyers. Air scouting was provided by the attachment of the seaplane tender HMS Engadine, one of the first aircraft carriers in history to participate in a naval engagement.[34]

The German High Seas Fleet under Scheer was also split into a main force and a separate reconnaissance force. Scheer's main battle fleet was composed of 16 battleships and six pre-dreadnought battleships arranged in an identical manner to the British. With them were six light cruisers and 31 torpedo-boats, (the latter being roughly equivalent to a British destroyer). The only German battleship missing was SMS König Albert.

 
Franz Hipper, commander of the German battlecruiser squadron

The German scouting force, commanded by Franz Hipper, consisted of five battlecruisers, five light cruisers and 30 torpedo-boats. The Germans had no equivalent to Engadine and no heavier-than-air aircraft to operate with the fleet but had the Imperial German Naval Airship Service's force of rigid airships available to patrol the North Sea.[citation needed]

All of the battleships and battlecruisers on both sides carried torpedoes of various sizes, as did the lighter craft.[34] The British battleships carried three or four underwater torpedo tubes. The battlecruisers carried from two to five. All were either 18-inch or 21-inch diameter. The German battleships carried five or six underwater torpedo tubes in three sizes from 18 to 21 inch and the battlecruisers carried four or five tubes.[citation needed]

The German battle fleet was hampered by the slow speed and relatively poor armament of the six pre-dreadnoughts of II Squadron, which limited maximum fleet speed to 18 knots (33 km/h; 21 mph), compared to maximum British fleet speed of 21 knots (39 km/h; 24 mph).[35] On the British side, the eight armoured cruisers were deficient in both speed and armour protection.[36] Both of these obsolete squadrons were notably vulnerable to attacks by more modern enemy ships.[citation needed]

Battlecruiser action

The route of the British battlecruiser fleet took it through the patrol sector allocated to U-32. After receiving the order to commence the operation, the U-boat moved to a position 80 mi (70 nmi; 130 km) east of the Isle of May at dawn on 31 May. At 03:40, it sighted the cruisers HMS Galatea and Phaeton leaving the Forth at 18 knots (33 km/h; 21 mph). It launched one torpedo at the leading cruiser at a range of 1,000 yd (910 m), but its periscope jammed 'up', giving away the position of the submarine as it manoeuvred to fire a second. The lead cruiser turned away to dodge the torpedo, while the second turned towards the submarine, attempting to ram. U-32 crash dived, and on raising its periscope at 04:10 saw two battlecruisers (the 2nd Battlecruiser Squadron) heading south-east. They were too far away to attack, but Kapitänleutnant von Spiegel reported the sighting of two battleships and two cruisers to Germany.[37]

U-66 was also supposed to be patrolling off the Firth of Forth but had been forced north to a position 60 mi (52 nmi; 97 km) off Peterhead by patrolling British vessels. This now brought it into contact with the 2nd Battle Squadron, coming from the Moray Firth. At 05:00, it had to crash dive when the cruiser Duke of Edinburgh appeared from the mist heading toward it. It was followed by another cruiser, Boadicea, and eight battleships. U-66 got within 350 yd (320 m) of the battleships preparing to fire, but was forced to dive by an approaching destroyer and missed the opportunity. At 06:35, it reported eight battleships and cruisers heading north.[38]

The courses reported by both submarines were incorrect, because they reflected one leg of a zigzag being used by British ships to avoid submarines. Taken with a wireless intercept of more ships leaving Scapa Flow earlier in the night, they created the impression in the German High Command that the British fleet, whatever it was doing, was split into separate sections moving apart, which was precisely as the Germans wished to meet it.[39]

Jellicoe's ships proceeded to their rendezvous undamaged and undiscovered. However, he was now misled by an Admiralty intelligence report advising that the German main battle fleet was still in port.[40] The Director of Operations Division, Rear Admiral Thomas Jackson, had asked the intelligence division, Room 40, for the current location of German call sign DK, used by Admiral Scheer. They had replied that it was currently transmitting from Wilhelmshaven. It was known to the intelligence staff that Scheer deliberately used a different call sign when at sea, but no one asked for this information or explained the reason behind the query – to locate the German fleet.[41]

The German battlecruisers cleared the minefields surrounding the Amrum swept channel by 09:00. They then proceeded north-west, passing 35 mi (30 nmi; 56 km) west of the Horn's Reef lightship heading for the Little Fisher Bank at the mouth of the Skagerrak. The High Seas Fleet followed some 50 mi (43 nmi; 80 km) behind. The battlecruisers were in line ahead, with the four cruisers of the II scouting group plus supporting torpedo boats ranged in an arc 8 mi (7.0 nmi; 13 km) ahead and to either side. The IX torpedo boat flotilla formed close support immediately surrounding the battlecruisers. The High Seas Fleet similarly adopted a line-ahead formation, with close screening by torpedo boats to either side and a further screen of five cruisers surrounding the column 5–8 mi (4.3–7.0 nmi; 8.0–12.9 km) away. The wind had finally moderated so that Zeppelins could be used, and by 11:30 five had been sent out: L14 to the Skagerrak, L23 240 mi (210 nmi; 390 km) east of Noss Head in the Pentland Firth, L21 120 mi (100 nmi; 190 km) off Peterhead, L9 100 mi (87 nmi; 160 km) off Sunderland, and L16 80 mi (70 nmi; 130 km) east of Flamborough Head. Visibility, however, was still bad, with clouds down to 1,000 ft (300 m).[42]

Contact

 
HMS Warspite and Malaya, seen from HMS Valiant at around 14:00 hrs

By around 14:00, Beatty's ships were proceeding eastward at roughly the same latitude as Hipper's squadron, which was heading north. Had the courses remained unchanged, Beatty would have passed between the two German fleets, 40 mi (35 nmi; 64 km) south of the battlecruisers and 20 mi (17 nmi; 32 km) north of the High Seas Fleet at around 16:30, possibly trapping his ships just as the German plan envisioned. His orders were to stop his scouting patrol when he reached a point 260 mi (230 nmi; 420 km) east of Britain and then turn north to meet Jellicoe, which he did at this time. Beatty's ships were divided into three columns, with the two battlecruiser squadrons leading in parallel lines 3 mi (2.6 nmi; 4.8 km) apart. The 5th Battle Squadron was stationed 5 mi (4.3 nmi; 8.0 km) to the north-west, on the side furthest away from any expected enemy contact, while a screen of cruisers and destroyers was spread south-east of the battlecruisers. After the turn, the 5th Battle Squadron was now leading the British ships in the westernmost column, and Beatty's squadron was centre and rearmost, with the 2nd BCS to the west.[43]

 
(1) 15:22 hrs, Hipper sights Beatty.
(2) 15:48 hrs, First shots fired by Hipper's squadron.
(3) 16:00 hrs-16:05 hrs, Indefatigable explodes, leaving two survivors.
(4) 16:25 hrs, Queen Mary explodes, nine survive.
(5) 16:45 hrs, Beatty's battlecruisers move out of range of Hipper.
(6) 16:54 hrs, Evan-Thomas's battleships turn north behind Beatty.

At 14:20 on 31 May, despite heavy haze and scuds of fog giving poor visibility,[44] scouts from Beatty's force reported enemy ships to the south-east; the British light units, investigating a neutral Danish steamer (N J Fjord), which was stopped between the two fleets, had found two German destroyers engaged on the same mission (B109 and B110). The first shots of the battle were fired at 14:28 when Galatea and Phaeton of the British 1st Light Cruiser Squadron opened on the German torpedo boats, which withdrew toward their approaching light cruisers. At 14:36, the Germans scored the first hit of the battle when SMS Elbing, of Rear-Admiral Friedrich Boedicker's Scouting Group II, hit her British counterpart Galatea at extreme range.[45]

Beatty began to move his battlecruisers and supporting forces south-eastwards and then east to cut the German ships off from their base and ordered Engadine to launch a seaplane to try to get more information about the size and location of the German forces. This was the first time in history that a carrier-based aeroplane was used for reconnaissance in naval combat. Engadine's aircraft did locate and report some German light cruisers just before 15:30 and came under anti-aircraft gunfire but attempts to relay reports from the aeroplane failed.[46]

Unfortunately for Beatty, his initial course changes at 14:32 were not received by Sir Hugh Evan-Thomas's 5th Battle Squadron (the distance being too great to read his flags), because the battlecruiser HMS Tiger—the last ship in his column—was no longer in a position where she could relay signals by searchlight to Evan-Thomas, as she had previously been ordered to do. Whereas before the north turn, Tiger had been the closest ship to Evan-Thomas, she was now further away than Beatty in Lion. Matters were aggravated because Evan-Thomas had not been briefed regarding standing orders within Beatty's squadron, as his squadron normally operated with the Grand Fleet. Fleet ships were expected to obey movement orders precisely and not deviate from them. Beatty's standing instructions expected his officers to use their initiative and keep station with the flagship.[47] As a result, the four Queen Elizabeth-class battleships—which were the fastest and most heavily armed in the world at that time—remained on the previous course for several minutes, ending up 10 mi (8.7 nmi; 16 km) behind rather than five.[48] Beatty also had the opportunity during the previous hours to concentrate his forces, and no reason not to do so, whereas he steamed ahead at full speed, faster than the battleships could manage. Dividing the force had serious consequences for the British, costing them what would have been an overwhelming advantage in ships and firepower during the first half-hour of the coming battle.[46]

With visibility favouring the Germans, Hipper's battlecruisers at 15:22, steaming approximately north-west, sighted Beatty's squadron at a range of about 15 mi (13 nmi; 24 km), while Beatty's forces did not identify Hipper's battlecruisers until 15:30. (position 1 on map). At 15:45, Hipper turned south-east to lead Beatty toward Scheer, who was 46 mi (40 nmi; 74 km) south-east with the main force of the High Seas Fleet.[49]

Run to the south

Beatty's conduct during the next 15 minutes has received a great deal of criticism, as his ships out-ranged and outnumbered the German squadron, yet he held his fire for over 10 minutes with the German ships in range. He also failed to use the time available to rearrange his battlecruisers into a fighting formation, with the result that they were still manoeuvring when the battle started.[50]

At 15:48, with the opposing forces roughly parallel at 15,000 yd (14,000 m), with the British to the south-west of the Germans (i.e., on the right side), Hipper opened fire, followed by the British ships as their guns came to bear upon targets (position 2). Thus began the opening phase of the battlecruiser action, known as the Run to the South, in which the British chased the Germans, and Hipper intentionally led Beatty toward Scheer. During the first minutes of the ensuing battle, all the British ships except Princess Royal fired far over their German opponents, due to adverse visibility conditions, before finally getting the range. Only Lion and Princess Royal had settled into formation, so the other four ships were hampered in aiming by their own turning. Beatty was to windward of Hipper, and therefore funnel and gun smoke from his own ships tended to obscure his targets, while Hipper's smoke blew clear. Also, the eastern sky was overcast and the grey German ships were indistinct and difficult to range.[51]

 
Beatty's flagship HMS Lion burning after being hit by a salvo from SMS Lützow
 
HMS Indefatigable sinking after being struck by shells from SMS Von der Tann

Beatty had ordered his ships to engage in a line, one British ship engaging with one German and his flagship HMS Lion doubling on the German flagship SMS Lützow. However, due to another mistake with signalling by flag, and possibly because Queen Mary and Tiger were unable to see the German lead ship because of smoke,[52] the second German ship, Derfflinger, was left un-engaged and free to fire without disruption. SMS Moltke drew fire from two of Beatty's battlecruisers, but still fired with great accuracy during this time, hitting Tiger 9 times in the first 12 minutes. The Germans drew first blood. Aided by superior visibility, Hipper's five battlecruisers quickly registered hits on three of the six British battlecruisers. Seven minutes passed before the British managed to score their first hit.[53]

The first near-kill of the Run to the South occurred at 16:00, when a 30.5 cm (12.0 in) shell from Lützow wrecked the "Q" turret amidships on Beatty's flagship Lion. Dozens of crewmen were instantly killed, but far larger destruction was averted when the mortally wounded turret commander – Major Francis Harvey of the Royal Marines – promptly ordered the magazine doors shut and the magazine flooded. This prevented a magazine explosion at 16:28, when a flash fire ignited ready cordite charges beneath the turret and killed everyone in the chambers outside "Q" magazine. Lion was saved.[54] HMS Indefatigable was not so lucky; at 16:02, just 14 minutes into the gunnery exchange, she was hit aft by three 28 cm (11 in) shells from SMS Von der Tann, causing damage sufficient to knock her out of line and detonating "X" magazine aft. Soon after, despite the near-maximum range, Von der Tann put another 28 cm (11 in) shell on Indefatigable's "A" turret forward. The plunging shells probably pierced the thin upper armour, and seconds later Indefatigable was ripped apart by another magazine explosion, sinking immediately and leaving only two survivors from her crew of 1,019 officers and men.[55] (position 3).

Hipper's position deteriorated somewhat by 16:15 as the 5th Battle Squadron finally came into range, so that he had to contend with gunfire from the four battleships astern as well as Beatty's five remaining battlecruisers to starboard. But he knew his baiting mission was close to completion, as his force was rapidly closing with Scheer's main body. At 16:08, the lead battleship of the 5th Battle Squadron, HMS Barham, caught up with Hipper and opened fire at extreme range, scoring a 15 in (380 mm) hit on Von der Tann within 60 seconds. Still, it was 16:15 before all the battleships of the 5th were able to fully engage at long range.[56]

At 16:25, the battlecruiser action intensified again when HMS Queen Mary was hit by what may have been a combined salvo from Derfflinger and Seydlitz; she disintegrated when both forward magazines exploded, sinking with all but nine of her 1,275 man crew lost.[57] (position 4). Commander von Hase, the first gunnery officer aboard Derfflinger, noted:

The enemy was shooting superbly. Twice the Derfflinger came under their infernal hail and each time she was hit. But the Queen Mary was having a bad time; engaged by the Seydlitz as well as the Derfflinger, she met her doom at 1626. A vivid red flame shot up from her forepart; then came an explosion forward, followed by a much heavier explosion amidships. Immediately afterwards, she blew up with a terrific explosion, the masts collapsing inwards and the smoke hiding everything.[58]

 
HMS Queen Mary blowing up

During the Run to the South, from 15:48 to 16:54, the German battlecruisers made an estimated total of forty-two 28 and 30.5 cm (11.0 and 12.0 in) hits on the British battlecruisers (nine on Lion, six on Princess Royal, seven on Queen Mary, 14 on Tiger, one on New Zealand, five on Indefatigable), and two more on the battleship Barham, compared with only eleven 13.5 in (340 mm) hits by the British battlecruisers (four on Lützow, four on Seydlitz, two on Moltke, one on von der Tann), and six 15 in (380 mm) hits by the battleships (one on Seydlitz, four on Moltke, one on von der Tann).[59]

Shortly after 16:26, a salvo struck on or around HMS Princess Royal, which was obscured by spray and smoke from shell bursts. A signalman promptly leapt on to the bridge of Lion and announced "Princess Royal's blown up, Sir." Beatty famously turned to his flag captain, saying "Chatfield, there seems to be something wrong with our bloody ships today." (In popular legend, Beatty also immediately ordered his ships to "turn two points to port", i.e., two points nearer the enemy, but there is no official record of any such command or course change.)[60] Princess Royal, as it turned out, was still afloat after the spray cleared.

At 16:30, Scheer's leading battleships sighted the distant battlecruiser action; soon after, HMS Southampton of Beatty's 2nd Light Cruiser Squadron led by Commodore William Goodenough sighted the main body of Scheer's High Seas Fleet, dodging numerous heavy-calibre salvos to report in detail the German strength: 16 dreadnoughts with six older battleships. This was the first news that Beatty and Jellicoe had that Scheer and his battle fleet were even at sea. Simultaneously, an all-out destroyer action raged in the space between the opposing battlecruiser forces, as British and German destroyers fought with each other and attempted to torpedo the larger enemy ships. Each side fired many torpedoes, but both battlecruiser forces turned away from the attacks and all escaped harm except Seydlitz, which was hit forward at 16:57 by a torpedo fired by the British destroyer HMS Petard. Though taking on water, Seydlitz maintained speed. The destroyer HMS Nestor, under the command of Captain Barry Bingham, led the British attacks. The British disabled the German torpedo boat V27, which the Germans soon abandoned and sank, and Petard then torpedoed and sank V29, her second score of the day. S35 and V26 rescued the crews of their sunken sister ships. But Nestor and another British destroyer – HMS Nomad – were immobilised by shell hits, and were later sunk by Scheer's passing dreadnoughts. Bingham was rescued, and awarded the Victoria Cross for his leadership in the destroyer action.[61]

Run to the north

As soon as he himself sighted the vanguard of Scheer's distant battleship line 12 mi (10 nmi; 19 km) away, at 16:40, Beatty turned his battlecruiser force 180°, heading north to draw the Germans toward Jellicoe.[62] (position 5). Beatty's withdrawal toward Jellicoe is called the "Run to the North", in which the tables turned and the Germans chased the British. Because Beatty once again failed to signal his intentions adequately, the battleships of the 5th Battle Squadron – which were too far behind to read his flags – found themselves passing the battlecruisers on an opposing course and heading directly toward the approaching main body of the High Seas Fleet. At 16:48, at extreme range, Scheer's leading battleships opened fire.[63]

Meanwhile, at 16:47, having received Goodenough's signal and knowing that Beatty was now leading the German battle fleet north to him, Jellicoe signalled to his own forces that the fleet action they had waited so long for was finally imminent; at 16:51, by radio, he informed the Admiralty so in London.[64]

The difficulties of the 5th Battle Squadron were compounded when Beatty gave the order to Evan-Thomas to "turn in succession" (rather than "turn together") at 16:48 as the battleships passed him. Evan-Thomas acknowledged the signal, but Lieutenant-Commander Ralph Seymour, Beatty's flag lieutenant, aggravated the situation when he did not haul down the flags (to execute the signal) for some minutes. At 16:55, when the 5BS had moved within range of the enemy battleships, Evan-Thomas issued his own flag command warning his squadron to expect sudden manoeuvres and to follow his lead, before starting to turn on his own initiative. The order to turn in succession would have resulted in all four ships turning in the same patch of sea as they reached it one by one, giving the High Seas Fleet repeated opportunity with ample time to find the proper range. However, the captain of the trailing ship (HMS Malaya) turned early, mitigating the adverse results.[63][65]

For the next hour, the 5th Battle Squadron acted as Beatty's rearguard, drawing fire from all the German ships within range, while by 17:10 Beatty had deliberately eased his own squadron out of range of Hipper's now-superior battlecruiser force.[66] Since visibility and firepower now favoured the Germans, there was no incentive for Beatty to risk further battlecruiser losses when his own gunnery could not be effective. Illustrating the imbalance, Beatty's battlecruisers did not score any hits on the Germans in this phase until 17:45,[67] but they had rapidly received five more before he opened the range (four on Lion, of which three were by Lützow, and one on Tiger by Seydlitz).[68] Now the only targets the Germans could reach, the ships of the 5th Battle Squadron, received simultaneous fire from Hipper's battlecruisers to the east (which HMS Barham and Valiant engaged) and Scheer's leading battleships to the south-east (which HMS Warspite and Malaya engaged).[69] Three took hits: Barham (four by Derfflinger), Warspite (two by Seydlitz), and Malaya (seven by the German battleships). Only Valiant was unscathed.[70]

The four battleships were far better suited to take this sort of pounding than the battlecruisers, and none were lost, though Malaya suffered heavy damage, an ammunition fire, and heavy crew casualties. At the same time, the 15 in (380 mm) fire of the four British ships was accurate and effective. As the two British squadrons headed north at top speed, eagerly chased by the entire German fleet, the 5th Battle Squadron scored 13 hits on the enemy battlecruisers (four on Lützow, three on Derfflinger, six on Seydlitz) and five on battleships (although only one, on SMS Markgraf, did any serious damage).[71] (position 6).

The fleets converge

Jellicoe was now aware that full fleet engagement was nearing, but had insufficient information on the position and course of the Germans. To assist Beatty, early in the battle at about 16:05, Jellicoe had ordered Rear-Admiral Horace Hood's 3rd Battlecruiser Squadron to speed ahead to find and support Beatty's force, and Hood was now racing SSE well in advance of Jellicoe's northern force.[72] Rear-Admiral Arbuthnot's 1st Cruiser Squadron patrolled the van of Jellicoe's main battleship force as it advanced steadily to the south-east.

At 17:33, the armoured cruiser HMS Black Prince of Arbuthnot's squadron, on the far southwest flank of Jellicoe's force, came within view of HMS Falmouth, which was about 5 mi (4.3 nmi; 8.0 km) ahead of Beatty with the 3rd Light Cruiser Squadron, establishing the first visual link between the converging bodies of the Grand Fleet.[73] At 17:38, the scout cruiser HMS Chester, screening Hood's oncoming battlecruisers, was intercepted by the van of the German scouting forces under Rear-Admiral Boedicker.[74]

Heavily outnumbered by Boedicker's four light cruisers, Chester was pounded before being relieved by Hood's heavy units, which swung westward for that purpose. Hood's flagship HMS Invincible disabled the light cruiser SMS Wiesbaden shortly after 17:56. Wiesbaden became a sitting target for most of the British fleet during the next hour, but remained afloat and fired some torpedoes at the passing enemy battleships from long range. Meanwhile, Boedicker's other ships turned toward Hipper and Scheer in the mistaken belief that Hood was leading a larger force of British capital ships from the north and east. A chaotic destroyer action in mist and smoke ensued as German torpedo boats attempted to blunt the arrival of this new formation, but Hood's battlecruisers dodged all the torpedoes fired at them. In this action, after leading a torpedo counter-attack, the British destroyer HMS Shark was disabled, but continued to return fire at numerous passing enemy ships for the next hour.[75]

Fleet action

Deployment

 
(1) 18:00 Scouting forces rejoin their respective fleets.
(2) 18:15 British fleet deploys into battle line
(3) 18:30 German fleet under fire turns away
(4) 19:00 German fleet turns back
(5) 19:15 German fleet turns away for second time
(6) 20:00
(7) 21:00 Nightfall: Jellicoe assumes night cruising formation

In the meantime, Beatty and Evan-Thomas had resumed their engagement with Hipper's battlecruisers, this time with the visual conditions to their advantage. With several of his ships damaged, Hipper turned back toward Scheer at around 18:00, just as Beatty's flagship Lion was finally sighted from Jellicoe's flagship Iron Duke. Jellicoe twice demanded the latest position of the German battlefleet from Beatty, who could not see the German battleships and failed to respond to the question until 18:14. Meanwhile, Jellicoe received confused sighting reports of varying accuracy and limited usefulness from light cruisers and battleships on the starboard (southern) flank of his force.[76]

Jellicoe was in a worrying position. He needed to know the location of the German fleet to judge when and how to deploy his battleships from their cruising formation (six columns of four ships each) into a single battle line. The deployment could be on either the westernmost or the easternmost column, and had to be carried out before the Germans arrived; but early deployment could mean losing any chance of a decisive encounter. Deploying to the west would bring his fleet closer to Scheer, gaining valuable time as dusk approached, but the Germans might arrive before the manoeuvre was complete. Deploying to the east would take the force away from Scheer, but Jellicoe's ships might be able to cross the "T", and visibility would strongly favour British gunnery – Scheer's forces would be silhouetted against the setting sun to the west, while the Grand Fleet would be indistinct against the dark skies to the north and east, and would be hidden by reflection of the low sunlight off intervening haze and smoke. Deployment would take twenty irreplaceable minutes, and the fleets were closing at full speed. In one of the most critical and difficult tactical command decisions of the entire war, Jellicoe ordered deployment to the east at 18:15.[76][77]

Windy Corner

Meanwhile, Hipper had rejoined Scheer, and the combined High Seas Fleet was heading north, directly toward Jellicoe. Scheer had no indication that Jellicoe was at sea, let alone that he was bearing down from the north-west, and was distracted by the intervention of Hood's ships to his north and east. Beatty's four surviving battlecruisers were now crossing the van of the British dreadnoughts to join Hood's three battlecruisers; at this time, Arbuthnot's flagship, the armoured cruiser HMS Defence, and her squadron-mate HMS Warrior both charged across Beatty's bows, and Lion narrowly avoided a collision with Warrior.[78] Nearby, numerous British light cruisers and destroyers on the south-western flank of the deploying battleships were also crossing each other's courses in attempts to reach their proper stations, often barely escaping collisions, and under fire from some of the approaching German ships. This period of peril and heavy traffic attending the merger and deployment of the British forces later became known as "Windy Corner".[79]

Arbuthnot was attracted by the drifting hull of the crippled Wiesbaden. With Warrior, Defence closed in for the kill, only to blunder right into the gun sights of Hipper's and Scheer's oncoming capital ships. Defence was deluged by heavy-calibre gunfire from many German battleships, which detonated her magazines in a spectacular explosion viewed by most of the deploying Grand Fleet. She sank with all hands (903 officers and men). Warrior was also hit badly, but was spared destruction by a mishap to the nearby battleship Warspite. Warspite had her steering gear overheat and jam under heavy load at high speed as the 5th Battle Squadron made a turn to the north at 18:19.[80] Steaming at top speed in wide circles, Warspite attracted the attention of German dreadnoughts and took 13 hits, inadvertently drawing fire away from the hapless Warrior. Warspite was brought back under control and survived the onslaught, but was badly damaged, had to reduce speed, and withdrew northward; later (at 21:07), she was ordered back to port by Evan-Thomas.[81] Warspite went on to a long and illustrious career, serving also in World War II. Warrior, on the other hand, was abandoned and sank the next day after her crew was taken off at 08:25 on 1 June by Engadine, which towed the sinking armoured cruiser 100 mi (87 nmi; 160 km) during the night.[82]

 
Invincible blowing up after being struck by shells from Lützow and Derfflinger

As Defence sank and Warspite circled, at about 18:19, Hipper moved within range of Hood's 3rd Battlecruiser Squadron, but was still also within range of Beatty's ships. At first, visibility favoured the British: HMS Indomitable hit Derfflinger three times and Seydlitz once,[83] while Lützow quickly took 10 hits from Lion, Inflexible and Invincible, including two below-waterline hits forward by Invincible that would ultimately doom Hipper's flagship.[84] But at 18:30, Invincible abruptly appeared as a clear target before Lützow and Derfflinger. The two German ships then fired three salvoes each at Invincible, and sank her in 90 seconds. A 30.5 cm (12.0 in) shell from the third salvo struck Invincible's Q-turret amidships, detonating the magazines below and causing her to blow up and sink. All but six of her crew of 1,032 officers and men, including Rear-Admiral Hood, were killed.[85] Of the remaining British battlecruisers, only Princess Royal received heavy-calibre hits at this time (two 30.5 cm (12.0 in) by the battleship Markgraf). Lützow, flooding forward and unable to communicate by radio, was now out of action and began to attempt to withdraw; therefore Hipper left his flagship and transferred to the torpedo boat SMS G39, hoping to board one of the other battlecruisers later.

Crossing the T

By 18:30, the main battle fleet action was joined for the first time, with Jellicoe effectively "crossing Scheer's T". The officers on the lead German battleships, and Scheer himself, were taken completely by surprise when they emerged from drifting clouds of smoky mist to suddenly find themselves facing the massed firepower of the entire Grand Fleet main battle line, which they did not know was even at sea.[86] Jellicoe's flagship Iron Duke quickly scored seven hits on the lead German dreadnought, SMS König, but in this brief exchange, which lasted only minutes, as few as 10 of the Grand Fleet's 24 dreadnoughts actually opened fire.[87] The Germans were hampered by poor visibility, in addition to being in an unfavourable tactical position, just as Jellicoe had intended. Realising he was heading into a death trap, Scheer ordered his fleet to turn and disengage at 18:33. Under a pall of smoke and mist, Scheer's forces succeeded in disengaging by an expertly executed 180° turn in unison ("battle about turn to starboard", German Gefechtskehrtwendung nach Steuerbord), which was a well-practised emergency manoeuvre of the High Seas Fleet.[88] Scheer declared:

It was now obvious that we were confronted by a large portion of the English fleet. The entire arc stretching from north to east was a sea of fire. The flash from the muzzles of the guns was seen distinctly through the mist and smoke on the horizon, although the ships themselves were not distinguishable.[86]

Conscious of the risks to his capital ships posed by torpedoes, Jellicoe did not chase directly but headed south, determined to keep the High Seas Fleet west of him. Starting at 18:40, battleships at the rear of Jellicoe's line were in fact sighting and avoiding torpedoes, and at 18:54 HMS Marlborough was hit by a torpedo (probably from the disabled Wiesbaden), which reduced her speed to 16 knots (30 km/h; 18 mph).[89] Meanwhile, Scheer, knowing that it was not yet dark enough to escape and that his fleet would suffer terribly in a stern chase, doubled back to the east at 18:55. In his memoirs he wrote, "the manoeuvre would be bound to surprise the enemy, to upset his plans for the rest of the day, and if the blow fell heavily it would facilitate the breaking loose at night." But the turn to the east took his ships, again, directly towards Jellicoe's fully deployed battle line.[90]

Simultaneously, the disabled British destroyer HMS Shark fought desperately against a group of four German torpedo boats and disabled V48 with gunfire, but was eventually torpedoed and sunk at 19:02 by the German destroyer S54. Shark's Captain Loftus Jones was awarded the Victoria Cross for his heroism in continuing to fight against all odds.[91]

Turn Of The Battle

 
HMS Birmingham under fire

Commodore Goodenough's 2nd Light Cruiser Squadron dodged the fire of German battleships for a second time to re-establish contact with the High Seas Fleet shortly after 19:00. By 19:15, Jellicoe had crossed Scheer's "T" again. This time his arc of fire was tighter and deadlier, causing severe damage to the German battleships, particularly Rear-Admiral Behncke's leading 3rd Squadron (SMS König, Grosser Kurfürst, Markgraf, and Kaiser all being hit, along with SMS Helgoland of the 1st Squadron),[92] while on the British side, only the battleship HMS Colossus was hit (twice, by Seydlitz but with little damage done).[93]

At 19:17, for the second time in less than an hour, Scheer turned his outnumbered and out-gunned fleet to the west using the "battle about turn" (German: Gefechtskehrtwendung), but this time it was executed only with difficulty, as the High Seas Fleet's lead squadrons began to lose formation under concentrated gunfire.[94] To deter a British chase, Scheer ordered a major torpedo attack by his destroyers and a potentially sacrificial charge by Scouting Group I's four remaining battlecruisers. Hipper was still aboard the torpedo boat G39 and was unable to command his squadron for this attack.[95] Therefore, Derfflinger, under Captain Hartog, led the already badly damaged German battlecruisers directly into "the greatest concentration of naval gunfire any fleet commander had ever faced", at ranges down to 4 mi (3.5 nmi; 6.4 km).[96]

In what became known as the "death ride", all the battlecruisers except Moltke were hit and further damaged, as 18 of the British battleships fired at them simultaneously.[92][97] Derfflinger had two main gun turrets destroyed. The crews of Scouting Group I suffered heavy casualties, but survived the pounding and veered away with the other battlecruisers once Scheer was out of trouble and the German destroyers were moving in to attack.[96] In this brief but intense portion of the engagement, from about 19:05 to about 19:30, the Germans sustained a total of 37 heavy hits while inflicting only two; Derfflinger alone received 14.[92][98]

While his battlecruisers drew the fire of the British fleet, Scheer slipped away, laying smoke screens. Meanwhile, from about 19:16 to about 19:40, the British battleships were also engaging Scheer's torpedo boats, which executed several waves of torpedo attacks to cover his withdrawal. Jellicoe's ships turned away from the attacks and successfully evaded all 31 of the torpedoes launched at them – though, in several cases, only barely – and sank the German destroyer S35, attributed to a salvo from Iron Duke. British light forces also sank V48, which had previously been disabled by HMS Shark.[99][100] This action, and the turn away, cost the British critical time and range in the last hour of daylight – as Scheer intended, allowing him to get his heavy ships out of immediate danger.

The last major exchanges between capital ships in this battle - and in the war - took place just after sunset, from about 20:19 to about 20:35, as the surviving British battlecruisers caught up with their German counterparts, which were briefly relieved by Rear-Admiral Mauve's obsolete pre-dreadnoughts (the German 2nd Squadron).[101] The British received one heavy hit on Princess Royal but scored five more on Seydlitz and three on other German ships.[102] As twilight faded to night, HMS King George V exchanged a few final shots with SMS Westfalen.[citation needed]

Night action and German withdrawal

At 21:00, Jellicoe, conscious of the Grand Fleet's deficiencies in night fighting, decided to try to avoid a major engagement until early dawn.[103] He placed a screen of cruisers and destroyers 5 mi (4.3 nmi; 8.0 km) behind his battle fleet to patrol the rear as he headed south to guard Scheer's expected escape route.[104] In reality, Scheer opted to cross Jellicoe's wake and escape via Horns Reef. Luckily for Scheer, most of the light forces in Jellicoe's rearguard failed to report the seven separate encounters with the German fleet during the night;[105][106] the very few radio reports that were sent to the British flagship were never received, possibly because the Germans were jamming British frequencies.[107] Many of the destroyers failed to make the most of their opportunities to attack discovered ships, despite Jellicoe's expectations that the destroyer forces would, if necessary, be able to block the path of the German fleet.[108]

Jellicoe and his commanders did not understand that the furious gunfire and explosions to the north (seen and heard for hours by all the British battleships) indicated that the German heavy ships were breaking through the screen astern of the British fleet.[105] Instead, it was believed that the fighting was the result of night attacks by German destroyers.[109] The most powerful British ships of all (the 15-inch-guns of the 5th Battle Squadron) directly observed German battleships crossing astern of them in action with British light forces, at ranges of 3 mi (2.6 nmi; 4.8 km) or less, and gunners on HMS Malaya made ready to fire, but her captain declined,[110] deferring to the authority of Rear-Admiral Evan-Thomas – and neither commander reported the sightings to Jellicoe, assuming that he could see for himself and that revealing the fleet's position by radio signals or gunfire was unwise.

While the nature of Scheer's escape, and Jellicoe's inaction, indicate the overall German superiority in night fighting, the results of the night action were no more clear-cut than were those of the battle as a whole. In the first of many surprise encounters by darkened ships at point-blank range, Southampton, Commodore Goodenough's flagship, which had scouted so proficiently, was heavily damaged in action with a German Scouting Group composed of light cruisers, but managed to torpedo SMS Frauenlob, which went down at 22:23 with all but 9 hands (320 officers and men).[111]

 
Damage to HMS Spitfire after being rammed by SMS Nassau.

From 23:20 to approximately 02:15, several British destroyer flotillas launched torpedo attacks on the German battle fleet in a series of violent and chaotic engagements at extremely short range (often under 0.5 mi (0.80 km)).[112] At the cost of five destroyers sunk and some others damaged, they managed to torpedo the light cruiser SMS Rostock, which sank several hours later, and the pre-dreadnought SMS Pommern, which blew up and sank with all hands (839 officers and men) at 03:10 during the last wave of attacks before dawn.[112] Three of the British destroyers collided in the chaos, and the German battleship SMS Nassau rammed the British destroyer HMS Spitfire, blowing away most of the British ship's superstructure merely with the muzzle blast of its big guns, which could not be aimed low enough to hit the ship. Nassau was left with an 11 ft (3.4 m) hole in her side, reducing her maximum speed to 15 knots (28 km/h; 17 mph), while the removed plating was left lying on Spitfire's deck.[113] Spitfire survived and made it back to port.[114] Another German cruiser, Elbing, was accidentally rammed by the dreadnought Posen and abandoned, sinking early the next day. Of the British destroyers, HMS Tipperary, Ardent, Fortune, Sparrowhawk and Turbulent were lost during the night fighting.

Just after midnight on 1 June, SMS Thüringen and other German battleships sank Black Prince of the ill-fated 1st Cruiser Squadron, which had blundered into the German battle line. Deployed as part of a screening force several miles ahead of the main force of the Grand Fleet, Black Prince had lost contact in the darkness and took a position near what she thought was the British line. The Germans soon identified the new addition to their line and opened fire. Overwhelmed by point-blank gunfire, Black Prince blew up, (all 857 officers and men were lost), as her squadron leader Defence had done hours earlier.[115] Lost in the darkness, the battlecruisers Moltke and Seydlitz had similar point-blank encounters with the British battle line and were recognised, but were spared the fate of Black Prince when the captains of the British ships, again, declined to open fire, reluctant to reveal their fleet's position.[116]

At 01:45, the sinking battlecruiser Lützow – fatally damaged by Invincible during the main action – was torpedoed by the destroyer G38 on orders of Lützow's Captain Viktor von Harder after the surviving crew of 1,150 transferred to destroyers that came alongside.[117] At 02:15, the German torpedo boat V4 suddenly had its bow blown off; V2 and V6 came alongside and took off the remaining crew, and the V2 then sank the hulk. Since there was no enemy nearby, it was assumed that she had hit a mine or had been torpedoed by a submarine.[118]

At 02:15, five British ships of the 13th Destroyer Flotilla under Captain James Uchtred Farie regrouped and headed south. At 02:25, they sighted the rear of the German line. HMS Marksman inquired of the leader Champion as to whether he thought they were British or German ships. Answering that he thought they were German, Farie then veered off to the east and away from the German line. All but Moresby in the rear followed, as through the gloom she sighted what she thought were four pre-dreadnought battleships 2 mi (1.7 nmi; 3.2 km) away. She hoisted a flag signal indicating that the enemy was to the west and then closed to firing range, letting off a torpedo set for high running at 02:37, then veering off to rejoin her flotilla. The four pre-dreadnought battleships were in fact two pre-dreadnoughts, Schleswig-Holstein and Schlesien, and the battlecruisers Von der Tann and Derfflinger. Von der Tann sighted the torpedo and was forced to steer sharply to starboard to avoid it as it passed close to her bows. Moresby rejoined Champion convinced she had scored a hit.[118]

Finally, at 05:20, as Scheer's fleet was safely on its way home, the battleship SMS Ostfriesland struck a British mine on her starboard side, killing one man and wounding ten, but was able to make port.[119] Seydlitz, critically damaged and very nearly sinking, barely survived the return voyage: after grounding and taking on even more water on the evening of 1 June, she had to be assisted stern first into port, where she dropped anchor at 07:30 on the morning of 2 June.[120]

The Germans were helped in their escape by the failure of the British Admiralty in London to pass on seven critical radio intercepts obtained by naval intelligence indicating the true position, course and intentions of the High Seas Fleet during the night.[121] One message was transmitted to Jellicoe at 23:15 that accurately reported the German fleet's course and speed as of 21:14. However, the erroneous signal from earlier in the day that reported the German fleet still in port, and an intelligence signal received at 22:45 giving another unlikely position for the German fleet, had reduced his confidence in intelligence reports. Had the other messages been forwarded, which confirmed the information received at 23:15, or had British ships reported accurately sightings and engagements with German destroyers, cruisers and battleships, then Jellicoe could have altered course to intercept Scheer at the Horns Reef. The unsent intercepted messages had been duly filed by the junior officer left on duty that night, who failed to appreciate their significance.[122] By the time Jellicoe finally learned of Scheer's whereabouts at 04:15, the German fleet was too far away to catch and it was clear that the battle could no longer be resumed.

Outcome

As both the Grand Fleet and the High Seas Fleet could claim to have at least partially satisfied their objectives, both Britain and Germany have at various points claimed victory in the Battle of Jutland. There is no consensus over which nation was victorious, or if there was a victor at all.

Reporting

At midday on 2 June, German authorities released a press statement claiming a victory, including the destruction of a battleship, two battlecruisers, two armoured cruisers, a light cruiser, a submarine and several destroyers, for the loss of Pommern and Wiesbaden. News that Lützow, Elbing and Rostock had been scuttled was withheld, on the grounds this information would not be known to the enemy. The victory of the Skagerrak was celebrated in the press, children were given a holiday and the nation celebrated. The Kaiser announced a new chapter in world history. Post-war, the official German history hailed the battle as a victory and it continued to be celebrated until after World War II.[123]

In Britain, the first official news came from German wireless broadcasts. Ships began to arrive in port, their crews sending messages to friends and relatives both of their survival and the loss of some 6,000 others. The authorities considered suppressing the news, but it had already spread widely. Some crews coming ashore found rumours had already reported them dead to relatives, while others were jeered for the defeat they had suffered.[44] At 19:00 on 2 June, the Admiralty released a statement based on information from Jellicoe containing the bare news of losses on each side. The following day British newspapers reported a German victory.[124] The Daily Mirror described the German Director of the Naval Department telling the Reichstag: "The result of the fighting is a significant success for our forces against a much stronger adversary".[125] The British population was shocked that the long anticipated battle had been a victory for Germany. On 3 June, the Admiralty issued a further statement expanding on German losses, and another the following day with exaggerated claims. However, on 7 June the German admission of the losses of Lützow and Rostock started to redress the sense of the battle as a loss. International perception of the battle began to change towards a qualified British victory, the German attempt to change the balance of power in the North Sea having been repulsed. In July, bad news from the Somme campaign swept concern over Jutland from the British consciousness.[126]

Assessments

 
SMS Seydlitz was heavily damaged in the battle, hit by twenty-one main calibre shells, several secondary calibre and one torpedo. 98 men were killed and 55 injured.

At Jutland, the Germans, with a 99-strong fleet, sank 115,000 long tons (117,000 t) of British ships, while a 151-strong British fleet sank 62,000 long tons (63,000 t) of German ships. The British lost 6,094 seamen; the Germans 2,551. Several other ships were badly damaged, such as Lion and Seydlitz.

As of the summer of 1916, the High Seas Fleet's strategy was to whittle away the numerical advantage of the Royal Navy by bringing its full strength to bear against isolated squadrons of enemy capital ships whilst declining to be drawn into a general fleet battle until it had achieved something resembling parity in heavy ships. In tactical terms, the High Seas Fleet had clearly inflicted significantly greater losses on the Grand Fleet than it had suffered itself at Jutland, and the Germans never had any intention of attempting to hold the site of the battle,[127] so some historians support the German claim of victory at Jutland.

However, Scheer seems to have quickly realised that further battles with a similar rate of attrition would exhaust the High Seas Fleet long before they reduced the Grand Fleet.[128] Further, after the 19 August advance was nearly intercepted by the Grand Fleet, he no longer believed that it would be possible to trap a single squadron of Royal Navy warships without having the Grand Fleet intervene before he could return to port. Therefore, the High Seas Fleet abandoned its forays into the North Sea and turned its attention to the Baltic for most of 1917 whilst Scheer switched tactics against Britain to unrestricted submarine warfare in the Atlantic.

At a strategic level, the outcome has been the subject of a huge amount of literature with no clear consensus. The battle was widely viewed as indecisive in the immediate aftermath, and this view remains influential.

Despite numerical superiority, the British had been disappointed in their hopes for a decisive battle [129] comparable to Trafalgar and the objective of the influential strategic doctrines of Alfred Mahan. The High Seas Fleet survived as a fleet in being. Most of its losses were made good within a month – even Seydlitz, the most badly damaged ship to survive the battle, was repaired by October and officially back in service by November. However, the Germans had failed in their objective of destroying a substantial portion of the British Fleet, and no progress had been made towards the goal of allowing the High Seas Fleet to operate in the Atlantic Ocean.

Subsequently, there has been considerable support for the view of Jutland as a strategic victory for the British. While the British had not destroyed the German fleet and had lost more ships and lives than their enemy, the Germans had retreated to harbour; at the end of the battle, the British were in command of the area. Britain enforced the blockade, reducing Germany's vital imports to 55%, affecting the ability of Germany to fight the war.[130][131]

The German fleet would only sortie into the North Sea thrice more, with a raid on 19 August, one in October 1916, and another in April 1918. All three were unopposed by capital ships and quickly aborted as neither side was prepared to take the risks of mines and submarines.

Apart from these three abortive operations the High Seas Fleet – unwilling to risk another encounter with the British fleet – confined its activities to the Baltic Sea for the remainder of the war. Jellicoe issued an order prohibiting the Grand Fleet from steaming south of the line of Horns Reef owing to the threat of mines and U-boats.[132] A German naval expert, writing publicly about Jutland in November 1918, commented, "Our Fleet losses were severe. On 1 June 1916, it was clear to every thinking person that this battle must, and would be, the last one".[133]

There is also significant support for viewing the battle as a German tactical victory, due to the much higher losses sustained by the British.[134] The Germans declared a great victory immediately afterwards, while the British by contrast had only reported short and simple results. In response to public outrage, the First Lord of the Admiralty Arthur Balfour asked Winston Churchill to write a second report that was more positive and detailed.[135]

 
A crew member of SMS Westfalen

At the end of the battle, the British had maintained their numerical superiority and had 23 dreadnoughts ready and four battlecruisers still able to fight, while the Germans had only 10 dreadnoughts.[136] One month after the battle, the Grand Fleet was stronger than it had been before sailing to Jutland.[136] Warspite was dry-docked at Rosyth, returning to the fleet on 22 July, while Malaya was repaired in the floating dock at Invergordon, returning to duty on 11 July. Barham was docked for a month at Devonport before undergoing speed trials and returning to Scapa Flow on 8 July. Princess Royal stayed initially at Rosyth but transferred to dry dock at Portsmouth before returning to duty at Rosyth 21 July. Tiger was dry-docked at Rosyth and ready for service 2 July. Queen Elizabeth, Emperor of India and HMAS Australia, which had been undergoing maintenance at the time of the battle, returned to the fleet immediately, followed shortly after by Resolution and Ramillies. Lion initially remained ready for sea duty despite the damaged turret, then underwent a month's repairs in July when Q turret was removed temporarily and replaced in September.[137]

A third view, presented in a number of recent evaluations, is that Jutland, the last major fleet action between battleships, illustrated the irrelevance of battleship fleets following the development of the submarine, mine and torpedo.[138] In this view, the most important consequence of Jutland was the decision of the Germans to engage in unrestricted submarine warfare. Although large numbers of battleships were constructed in the decades between the wars, it has been argued that this outcome reflected the social dominance among naval decision-makers of battleship advocates who constrained technological choices to fit traditional paradigms of fleet action.[139] Battleships played a relatively minor role in World War II, in which the submarine and aircraft carrier emerged as the dominant offensive weapons of naval warfare.[140]

British self-critique

The official British Admiralty examination of the Grand Fleet's performance recognised two main problems:

  • British armour-piercing shells exploded outside the German armour rather than penetrating and exploding within. As a result, some German ships with only 8 in (20 cm)-thick armour survived hits from 15-inch (38 cm) projectiles. Had these shells penetrated the armour and then exploded, German losses would probably have been far greater.[141][142]
  • Communication between ships and the British commander-in-chief was comparatively poor. For most of the battle, Jellicoe had no idea where the German ships were, even though British ships were in contact. They failed to report enemy positions, contrary to the Grand Fleet's Battle Plan. Some of the most important signalling was carried out solely by flag instead of wireless or using redundant methods to ensure communications—a questionable procedure, given the mixture of haze and smoke that obscured the battlefield, and a foreshadowing of similar failures by habit-bound and conservatively minded professional officers of rank to take advantage of new technology in World War II.[143] [144]

Shell performance

German armour-piercing shells were far more effective than the British ones, which often failed to penetrate heavy armour.[145] The issue particularly concerned shells striking at oblique angles, which became increasingly the case at long range.[146] Germany had adopted trinitrotoluene (TNT) as the explosive filler for artillery shells in 1902, while the United Kingdom was still using a picric acid mixture (Lyddite). The shock of impact of a shell against armour often prematurely detonated Lyddite in advance of fuze function while TNT detonation could be delayed until after the shell had penetrated and the fuze had functioned in the vulnerable area behind the armour plate.[147] Some 17 British shells hit the side armour of the German dreadnoughts or battlecruisers. Of these, four would not have penetrated under any circumstances. Of the remaining 13, one penetrated the armour and exploded inside. This showed a 7.5% chance of proper shell function on the British side, a result of overly brittle shells and Lyddite exploding too soon.[148]

The issue of poorly performing shells had been known to Jellicoe, who as Third Sea Lord from 1908 to 1910 had ordered new shells to be designed. However, the matter had not been followed through after his posting to sea and new shells had never been thoroughly tested.[149] Beatty discovered the problem at a party aboard Lion a short time after the battle, when a Swedish Naval officer was present. He had recently visited Berlin, where the German navy had scoffed at how British shells had broken up on their ships' armour.[150] The question of shell effectiveness had also been raised after the Battle of Dogger Bank, but no action had been taken.[151] Hipper later commented, "It was nothing but the poor quality of their bursting charges which saved us from disaster."[152]

Admiral Dreyer, writing later about the battle, during which he had been captain of the British flagship Iron Duke, estimated that effective shells as later introduced would have led to the sinking of six more German capital ships, based upon the actual number of hits achieved in the battle.[153] The system of testing shells, which remained in use up to 1944, meant that, statistically, a batch of shells of which 70% were faulty stood an even chance of being accepted. Indeed, even shells that failed this relatively mild test had still been issued to ships. Analysis of the test results afterwards by the Ordnance Board suggested the likelihood that 30–70% of shells would not have passed the standard penetration test specified by the Admiralty.[151]

Efforts to replace the shells were initially resisted by the Admiralty, and action was not taken until Jellicoe became First Sea Lord in December 1916. As an initial response, the worst of the existing shells were withdrawn from ships in early 1917 and replaced from reserve supplies.[154] New shells were designed, but did not arrive until April 1918, and were never used in action.[150]

Battlecruiser losses

British battlecruisers were designed to chase and destroy enemy cruisers from out of the range of those ships. They were not designed to be ships of the line and exchange broadsides with the enemy. One German and three British battlecruisers were sunk—but none were destroyed by enemy shells penetrating the belt armour and detonating the magazines. Each of the British battlecruisers was penetrated through a turret roof and their magazines ignited by flash fires passing through the turret and shell-handling rooms.[155] Lützow sustained 24 hits and her flooding could not be contained. She was eventually sunk by her escorts' torpedoes after most of her crew had been safely removed (though six trapped stokers died when the ship was scuttled[156]). Derfflinger and Seydlitz sustained 22 hits each but reached port (although in Seydlitz's case only just).[157]

The disturbing feature of the battlecruiser action is the fact that five German battle-cruisers engaging six British vessels of this class, supported after the first twenty minutes, although at great range, by the fire of four battleships of the "Queen Elizabeth" class, were yet able to sink 'Queen Mary' and 'Indefatigable'....The facts which contributed to the British losses, first, were the indifferent armour protection of our battle-cruisers, particularly as regards turret armour, and, second, deck plating and the disadvantage under which our vessels laboured in regard to the light. Of this there can be no question. But it is also undoubted that the gunnery of the German battle-cruisers in the early stages was of a very high standard.

— Sir John Jellicoe, Jellicoe's official despatch[158]

Jellicoe and Beatty, as well as other senior officers, gave an impression that the loss of the battlecruisers was caused by weak armour, despite reports by two committees and earlier statements by Jellicoe and other senior officers that Cordite and its management were to blame. This led to calls for armour to be increased, and an additional 1 in (2.5 cm) was placed over the relatively thin decks above magazines. To compensate for the increase in weight, ships had to carry correspondingly less fuel, water and other supplies. Whether or not thin deck armour was a potential weakness of British ships, the battle provided no evidence that it was the case. At least amongst the surviving ships, no enemy shell was found to have penetrated deck armour anywhere.[159] The design of the new battlecruiser HMS Hood (which was being built at the time of the battle) was altered to give her 5,000 long tons (5,100 t) of additional armour.[160]

Ammunition handling

British and German propellant charges differed in packaging, handling, and chemistry. The British propellant was of two types, MK1 and MD. The Mark 1 cordite had a formula of 37% nitrocellulose, 58% nitroglycerine, and 5% petroleum jelly. It was a good propellant but burned hot and caused an erosion problem in gun barrels. The petroleum jelly served as both a lubricant and a stabiliser. Cordite MD was developed to reduce barrel wear, its formula being 65% nitrocellulose, 30% nitroglycerine, and 5% petroleum jelly. While cordite MD solved the gun-barrel erosion issue, it did nothing to improve its storage properties, which were poor. Cordite was very sensitive to variations of temperature, and acid propagation/cordite deterioration would take place at a very rapid rate. Cordite MD also shed micro-dust particles of nitrocellulose and iron pyrite.[161] While cordite propellant was manageable, it required a vigilant gunnery officer, strict cordite lot control, and frequent testing of the cordite lots in the ships' magazines.[162]

British cordite propellant (when uncased and exposed in the silk bag) tended to burn violently, causing uncontrollable "flash fires" when ignited by nearby shell hits. In 1945, a test was conducted by the U.S.N. Bureau of Ordnance (Bulletin of Ordnance Information, No.245, pp. 54–60)[163] testing the sensitivity of cordite to then-current U.S. Naval propellant powders against a measurable and repeatable flash source. It found that cordite would ignite at 530 mm (21 in) from the flash, the current U.S. powder at 120 mm (4.7 in), and the U.S. flashless powder at 25 mm (0.98 in).

This meant that about 75 times the propellant would immediately ignite when exposed to flash, as compared to the U.S. powder. British ships had inadequate protection against these flash fires. German propellant (RP C/12, handled in brass cartridge cases, which were used in German artillery since traditional there sliding wedge breeches were hard to obturate with smokeless powder otherwise[164]) was less vulnerable and less volatile in composition.[165] German propellants were not that different in composition from cordite—with one major exception: centralite. This was symmetrical diethyl diphenyl urea, which served as a stabiliser that was superior to the petroleum jelly used in British practice. It stored better and burned but did not explode. Stored and used in brass cases, it proved much less sensitive to flash. RP C/12 was composed of 64.13% nitrocellulose, 29.77% nitroglycerine, 5.75% centralite, 0.25% magnesium oxide and 0.10% graphite.[161]

The Royal Navy Battle Cruiser Fleet had also emphasised speed in ammunition handling over established safety protocol. In practice drills, cordite could not be supplied to the guns rapidly enough through the hoists and hatches. To bring up the propellant in good time to load for the next broadside, many safety doors were kept open that should have been shut to safeguard against flash fires. Bags of cordite were also stocked and kept locally, creating a total breakdown of safety design features. By staging charges in the chambers between the gun turret and magazine, the Royal Navy enhanced their rate of fire but left their ships vulnerable to chain reaction ammunition fires and magazine explosions.[162][166] This 'bad safety habit' carried over into real battle practices.[162] Furthermore, the doctrine of a high rate of fire also led to the decision in 1913 to increase the supply of shells and cordite held on the British ships by 50%, for fear of running out of ammunition. When this exceeded the capacity of the ships' magazines, cordite was stored in insecure places.[167]

The British cordite charges were stored two silk bags to a metal cylindrical container, with a 16-oz gunpowder igniter charge, which was covered with a thick paper wad, four charges being used on each projectile. The gun crews were removing the charges from their containers and removing the paper covering over the gunpowder igniter charges. The effect of having eight loads at the ready was to have 4 short tons (3,600 kg) of exposed explosive, with each charge leaking small amounts of gunpowder from the igniter bags. In effect, the gun crews had laid an explosive train from the turret to the magazines, and one shell hit to a battlecruiser turret was enough to end a ship.[168]

A diving expedition during the summer of 2003 provided corroboration of this practice. It examined the wrecks of Invincible, Queen Mary, Defence, and Lützow to investigate the cause of the British ships' tendency to suffer from internal explosions. From this evidence, a major part of the blame may be laid on lax handling of the cordite propellant for the shells of the main guns. The wreck of the Queen Mary revealed cordite containers stacked in the working chamber of the X turret instead of the magazine.[169]

There was a further difference in the propellant itself. While the German RP C/12 burned when exposed to fire, it did not explode, as opposed to cordite. RP C/12 was extensively studied by the British and, after World War I, would form the basis of the later Cordite SC.[170]

The memoirs of Alexander Grant, Gunner on Lion, suggest that some British officers were aware of the dangers of careless handling of cordite:

With the introduction of cordite to replace powder for firing guns, regulations regarding the necessary precautions for handling explosives became unconsciously considerably relaxed, even I regret to say, to a dangerous degree throughout the Service. The gradual lapse in the regulations on board ship seemed to be due to two factors. First, cordite is a much safer explosive to handle than gun-powder. Second, but more important, the altered construction of the magazines on board led to a feeling of false security....The iron or steel deck, the disappearance of the wood lining, the electric lights fitted inside, the steel doors, open because there was now no chute for passing cartridges out; all this gave officers and men a comparative easiness of mind regarding the precautions necessary with explosive material.[171]

Grant had already introduced measures onboard Lion to limit the number of cartridges kept outside the magazine and to ensure doors were kept closed, probably contributing to her survival.[172]

On 5 June 1916, the First Lord of the Admiralty advised Cabinet Members that the three battlecruisers had been lost due to unsafe cordite management.[173]

After the battle, the B.C.F. Gunnery Committee issued a report (at the command of Admiral David Beatty) advocating immediate changes in flash protection and charge handling. It reported, among other things, that:

  • Some vent plates in magazines allowed flash into the magazines and should be retro-fitted to a new standard.
  • Bulkheads in HMS Lion's magazine showed buckling from fire under pressure (overpressure) – despite being flooded and therefore supported by water pressure – and must be made stronger.
  • Doors opening inward to magazines were an extreme danger.
  • Current designs of turrets could not eliminate flash from shell bursts in the turret from reaching the handling rooms.
  • Ignition pads must not be attached to charges but instead be placed just before ramming.
  • Better methods must be found for safe storage of ready charges than the current method.
  • Some method for rapidly drowning charges already in the handling path must be devised.
  • Handling scuttles (special flash-proof fittings for moving propellant charges through ship's bulkheads), designed to handle overpressure, must be fitted.[174]

Gunnery

British gunnery control systems, based on Dreyer tables, were well in advance of the German ones, as demonstrated by the proportion of main calibre hits made on the German fleet. Because of its demonstrated advantages, it was installed on ships progressively as the war went on, had been fitted to a majority of British capital ships by May 1916, and had been installed on the main guns of all but two of the Grand Fleet's capital ships.[175] The Royal Navy used centralised fire-control systems on their capital ships, directed from a point high up on the ship where the fall of shells could best be seen, utilising a director sight for both training and elevating the guns. In contrast, the German battlecruisers controlled the fire of turrets using a training-only director, which also did not fire the guns at once. The rest of the German capital ships were without even this innovation. German range-finding equipment was generally superior to the British 9 ft (2.7 m) FT24, as its operators were trained to a higher standard due to the complexity of the Zeiss 3 m (9.8 ft) range finders. Their stereoscopic design meant that in certain conditions they could range on a target enshrouded by smoke.[176] The German equipment was not superior in range to the British Barr & Stroud 15 ft (4.6 m) rangefinder found in the newest British capital ships, and, unlike the British range finders, the German range takers had to be replaced as often as every thirty minutes, as their eyesight became impaired, affecting the ranges provided to their gunnery equipment.[177]

The results of the battle confirmed the value of firing guns by centralised director. The battle prompted the Royal Navy to install director firing systems in cruisers and destroyers, where it had not thus far been used, and for secondary armament on battleships.[178]

German ships were considered to have been quicker in determining the correct range to targets, thus obtaining an early advantage. The British used a 'bracket system', whereby a salvo was fired at the best-guess range and, depending where it landed, the range was progressively corrected up or down until successive shots were landing in front of and behind the enemy. The Germans used a 'ladder system', whereby an initial volley of three shots at different ranges was used, with the centre shot at the best-guess range. The ladder system allowed the gunners to get ranging information from the three shots more quickly than the bracket system, which required waiting between shots to see how the last had landed. British ships adopted the German system.[179]

It was determined that 9-foot (2.7 m) range finders of the sort issued to most British ships were not adequate at long range and did not perform as well as the 15-foot (4.6 m) range finders on some of the most modern ships. In 1917, range finders of base lengths of 25 and 30 ft (7.6 and 9.1 m) were introduced on the battleships to improve accuracy.[180]

Signalling

Throughout the battle, British ships experienced difficulties with communications, whereas the Germans did not suffer such problems. The British preferred signalling using ship-to-ship flag and lamp signals, avoiding wireless, whereas the Germans used wireless successfully. One conclusion drawn was that flag signals were not a satisfactory way to control the fleet. Experience using lamps, particularly at night when issuing challenges to other ships, demonstrated this was an excellent way to advertise your precise location to an enemy, inviting a reply by gunfire. Recognition signals by lamp, once seen, could also easily be copied in future engagements.[181]

British ships both failed to report engagements with the enemy but also, in the case of cruisers and destroyers, failed to actively seek out the enemy. A culture had arisen within the fleet of not acting without orders, which could prove fatal when any circumstances prevented orders being sent or received. Commanders failed to engage the enemy because they believed other, more senior officers must also be aware of the enemy nearby, and would have given orders to act if this was expected. Wireless, the most direct way to pass messages across the fleet (although it was being jammed by German ships), was avoided either for perceived reasons of not giving away the presence of ships or for fear of cluttering up the airwaves with unnecessary reports.[182]

Fleet Standing Orders

Naval operations were governed by standing orders issued to all the ships. These attempted to set out what ships should do in all circumstances, particularly in situations where ships would have to react without referring to higher authority, or when communications failed. A number of changes were introduced as a result of experience gained in the battle.

A new signal was introduced instructing squadron commanders to act independently as they thought best while still supporting the main fleet, particularly for use when circumstances would make it difficult to send detailed orders. The description stressed that this was not intended to be the only time commanders might take independent action, but was intended to make plain times when they definitely should. Similarly, instructions on what to do if the fleet was instructed to take evasive action against torpedoes were amended. Commanders were given discretion that if their part of the fleet was not under immediate attack, they should continue engaging the enemy rather than turning away with the rest of the fleet. In this battle, when the fleet turned away from Scheer's destroyer attack covering his retreat, not all the British ships had been affected, and could have continued to engage the enemy.[183]

A number of opportunities to attack enemy ships by torpedo had presented themselves but had been missed. All ships, not just the destroyers armed principally with torpedoes but also battleships, were reminded that they carried torpedoes intended to be used whenever an opportunity arose. Destroyers were instructed to close the enemy fleet to fire torpedoes as soon as engagements between the main ships on either side would keep enemy guns busy directed at larger targets. Destroyers should also be ready to immediately engage enemy destroyers if they should launch an attack, endeavouring to disrupt their chances of launching torpedoes and keep them away from the main fleet.[184]

To add some flexibility when deploying for attack, a new signal was provided for deploying the fleet to the centre, rather than as previously only either to left or right of the standard closed-up formation for travelling. The fast and powerful 5th Battle Squadron was moved to the front of the cruising formation so it would have the option of deploying left or right depending upon the enemy position. In the event of engagements at night, although the fleet still preferred to avoid night fighting, a destroyer and cruiser squadron would be specifically detailed to seek out the enemy and launch destroyer attacks.[185]

 
The German propaganda poster proudly boasts of German achievements in the Battle of Jutland

Controversy

At the time, Jellicoe was criticised for his caution and for allowing Scheer to escape.[186] Beatty, in particular, was convinced that Jellicoe had missed a tremendous opportunity to annihilate the High Seas Fleet[187] and win what would amount to another Trafalgar. Jellicoe was promoted away from active command to become First Sea Lord, the professional head of the Royal Navy, while Beatty replaced him as commander of the Grand Fleet.

The controversy raged within the navy and in public for about a decade after the war. Criticism focused on Jellicoe's decision at 19:15. Scheer had ordered his cruisers and destroyers forward in a torpedo attack to cover the turning away of his battleships. Jellicoe chose to turn to the south-east, and so keep out of range of the torpedoes. Supporters of Jellicoe, including the historian Cyril Falls, pointed to the folly of risking defeat in battle when one already has command of the sea.[188] Jellicoe himself, in a letter to the Admiralty seventeen months before the battle, said that he intended to turn his fleet away from any mass torpedo attack (that being the universally accepted proper tactical response to such attacks, practised by all the major navies of the world[188]). He said that, in the event of a fleet engagement in which the enemy turned away, he would assume they intended to draw him over mines or submarines, and he would decline to be so drawn. The Admiralty approved this plan and expressed full confidence in Jellicoe at the time (October 1914).[189]

The stakes were high, the pressure on Jellicoe immense, and his caution certainly understandable. His judgement might have been that even 90% odds in favour were not good enough to bet the British Empire. Churchill said of the battle that Jellicoe "was the only man on either side who could have lost the war in an afternoon."[190]

The criticism of Jellicoe also fails to sufficiently credit Scheer, who was determined to preserve his fleet by avoiding the full British battle line, and who showed great skill in effecting his escape.[191]

Beatty's actions

On the other hand, some of Jellicoe's supporters condemned the actions of Beatty for the British failure to achieve a complete victory.[192] Although Beatty was undeniably brave, his mismanagement of the initial encounter with Hipper's squadron and the High Seas Fleet cost him a considerable advantage in the first hours of the battle.[193] His most glaring failure was in not providing Jellicoe with periodic information on the position, course, and speed of the High Seas Fleet.[194] Beatty, aboard the battlecruiser Lion, left behind the four fast battleships of the 5th Battle Squadron – the most powerful warships in the world at the time – engaging with six ships when better control would have given him 10 against Hipper's five. Though Beatty's larger 13.5 in (340 mm) guns out-ranged Hipper's 11 and 12 in (280 and 300 mm) guns by thousands of yards, Beatty held his fire for 10 minutes and closed the German squadron until within range of the Germans' superior gunnery, under lighting conditions that favoured the Germans.[195] Most of the British losses in tonnage occurred in Beatty's force.

Death toll

The total loss of life on both sides was 9,823 personnel: the British losses numbered 6,784 and the German 3,039.[196] Counted among the British losses were two members of the Royal Australian Navy and one member of the Royal Canadian Navy. Six Australian nationals serving in the Royal Navy were also killed.[197]

British

113,300 tons sunk:[1]

German

62,300 tons sunk:[1]

Selected honours

The Victoria Cross is the highest military decoration awarded for valour "in the face of the enemy" to members of the British Empire armed forces. The Ordre pour le Mérite was the Kingdom of Prussia and consequently the German Empire's highest military order until the end of the First World War.

Pour le Mérite

Victoria Cross

Status of the survivors and wrecks

 
HMS Caroline, the last surviving warship that saw action at Jutland, is preserved in Belfast, Northern Ireland

In the years following the battle the wrecks were slowly discovered. Invincible was found by the Royal Navy minesweeper HMS Oakley in 1919.[198] After the Second World War some of the wrecks seem to have been commercially salvaged. For instance, the Hydrographic Office record for SMS Lützow (No.32344) shows that salvage operations were taking place on the wreck in 1960.[199]

During 2000–2016 a series of diving and marine survey expeditions involving veteran shipwreck historian and archaeologist Innes McCartney located all of the wrecks sunk in the battle. It was discovered that over 60 per cent of them had suffered from metal theft.[200] In 2003 McCartney led a detailed survey of the wrecks for the Channel 4 documentary "Clash of the Dreadnoughts".[201] The film examined the last minutes of the lost ships and revealed for the first time how both 'P' and 'Q' turrets of Invincible had been blasted out of the ship and tossed into the sea before she broke in half. This was followed by the Channel 4 documentary "Jutland: WWI's Greatest Sea Battle",[202] broadcast in May 2016, which showed how several of the major losses at Jutland had actually occurred and just how accurate the "Harper Record" actually was.

On the 90th anniversary of the battle, in 2006, the UK Ministry of Defence belatedly announced that the 14 British vessels lost in the battle were being designated as protected places under the Protection of Military Remains Act 1986. This legislation only affects British ships and citizens and in practical terms offers no real protection from non-British salvors of the wreck sites.[203] In May 2016 a number of British newspapers named the Dutch salvage company "Friendship Offshore" as one of the main salvors of the Jutland wrecks in recent years and depicted leaked photographs revealing the extent of their activities on the wreck of Queen Mary.[204]

The last surviving veteran of the battle, Henry Allingham, a British RAF (originally RNAS) airman, died on 18 July 2009, aged 113, by which time he was the oldest documented man in the world and one of the last surviving veterans of the whole war.[205] Also among the combatants was the then 20-year-old Prince Albert, serving as a junior officer aboard HMS Collingwood. He was second in the line to the throne, but would become king as George VI following his brother Edward's abdication in 1936.[206]

One ship from the battle survives and is still (in 2023) afloat: the light cruiser HMS Caroline. Decommissioned in 2011, she is docked at the Alexandra Graving Dock in Belfast, Northern Ireland and is a museum ship.[207]

Remembrance

The Battle of Jutland was annually celebrated as a great victory by the right wing in Weimar Germany. This victory was used to repress the memory of the German navy's initiation of the German Revolution of 1918–1919, as well as the memory of the defeat in World War I in general. (The celebrations of the Battle of Tannenberg played a similar role.) This is especially true for the city of Wilhelmshaven, where wreath-laying ceremonies and torch-lit parades were performed until the end of the 1960s.[208]

In 1916 Contreadmiral Friedrich von Kühlwetter (1865–1931) wrote a detailed analysis of the battle and published it in a book under the title Skagerrak (first anonymously published), which was reprinted in large numbers until after WWII and had a huge influence in keeping the battle in public memory amongst Germans as it was not tainted by the ideology of the Third Reich. Kühlwetter built the School for Naval Officers at Mürwik near Flensburg, where he is still remembered.[209]

In May 2016, the 100th-anniversary commemoration of the Battle of Jutland was held. On 29 May, a commemorative service was held at St Mary's Church, Wimbledon, where the ensign from HMS Inflexible is on permanent display. On 31 May, the main service was held at St Magnus Cathedral in Orkney, attended by the British prime minister, David Cameron, and the German president, Joachim Gauck, along with Princess Anne and Vice Admiral Sir Tim Laurence.[210] A centennial exposition was held at the Deutsches Marinemuseum in Wilhemshaven from 29 May 2016 to 28 February 2017.[211]

Film

See also

Notes

  1. ^ In this article the terms "torpedo boat" (sometimes "torpedo-boat") and "destroyer" are used interchangeably to refer to the same class of vessels in the German Navy.

Citations

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  4. ^ Corbett (2015) Vol. 1, p. 380, 381; The Russians turned back into Port Arthur to remain bottled up, after a 12 inch shell killed Admiral Vitgeft in his flagship, the battleship Tzesarevich. The new anticipated plan would be to re-enter the Yellow Sea from Port Arthur to reinforce the pending arrival of the Russian Baltic Fleet, expected sometime in 1905. The Battle of the Yellow sea is known as the "Battle of August 10" in Russia,
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Bibliography

  • Bennett, Geoffrey (2005). Naval Battles of the First World War. London: Pen & Sword Military Classics. ISBN 1-84415-300-2.
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  • Kühlwetter, von, Friedrich (1916). Skagerrak : Der Ruhmestag der deutschen Flotte. Berlin: Ullstein.
  • Lambert, Nicholas A (January 1998). ""Our Bloody Ships" or "Our Bloody System"? Jutland and the Loss of the Battle Cruisers, 1916". The Journal of Military History. Society for Military History, Vol. 62, No. 1. 61 (1): 29–55. doi:10.2307/120394. JSTOR 120394.
  • Marder, Arthur J. (1966). Jutland and after, May 1916 – December 1916. From the Dreadnought to Scapa Flow. Vol. III. Oxford University Press.
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Further reading

  • Bacon, Reginald (1925). The Jutland Scandal. London. OCLC 1900062.
  • Butler, Daniel Allen (2006). Distant Victory: The Battle of Jutland and the Allied Triumph in the First World War. Westport, CT: Praeger. ISBN 0-275-99073-7.
  • Corbett, Julian (2003). Naval Operations. Official History of the War. Vol. III (repr. ed.). London: Longmans & Co. ISBN 1-84342-491-6.
  • H.W. Fawcett & G.W.W. Hooper, RN (editors), The fighting at Jutland (abridged edition); the personal experiences of forty-five officers and men of the British Fleet London: MacMillan & Co, 1921
  • Frost, H. H. (1936). The Battle of Jutland. Annapolis, MD: USNI. OCLC 2826423.
  • George, S.C. (1981). Jutland to Junkyard. Edinburgh: Paul Harris. ISBN 0-86228-029-X.
  • Groos, Fregattenkäpitan Otto (1925). Der Krieg in der Nordsee. Der Krieg zur See: 1914–1918 (in German). Vol. Bänd V. Berlin: Mittler & Sons. OCLC 2960788.
  • Hough, Richard (1975). Dreadnought, A history of the Modern Battleship. Macmillan Publishers. ISBN 0517293676. OCLC 5101910.
  • Legg, Stuart (1966). Jutland, an Eye-Witness Account of a Great Battle. New York City: The John Day Company. OCLC 505431.
  • Lambert, Andrew. "Writing Writing the Battle: Jutland in Sir Julian Corbett's Naval Operations," Mariner's Mirror 103#2 (2017) 175–95, Historiography..
  • London, Charles (2000). Jutland 1916, Clash of the Dreadnoughts. Campaign. Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 1-85532-992-1.
  • Marder, Arthur J. (1965). From the Dreadnought to Scapa Flow, The Royal Navy in the Fisher Era, 1904–1919: The War Years to the eve of Jutland, 1914–1916. Vol. II. London: Oxford University Press. OCLC 865180297.
  • Roberts, John Arthur (2003). Battlecruisers. ShipShape. London: Caxton Editions. ISBN 1-84067-530-6.
  • Steel, Nigel; Hart, Peter (2004). Jutland 1916: Death in the Grey Wastes. London: Cassell. ISBN 0-304-35892-4.

External links

  • WW1 Centenary News - Battle of Jutland
  • Jutland Centenary Initiative
  • Jutland Commemoration Exhibition
  • Beatty's official report
  • Jellicoe's official despatch
  • Jellicoe, extract from The Grand Fleet, published 1919
  • World War I Naval Combat – Despatches
  • Scheer, Germany's High Seas Fleet in the World War 17 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine, published 1920
  • Henry Allingham Last known survivor of the Battle of Jutland
  • Jutland Casualties Listed by Ship
  • Some Original Documents from the British Admiralty, Room 40, regarding the Battle of Jutland: Photocopies from The National Archives, Kew, Richmond, UK.
  • Battle of Jutland Crew Lists Project
  • Memorial park for the Battle of Jutland
  • Battle of Jutland Crew Lists Project Wiki
  • Battle-of-Jutland.com The website owner has a package of original documents
  • Harley, Simon. "A Direct Train of Cordite". The Dreadnought Project. Transcript of post-battle correspondence between the Grand Fleet and the Admiralty concerning the loss of the battlecruisers.

Notable accounts

  • by Rudyard Kipling Retrieved 2009-10-31.
  • by Alexander Grant, a gunner aboard HMS Lion
  • A North Sea diary, 1914–1918, by Stephen King-Hall, a junior officer on the light cruiser HMS Southampton
  • by Paul Berryman, a junior officer on HMS Malaya
  • by Moritz von Egidy, captain of SMS Seydlitz
  • by Richard Foerster, gunnery officer on Seydlitz
  • by Georg von Hase, gunnery officer on Derfflinger
(Note: Due to the time difference, entries in some of the German accounts are one hour ahead of the times in this article.)

battle, jutland, this, article, about, world, naval, battle, football, rivalry, football, german, skagerrakschlacht, battle, skagerrak, naval, battle, fought, between, britain, royal, navy, grand, fleet, under, admiral, john, jellicoe, imperial, german, navy, . This article is about the World War I naval battle For the football rivalry see Battle of Jutland football The Battle of Jutland German Skagerrakschlacht the Battle of the Skagerrak was a naval battle fought between Britain s Royal Navy Grand Fleet under Admiral Sir John Jellicoe and the Imperial German Navy s High Seas Fleet under Vice Admiral Reinhard Scheer during the First World War The battle unfolded in extensive manoeuvring and three main engagements the battlecruiser action the fleet action and the night action from 31 May to 1 June 1916 off the North Sea coast of Denmark s Jutland Peninsula 2 It was the largest naval battle and the only full scale clash of battleships in that war Jutland was the third fleet action between steel battleships following the Battle of the Yellow Sea in 1904 3 4 and the Battle of Tsushima in 1905 5 during the Russo Japanese War Jutland was the last major battle in history fought primarily by battleships 6 Battle of JutlandPart of World War IThe Battle of Jutland 1916Date31 May 1 June 1916LocationNorth Sea near Denmark56 42 N 5 52 E 56 700 N 5 867 E 56 700 5 867ResultInconclusive though both have since claimed victory see OutcomeBelligerents United Kingdom German EmpireCommanders and leadersJohn Jellicoe David BeattyReinhard Scheer Franz HipperStrengthTotal 151 combat ships 28 dreadnought battleships 9 battlecruisers 8 armoured cruisers 26 light cruisers 78 destroyers 1 minelayer 1 seaplane carrierTotal 99 combat ships 16 dreadnought battleships 5 battlecruisers 6 pre dreadnought battleships 11 light cruisers 61 torpedo boats a Casualties and losses6 094 killed 674 wounded 177 captured 3 battlecruisers sunk 3 armoured cruisers sunk 8 destroyers sunk 113 300 tons sunk 1 2 551 killed 507 wounded 1 battlecruiser sunk 1 pre dreadnought battleship sunk 4 light cruisers sunk 5 torpedo boats sunk 62 300 tons sunk 1 Germany s High Seas Fleet intended to lure out trap and destroy a portion of the British Grand Fleet as the German naval force was insufficient to openly engage the entire British fleet This formed part of a larger strategy to break the British blockade of Germany and to allow German naval vessels access to the Atlantic Meanwhile Great Britain s Royal Navy pursued a strategy of engaging and destroying the High Seas Fleet thereby keeping German naval forces contained and away from Britain and her shipping lanes 7 The Germans planned to use Vice Admiral Franz Hipper s fast scouting group of five modern battlecruisers to lure Vice Admiral Sir David Beatty s battlecruiser squadrons into the path of the main German fleet They stationed submarines in advance across the likely routes of the British ships However the British learned from signal intercepts that a major fleet operation was likely so on 30 May Jellicoe sailed with the Grand Fleet to rendezvous with Beatty passing over the locations of the German submarine picket lines while they were unprepared The German plan had been delayed causing further problems for their submarines which had reached the limit of their endurance at sea On the afternoon of 31 May Beatty encountered Hipper s battlecruiser force long before the Germans had expected In a running battle Hipper successfully drew the British vanguard into the path of the High Seas Fleet By the time Beatty sighted the larger force and turned back towards the British main fleet he had lost two battlecruisers from a force of six battlecruisers and four powerful battleships though he had sped ahead of his battleships of 5th Battle Squadron earlier in the day effectively losing them as an integral component for much of this opening action against the five ships commanded by Hipper Beatty s withdrawal at the sight of the High Seas Fleet which the British had not known were in the open sea would reverse the course of the battle by drawing the German fleet in pursuit towards the British Grand Fleet Between 18 30 when the sun was lowering on the western horizon back lighting the German forces and nightfall at about 20 30 the two fleets totalling 250 ships between them directly engaged twice Fourteen British and eleven German ships sank with a total of 9 823 casualties After sunset and throughout the night Jellicoe manoeuvred to cut the Germans off from their base hoping to continue the battle the next morning but under the cover of darkness Scheer broke through the British light forces forming the rearguard of the Grand Fleet and returned to port 8 Both sides claimed victory The British lost more ships and twice as many sailors but succeeded in containing the German fleet The British press criticised the Grand Fleet s failure to force a decisive outcome while Scheer s plan of destroying a substantial portion of the British fleet also failed The British strategy of denying Germany access to both the United Kingdom and the Atlantic did succeed which was the British long term goal 9 The Germans fleet in being continued to pose a threat requiring the British to keep their battleships concentrated in the North Sea but the battle reinforced the German policy of avoiding all fleet to fleet contact At the end of 1916 after further unsuccessful attempts to reduce the Royal Navy s numerical advantage the German Navy accepted that its surface ships had been successfully contained subsequently turning its efforts and resources to unrestricted submarine warfare and the destruction of Allied and neutral shipping which along with the Zimmermann Telegram by April 1917 triggered the United States of America s declaration of war on Germany 10 Subsequent reviews commissioned by the Royal Navy generated strong disagreement between supporters of Jellicoe and Beatty concerning the two admirals performance in the battle Debate over their performance and the significance of the battle continues to this day Contents 1 Background and planning 1 1 German planning 1 1 1 Submarine deployments 1 1 2 Zeppelins 1 2 British response 2 Naval tactics in 1916 2 1 Ship design 3 Order of battle 4 Battlecruiser action 4 1 Contact 4 2 Run to the south 4 3 Run to the north 4 4 The fleets converge 5 Fleet action 5 1 Deployment 5 2 Windy Corner 5 3 Crossing the T 5 4 Turn Of The Battle 6 Night action and German withdrawal 7 Outcome 7 1 Reporting 7 2 Assessments 7 3 British self critique 7 3 1 Shell performance 7 3 2 Battlecruiser losses 7 3 3 Ammunition handling 7 3 4 Gunnery 7 3 5 Signalling 7 3 6 Fleet Standing Orders 8 Controversy 8 1 Beatty s actions 9 Death toll 9 1 British 9 2 German 10 Selected honours 10 1 Pour le Merite 10 2 Victoria Cross 11 Status of the survivors and wrecks 12 Remembrance 13 Film 14 See also 15 Notes 16 Citations 17 Bibliography 18 Further reading 19 External links 19 1 Notable accountsBackground and planning EditGerman planning Edit With 16 dreadnought type battleships compared with the Royal Navy s 28 the German High Seas Fleet stood little chance of winning a head to head clash The Germans therefore adopted a divide and conquer strategy They would stage raids into the North Sea and bombard the English coast with the aim of luring out small British squadrons and pickets which could then be destroyed by superior forces or submarines In January 1916 Admiral von Pohl commander of the German fleet fell ill He was replaced by Scheer who believed that the fleet had been used too defensively had better ships and men than the British and ought to take the war to them 11 According to Scheer the German naval strategy should be to damage the English fleet by offensive raids against the naval forces engaged in watching and blockading the German Bight as well as by mine laying on the British coast and submarine attack whenever possible After an equality of strength had been realised as a result of these operations and all our forces had been made ready and concentrated an attempt was to be made with our fleet to seek battle under circumstances unfavourable to the enemy Reinhard Scheer German fleet commander On 25 April 1916 a decision was made by the German Imperial Admiralty to halt indiscriminate attacks by submarines on merchant shipping This followed protests from neutral countries notably the United States that their nationals had been the victims of attacks Germany agreed that future attacks would only take place in accord with internationally agreed prize rules which required an attacker to give a warning and allow the crews of vessels time to escape and not to attack neutral vessels at all Scheer believed that it would not be possible to continue attacks on these terms which took away the advantage of secret approach by submarines and left them vulnerable to even relatively small guns on the target ships Instead he set about deploying the submarine fleet against military vessels 12 It was hoped that following a successful German submarine attack fast British escorts such as destroyers would be tied down by anti submarine operations If the Germans could catch the British in the expected locations good prospects were thought to exist of at least partially redressing the balance of forces between the fleets After the British sortied in response to the raiding attack force the Royal Navy s centuries old instincts for aggressive action could be exploited to draw its weakened units towards the main German fleet under Scheer The hope was that Scheer would thus be able to ambush a section of the British fleet and destroy it 13 Submarine deployments Edit A plan was devised to station submarines offshore from British naval bases and then stage some action that would draw out the British ships to the waiting submarines The battlecruiser SMS Seydlitz had been damaged in a previous engagement but was due to be repaired by mid May so an operation was scheduled for 17 May 1916 At the start of May difficulties with condensers were discovered on ships of the third battleship squadron so the operation was put back to 23 May Ten submarines U 24 U 32 U 43 U 44 UC 47 U 51 U 52 U 63 U 66 and U 70 were given orders first to patrol in the central North Sea between 17 and 22 May and then to take up waiting positions U 43 and U 44 were stationed in the Pentland Firth which the Grand Fleet was likely to cross when leaving Scapa Flow while the remainder proceeded to the Firth of Forth awaiting battlecruisers departing Rosyth Each boat had an allocated area within which it could move around as necessary to avoid detection but was instructed to keep within it During the initial North Sea patrol the boats were instructed to sail only north south so that any enemy who chanced to encounter one would believe it was departing or returning from operations on the west coast which required them to pass around the north of Britain Once at their final positions the boats were under strict orders to avoid premature detection that might give away the operation It was arranged that a coded signal would be transmitted to alert the submarines exactly when the operation commenced Take into account the enemy s forces may be putting to sea 14 Additionally UB 27 was sent out on 20 May with instructions to work its way into the Firth of Forth past May Island U 46 was ordered to patrol the coast of Sunderland which had been chosen for the diversionary attack but because of engine problems it was unable to leave port and U 47 was diverted to this task On 13 May U 72 was sent to lay mines in the Firth of Forth on the 23rd U 74 departed to lay mines in the Moray Firth and on the 24th U 75 was dispatched similarly west of the Orkney Islands UB 21 and UB 22 were sent to patrol the Humber where incorrect reports had suggested the presence of British warships U 22 U 46 and U 67 were positioned north of Terschelling to protect against intervention by British light forces stationed at Harwich 15 On 22 May 1916 it was discovered that Seydlitz was still not watertight after repairs and would not now be ready until the 29th The ambush submarines were now on station and experiencing difficulties of their own visibility near the coast was frequently poor due to fog and sea conditions were either so calm the slightest ripple as from the periscope could give away their position or so rough as to make it very hard to keep the vessel at a steady depth The British had become aware of unusual submarine activity and had begun counter patrols that forced the submarines out of position UB 27 passed Bell Rock on the night of 23 May on its way into the Firth of Forth as planned but was halted by engine trouble After repairs it continued to approach following behind merchant vessels and reached Largo Bay on 25 May There the boat became entangled in nets that fouled one of the propellers forcing it to abandon the operation and return home U 74 was detected by four armed trawlers on 27 May and sunk 25 mi 22 nmi 40 km south east of Peterhead U 75 laid its mines off the Orkney Islands which although they played no part in the battle were responsible later for sinking the cruiser Hampshire carrying Lord Kitchener the Secretary of State for War on 5 June killing him and all but 12 of the crew U 72 was forced to abandon its mission without laying any mines when an oil leak meant it was leaving a visible surface trail astern 16 Zeppelins Edit The throat of the Skagerrak the strategic gateway to the Baltic and North Atlantic waters off Jutland Norway and Sweden The Germans maintained a fleet of Zeppelins that they used for aerial reconnaissance and occasional bombing raids The planned raid on Sunderland intended to use Zeppelins to watch out for the British fleet approaching from the north which might otherwise surprise the raiders 17 By 28 May strong north easterly winds meant that it would not be possible to send out the Zeppelins so the raid again had to be postponed The submarines could only stay on station until 1 June before their supplies would be exhausted and they had to return so a decision had to be made quickly about the raid 18 It was decided to use an alternative plan abandoning the attack on Sunderland but instead sending a patrol of battlecruisers to the Skagerrak where it was likely they would encounter merchant ships carrying British cargo and British cruiser patrols It was felt this could be done without air support because the action would now be much closer to Germany relying instead on cruiser and torpedo boat patrols for reconnaissance 19 Orders for the alternative plan were issued on 28 May although it was still hoped that last minute improvements in the weather would allow the original plan to go ahead The German fleet assembled in the Jade River and at Wilhelmshaven and was instructed to raise steam and be ready for action from midnight on 28 May 20 By 14 00 on 30 May the wind was still too strong and the final decision was made to use the alternative plan The coded signal 31 May G G 2490 was transmitted to the ships of the fleet to inform them the Skagerrak attack would start on 31 May The pre arranged signal to the waiting submarines was transmitted throughout the day from the E Dienst radio station at Bruges and the U boat tender Arcona anchored at Emden Only two of the waiting submarines U 66 and U 32 received the order 21 British response Edit Unfortunately for the German plan the British had obtained a copy of the main German codebook from the light cruiser SMS Magdeburg which had been boarded by the Russian Navy after the ship ran aground in Russian territorial waters in 1914 German naval radio communications could therefore often be quickly deciphered and the British Admiralty usually knew about German activities The British Admiralty s Room 40 maintained direction finding and interception of German naval signals It had intercepted and decrypted a German signal on 28 May that provided ample evidence that the German fleet was stirring in the North Sea 22 Further signals were intercepted and although they were not decrypted it was clear that a major operation was likely At 11 00 on 30 May Jellicoe was warned that the German fleet seemed prepared to sail the following morning By 17 00 the Admiralty had intercepted the signal from Scheer 31 May G G 2490 making it clear something significant was imminent 23 Not knowing the Germans objective Jellicoe and his staff decided to position the fleet to head off any attempt by the Germans to enter the North Atlantic or the Baltic through the Skagerrak by taking up a position off Norway where they could potentially cut off any German raid into the shipping lanes of the Atlantic or prevent the Germans from heading into the Baltic A position further west was unnecessary as that area of the North Sea could be patrolled by air using aircraft citation needed John Jellicoe British fleet commander Consequently Admiral Jellicoe led the sixteen dreadnought battleships of the 1st and 4th Battle Squadrons of the Grand Fleet and three battlecruisers of the 3rd Battlecruiser Squadron eastwards out of Scapa Flow at 22 30 on 30 May He was to meet the 2nd Battle Squadron of eight dreadnought battleships commanded by Vice Admiral Martyn Jerram coming from Cromarty Beatty s force of six ships of the 1st and 2nd Battlecruiser Squadrons plus the 5th Battle Squadron of four fast battleships left the Firth of Forth at around the same time 24 Jellicoe intended to rendezvous with him 90 mi 78 nmi 140 km west of the mouth of the Skagerrak off the coast of Jutland and wait for the Germans to appear or for their intentions to become clear The planned position would give him the widest range of responses to likely German moves 25 Hipper s raiding force did not leave the Outer Jade Roads until 01 00 on 31 May heading west of Heligoland Island following a cleared channel through the minefields heading north at 16 knots 30 km h 18 mph The main German fleet of sixteen dreadnought battleships of 1st and 3rd Battle Squadrons left the Jade at 02 30 being joined off Heligoland at 04 00 by the six pre dreadnoughts of the 2nd Battle Squadron coming from the Elbe River Naval tactics in 1916 EditThe principle of concentration of force was fundamental to the fleet tactics of this time As outlined by Captain Reginald Hall in 1914 tactical doctrine called for a fleet approaching battle to be in a compact formation of parallel columns allowing relatively easy manoeuvring and giving shortened sight lines within the formation which simplified the passing of the signals necessary for command and control 26 A fleet formed in several short columns could change its heading faster than one formed in a single long column Since most command signals were made with flags or signal lamps between ships the flagship was usually placed at the head of the centre column so that its signals might be more easily seen by the many ships of the formation Wireless telegraphy was in use though security radio direction finding encryption and the limitation of the radio sets made their extensive use more problematic Command and control of such huge fleets remained difficult 26 27 Thus it might take a very long time for a signal from the flagship to be relayed to the entire formation It was usually necessary for a signal to be confirmed by each ship before it could be relayed to other ships and an order for a fleet movement would have to be received and acknowledged by every ship before it could be executed In a large single column formation a signal could take 10 minutes or more to be passed from one end of the line to the other whereas in a formation of parallel columns visibility across the diagonals was often better and always shorter than in a single long column and the diagonals gave signal redundancy increasing the probability that a message would be quickly seen and correctly interpreted 26 However before battle was joined the heavy units of the fleet would if possible deploy into a single column To form the battle line in the correct orientation relative to the enemy the commanding admiral had to know the enemy fleet s distance bearing heading and speed It was the task of the scouting forces consisting primarily of battlecruisers and cruisers to find the enemy and report this information in sufficient time and if possible to deny the enemy s scouting forces the opportunity of obtaining the equivalent information 26 Ideally the battle line would cross the intended path of the enemy column so that the maximum number of guns could be brought to bear while the enemy could fire only with the forward guns of the leading ships a manoeuvre known as crossing the T Admiral Tōgō commander of the Japanese battleship fleet had achieved this against Admiral Zinovy Rozhestvensky s Russian battleships in 1905 at the Battle of Tsushima with devastating results 28 Jellicoe achieved this twice in one hour against the High Seas Fleet at Jutland but on both occasions Scheer managed to turn away and disengage thereby avoiding a decisive action Ship design Edit Within the existing technological limits a trade off had to be made between the weight and size of guns the weight of armour protecting the ship and the maximum speed Battleships sacrificed speed for armour and heavy naval guns 11 in 280 mm or larger British battlecruisers sacrificed weight of armour for greater speed while their German counterparts were armed with lighter guns and heavier armour These weight savings allowed them to escape danger or catch other ships Generally the larger guns mounted on British ships allowed an engagement at greater range In theory a lightly armoured ship could stay out of range of a slower opponent while still scoring hits The fast pace of development in the pre war years meant that every few years a new generation of ships rendered its predecessors obsolete Thus fairly young ships could still be obsolete compared with the newest ships and fare badly in an engagement against them 29 Admiral John Fisher responsible for reconstruction of the British fleet in the pre war period favoured large guns oil fuel and speed Admiral Tirpitz responsible for the German fleet favoured ship survivability and chose to sacrifice some gun size for improved armour The German battlecruiser SMS Derfflinger had belt armour equivalent in thickness though not as comprehensive to the British battleship HMS Iron Duke significantly better than on the British battlecruisers such as Tiger German ships had better internal subdivision and had fewer doors and other weak points in their bulkheads but with the disadvantage that space for crew was greatly reduced 29 As they were designed only for sorties in the North Sea they did not need to be as habitable as the British vessels and their crews could live in barracks ashore when in harbour 30 Order of battle EditMain article Order of battle at Jutland British GermanDreadnoughtbattleships 28 16Pre dreadnoughts 0 6Battlecruisers 9 5Armoured cruisers 8 0Light cruisers 26 11Destroyers 79 61Seaplane carrier 1 0Warships of the period were armed with guns firing projectiles of varying weights bearing high explosive warheads The sum total of weight of all the projectiles fired by all the ship s broadside guns is referred to as weight of broadside At Jutland the total of the British ships weight of broadside was 332 360 lb 150 760 kg while the German fleet s total was 134 216 lb 60 879 kg 31 This does not take into consideration the ability of some ships and their crews to fire more or less rapidly than others which would increase or decrease amount of fire that one combatant was able to bring to bear on their opponent for any length of time Jellicoe s Grand Fleet was split into two sections The dreadnought Battle Fleet with which he sailed formed the main force and was composed of 24 battleships and three battlecruisers The battleships were formed into three squadrons of eight ships further subdivided into divisions of four each led by a flag officer Accompanying them were eight armoured cruisers classified by the Royal Navy since 1913 as cruisers eight light cruisers four scout cruisers 51 destroyers and one destroyer minelayer 32 David Beatty commander of the British battlecruiser fleet The Grand Fleet sailed without three of its battleships Emperor of India in refit at Invergordon Queen Elizabeth dry docked at Rosyth and Dreadnought in refit at Devonport The brand new Royal Sovereign was left behind with only three weeks in service her untrained crew was judged unready for battle HMS Audacious had been sunk by a German mine on 27 October 1914 33 British reconnaissance was provided by the Battlecruiser Fleet under David Beatty six battlecruisers four fast Queen Elizabeth class battleships 14 light cruisers and 27 destroyers Air scouting was provided by the attachment of the seaplane tender HMS Engadine one of the first aircraft carriers in history to participate in a naval engagement 34 The German High Seas Fleet under Scheer was also split into a main force and a separate reconnaissance force Scheer s main battle fleet was composed of 16 battleships and six pre dreadnought battleships arranged in an identical manner to the British With them were six light cruisers and 31 torpedo boats the latter being roughly equivalent to a British destroyer The only German battleship missing was SMS Konig Albert Franz Hipper commander of the German battlecruiser squadron The German scouting force commanded by Franz Hipper consisted of five battlecruisers five light cruisers and 30 torpedo boats The Germans had no equivalent to Engadine and no heavier than air aircraft to operate with the fleet but had the Imperial German Naval Airship Service s force of rigid airships available to patrol the North Sea citation needed All of the battleships and battlecruisers on both sides carried torpedoes of various sizes as did the lighter craft 34 The British battleships carried three or four underwater torpedo tubes The battlecruisers carried from two to five All were either 18 inch or 21 inch diameter The German battleships carried five or six underwater torpedo tubes in three sizes from 18 to 21 inch and the battlecruisers carried four or five tubes citation needed The German battle fleet was hampered by the slow speed and relatively poor armament of the six pre dreadnoughts of II Squadron which limited maximum fleet speed to 18 knots 33 km h 21 mph compared to maximum British fleet speed of 21 knots 39 km h 24 mph 35 On the British side the eight armoured cruisers were deficient in both speed and armour protection 36 Both of these obsolete squadrons were notably vulnerable to attacks by more modern enemy ships citation needed Battlecruiser action EditThe route of the British battlecruiser fleet took it through the patrol sector allocated to U 32 After receiving the order to commence the operation the U boat moved to a position 80 mi 70 nmi 130 km east of the Isle of May at dawn on 31 May At 03 40 it sighted the cruisers HMS Galatea and Phaeton leaving the Forth at 18 knots 33 km h 21 mph It launched one torpedo at the leading cruiser at a range of 1 000 yd 910 m but its periscope jammed up giving away the position of the submarine as it manoeuvred to fire a second The lead cruiser turned away to dodge the torpedo while the second turned towards the submarine attempting to ram U 32 crash dived and on raising its periscope at 04 10 saw two battlecruisers the 2nd Battlecruiser Squadron heading south east They were too far away to attack but Kapitanleutnant von Spiegel reported the sighting of two battleships and two cruisers to Germany 37 U 66 was also supposed to be patrolling off the Firth of Forth but had been forced north to a position 60 mi 52 nmi 97 km off Peterhead by patrolling British vessels This now brought it into contact with the 2nd Battle Squadron coming from the Moray Firth At 05 00 it had to crash dive when the cruiser Duke of Edinburgh appeared from the mist heading toward it It was followed by another cruiser Boadicea and eight battleships U 66 got within 350 yd 320 m of the battleships preparing to fire but was forced to dive by an approaching destroyer and missed the opportunity At 06 35 it reported eight battleships and cruisers heading north 38 The courses reported by both submarines were incorrect because they reflected one leg of a zigzag being used by British ships to avoid submarines Taken with a wireless intercept of more ships leaving Scapa Flow earlier in the night they created the impression in the German High Command that the British fleet whatever it was doing was split into separate sections moving apart which was precisely as the Germans wished to meet it 39 Jellicoe s ships proceeded to their rendezvous undamaged and undiscovered However he was now misled by an Admiralty intelligence report advising that the German main battle fleet was still in port 40 The Director of Operations Division Rear Admiral Thomas Jackson had asked the intelligence division Room 40 for the current location of German call sign DK used by Admiral Scheer They had replied that it was currently transmitting from Wilhelmshaven It was known to the intelligence staff that Scheer deliberately used a different call sign when at sea but no one asked for this information or explained the reason behind the query to locate the German fleet 41 The German battlecruisers cleared the minefields surrounding the Amrum swept channel by 09 00 They then proceeded north west passing 35 mi 30 nmi 56 km west of the Horn s Reef lightship heading for the Little Fisher Bank at the mouth of the Skagerrak The High Seas Fleet followed some 50 mi 43 nmi 80 km behind The battlecruisers were in line ahead with the four cruisers of the II scouting group plus supporting torpedo boats ranged in an arc 8 mi 7 0 nmi 13 km ahead and to either side The IX torpedo boat flotilla formed close support immediately surrounding the battlecruisers The High Seas Fleet similarly adopted a line ahead formation with close screening by torpedo boats to either side and a further screen of five cruisers surrounding the column 5 8 mi 4 3 7 0 nmi 8 0 12 9 km away The wind had finally moderated so that Zeppelins could be used and by 11 30 five had been sent out L14 to the Skagerrak L23 240 mi 210 nmi 390 km east of Noss Head in the Pentland Firth L21 120 mi 100 nmi 190 km off Peterhead L9 100 mi 87 nmi 160 km off Sunderland and L16 80 mi 70 nmi 130 km east of Flamborough Head Visibility however was still bad with clouds down to 1 000 ft 300 m 42 Contact Edit HMS Warspite and Malaya seen from HMS Valiant at around 14 00 hrs By around 14 00 Beatty s ships were proceeding eastward at roughly the same latitude as Hipper s squadron which was heading north Had the courses remained unchanged Beatty would have passed between the two German fleets 40 mi 35 nmi 64 km south of the battlecruisers and 20 mi 17 nmi 32 km north of the High Seas Fleet at around 16 30 possibly trapping his ships just as the German plan envisioned His orders were to stop his scouting patrol when he reached a point 260 mi 230 nmi 420 km east of Britain and then turn north to meet Jellicoe which he did at this time Beatty s ships were divided into three columns with the two battlecruiser squadrons leading in parallel lines 3 mi 2 6 nmi 4 8 km apart The 5th Battle Squadron was stationed 5 mi 4 3 nmi 8 0 km to the north west on the side furthest away from any expected enemy contact while a screen of cruisers and destroyers was spread south east of the battlecruisers After the turn the 5th Battle Squadron was now leading the British ships in the westernmost column and Beatty s squadron was centre and rearmost with the 2nd BCS to the west 43 1 15 22 hrs Hipper sights Beatty 2 15 48 hrs First shots fired by Hipper s squadron 3 16 00 hrs 16 05 hrs Indefatigable explodes leaving two survivors 4 16 25 hrs Queen Mary explodes nine survive 5 16 45 hrs Beatty s battlecruisers move out of range of Hipper 6 16 54 hrs Evan Thomas s battleships turn north behind Beatty At 14 20 on 31 May despite heavy haze and scuds of fog giving poor visibility 44 scouts from Beatty s force reported enemy ships to the south east the British light units investigating a neutral Danish steamer N J Fjord which was stopped between the two fleets had found two German destroyers engaged on the same mission B109 and B110 The first shots of the battle were fired at 14 28 when Galatea and Phaeton of the British 1st Light Cruiser Squadron opened on the German torpedo boats which withdrew toward their approaching light cruisers At 14 36 the Germans scored the first hit of the battle when SMS Elbing of Rear Admiral Friedrich Boedicker s Scouting Group II hit her British counterpart Galatea at extreme range 45 Beatty began to move his battlecruisers and supporting forces south eastwards and then east to cut the German ships off from their base and ordered Engadine to launch a seaplane to try to get more information about the size and location of the German forces This was the first time in history that a carrier based aeroplane was used for reconnaissance in naval combat Engadine s aircraft did locate and report some German light cruisers just before 15 30 and came under anti aircraft gunfire but attempts to relay reports from the aeroplane failed 46 Unfortunately for Beatty his initial course changes at 14 32 were not received by Sir Hugh Evan Thomas s 5th Battle Squadron the distance being too great to read his flags because the battlecruiser HMS Tiger the last ship in his column was no longer in a position where she could relay signals by searchlight to Evan Thomas as she had previously been ordered to do Whereas before the north turn Tiger had been the closest ship to Evan Thomas she was now further away than Beatty in Lion Matters were aggravated because Evan Thomas had not been briefed regarding standing orders within Beatty s squadron as his squadron normally operated with the Grand Fleet Fleet ships were expected to obey movement orders precisely and not deviate from them Beatty s standing instructions expected his officers to use their initiative and keep station with the flagship 47 As a result the four Queen Elizabeth class battleships which were the fastest and most heavily armed in the world at that time remained on the previous course for several minutes ending up 10 mi 8 7 nmi 16 km behind rather than five 48 Beatty also had the opportunity during the previous hours to concentrate his forces and no reason not to do so whereas he steamed ahead at full speed faster than the battleships could manage Dividing the force had serious consequences for the British costing them what would have been an overwhelming advantage in ships and firepower during the first half hour of the coming battle 46 With visibility favouring the Germans Hipper s battlecruisers at 15 22 steaming approximately north west sighted Beatty s squadron at a range of about 15 mi 13 nmi 24 km while Beatty s forces did not identify Hipper s battlecruisers until 15 30 position 1 on map At 15 45 Hipper turned south east to lead Beatty toward Scheer who was 46 mi 40 nmi 74 km south east with the main force of the High Seas Fleet 49 Run to the south Edit Beatty s conduct during the next 15 minutes has received a great deal of criticism as his ships out ranged and outnumbered the German squadron yet he held his fire for over 10 minutes with the German ships in range He also failed to use the time available to rearrange his battlecruisers into a fighting formation with the result that they were still manoeuvring when the battle started 50 At 15 48 with the opposing forces roughly parallel at 15 000 yd 14 000 m with the British to the south west of the Germans i e on the right side Hipper opened fire followed by the British ships as their guns came to bear upon targets position 2 Thus began the opening phase of the battlecruiser action known as the Run to the South in which the British chased the Germans and Hipper intentionally led Beatty toward Scheer During the first minutes of the ensuing battle all the British ships except Princess Royal fired far over their German opponents due to adverse visibility conditions before finally getting the range Only Lion and Princess Royal had settled into formation so the other four ships were hampered in aiming by their own turning Beatty was to windward of Hipper and therefore funnel and gun smoke from his own ships tended to obscure his targets while Hipper s smoke blew clear Also the eastern sky was overcast and the grey German ships were indistinct and difficult to range 51 Beatty s flagship HMS Lion burning after being hit by a salvo from SMS Lutzow HMS Indefatigable sinking after being struck by shells from SMS Von der Tann Beatty had ordered his ships to engage in a line one British ship engaging with one German and his flagship HMS Lion doubling on the German flagship SMS Lutzow However due to another mistake with signalling by flag and possibly because Queen Mary and Tiger were unable to see the German lead ship because of smoke 52 the second German ship Derfflinger was left un engaged and free to fire without disruption SMS Moltke drew fire from two of Beatty s battlecruisers but still fired with great accuracy during this time hitting Tiger 9 times in the first 12 minutes The Germans drew first blood Aided by superior visibility Hipper s five battlecruisers quickly registered hits on three of the six British battlecruisers Seven minutes passed before the British managed to score their first hit 53 The first near kill of the Run to the South occurred at 16 00 when a 30 5 cm 12 0 in shell from Lutzow wrecked the Q turret amidships on Beatty s flagship Lion Dozens of crewmen were instantly killed but far larger destruction was averted when the mortally wounded turret commander Major Francis Harvey of the Royal Marines promptly ordered the magazine doors shut and the magazine flooded This prevented a magazine explosion at 16 28 when a flash fire ignited ready cordite charges beneath the turret and killed everyone in the chambers outside Q magazine Lion was saved 54 HMS Indefatigable was not so lucky at 16 02 just 14 minutes into the gunnery exchange she was hit aft by three 28 cm 11 in shells from SMS Von der Tann causing damage sufficient to knock her out of line and detonating X magazine aft Soon after despite the near maximum range Von der Tann put another 28 cm 11 in shell on Indefatigable s A turret forward The plunging shells probably pierced the thin upper armour and seconds later Indefatigable was ripped apart by another magazine explosion sinking immediately and leaving only two survivors from her crew of 1 019 officers and men 55 position 3 Hipper s position deteriorated somewhat by 16 15 as the 5th Battle Squadron finally came into range so that he had to contend with gunfire from the four battleships astern as well as Beatty s five remaining battlecruisers to starboard But he knew his baiting mission was close to completion as his force was rapidly closing with Scheer s main body At 16 08 the lead battleship of the 5th Battle Squadron HMS Barham caught up with Hipper and opened fire at extreme range scoring a 15 in 380 mm hit on Von der Tann within 60 seconds Still it was 16 15 before all the battleships of the 5th were able to fully engage at long range 56 At 16 25 the battlecruiser action intensified again when HMS Queen Mary was hit by what may have been a combined salvo from Derfflinger and Seydlitz she disintegrated when both forward magazines exploded sinking with all but nine of her 1 275 man crew lost 57 position 4 Commander von Hase the first gunnery officer aboard Derfflinger noted The enemy was shooting superbly Twice the Derfflinger came under their infernal hail and each time she was hit But the Queen Mary was having a bad time engaged by the Seydlitz as well as the Derfflinger she met her doom at 1626 A vivid red flame shot up from her forepart then came an explosion forward followed by a much heavier explosion amidships Immediately afterwards she blew up with a terrific explosion the masts collapsing inwards and the smoke hiding everything 58 HMS Queen Mary blowing up During the Run to the South from 15 48 to 16 54 the German battlecruisers made an estimated total of forty two 28 and 30 5 cm 11 0 and 12 0 in hits on the British battlecruisers nine on Lion six on Princess Royal seven on Queen Mary 14 on Tiger one on New Zealand five on Indefatigable and two more on the battleship Barham compared with only eleven 13 5 in 340 mm hits by the British battlecruisers four on Lutzow four on Seydlitz two on Moltke one on von der Tann and six 15 in 380 mm hits by the battleships one on Seydlitz four on Moltke one on von der Tann 59 Shortly after 16 26 a salvo struck on or around HMS Princess Royal which was obscured by spray and smoke from shell bursts A signalman promptly leapt on to the bridge of Lion and announced Princess Royal s blown up Sir Beatty famously turned to his flag captain saying Chatfield there seems to be something wrong with our bloody ships today In popular legend Beatty also immediately ordered his ships to turn two points to port i e two points nearer the enemy but there is no official record of any such command or course change 60 Princess Royal as it turned out was still afloat after the spray cleared At 16 30 Scheer s leading battleships sighted the distant battlecruiser action soon after HMS Southampton of Beatty s 2nd Light Cruiser Squadron led by Commodore William Goodenough sighted the main body of Scheer s High Seas Fleet dodging numerous heavy calibre salvos to report in detail the German strength 16 dreadnoughts with six older battleships This was the first news that Beatty and Jellicoe had that Scheer and his battle fleet were even at sea Simultaneously an all out destroyer action raged in the space between the opposing battlecruiser forces as British and German destroyers fought with each other and attempted to torpedo the larger enemy ships Each side fired many torpedoes but both battlecruiser forces turned away from the attacks and all escaped harm except Seydlitz which was hit forward at 16 57 by a torpedo fired by the British destroyer HMS Petard Though taking on water Seydlitz maintained speed The destroyer HMS Nestor under the command of Captain Barry Bingham led the British attacks The British disabled the German torpedo boat V27 which the Germans soon abandoned and sank and Petard then torpedoed and sank V29 her second score of the day S35 and V26 rescued the crews of their sunken sister ships But Nestor and another British destroyer HMS Nomad were immobilised by shell hits and were later sunk by Scheer s passing dreadnoughts Bingham was rescued and awarded the Victoria Cross for his leadership in the destroyer action 61 Run to the north Edit As soon as he himself sighted the vanguard of Scheer s distant battleship line 12 mi 10 nmi 19 km away at 16 40 Beatty turned his battlecruiser force 180 heading north to draw the Germans toward Jellicoe 62 position 5 Beatty s withdrawal toward Jellicoe is called the Run to the North in which the tables turned and the Germans chased the British Because Beatty once again failed to signal his intentions adequately the battleships of the 5th Battle Squadron which were too far behind to read his flags found themselves passing the battlecruisers on an opposing course and heading directly toward the approaching main body of the High Seas Fleet At 16 48 at extreme range Scheer s leading battleships opened fire 63 Meanwhile at 16 47 having received Goodenough s signal and knowing that Beatty was now leading the German battle fleet north to him Jellicoe signalled to his own forces that the fleet action they had waited so long for was finally imminent at 16 51 by radio he informed the Admiralty so in London 64 The difficulties of the 5th Battle Squadron were compounded when Beatty gave the order to Evan Thomas to turn in succession rather than turn together at 16 48 as the battleships passed him Evan Thomas acknowledged the signal but Lieutenant Commander Ralph Seymour Beatty s flag lieutenant aggravated the situation when he did not haul down the flags to execute the signal for some minutes At 16 55 when the 5BS had moved within range of the enemy battleships Evan Thomas issued his own flag command warning his squadron to expect sudden manoeuvres and to follow his lead before starting to turn on his own initiative The order to turn in succession would have resulted in all four ships turning in the same patch of sea as they reached it one by one giving the High Seas Fleet repeated opportunity with ample time to find the proper range However the captain of the trailing ship HMS Malaya turned early mitigating the adverse results 63 65 For the next hour the 5th Battle Squadron acted as Beatty s rearguard drawing fire from all the German ships within range while by 17 10 Beatty had deliberately eased his own squadron out of range of Hipper s now superior battlecruiser force 66 Since visibility and firepower now favoured the Germans there was no incentive for Beatty to risk further battlecruiser losses when his own gunnery could not be effective Illustrating the imbalance Beatty s battlecruisers did not score any hits on the Germans in this phase until 17 45 67 but they had rapidly received five more before he opened the range four on Lion of which three were by Lutzow and one on Tiger by Seydlitz 68 Now the only targets the Germans could reach the ships of the 5th Battle Squadron received simultaneous fire from Hipper s battlecruisers to the east which HMS Barham and Valiant engaged and Scheer s leading battleships to the south east which HMS Warspite and Malaya engaged 69 Three took hits Barham four by Derfflinger Warspite two by Seydlitz and Malaya seven by the German battleships Only Valiant was unscathed 70 The four battleships were far better suited to take this sort of pounding than the battlecruisers and none were lost though Malaya suffered heavy damage an ammunition fire and heavy crew casualties At the same time the 15 in 380 mm fire of the four British ships was accurate and effective As the two British squadrons headed north at top speed eagerly chased by the entire German fleet the 5th Battle Squadron scored 13 hits on the enemy battlecruisers four on Lutzow three on Derfflinger six on Seydlitz and five on battleships although only one on SMS Markgraf did any serious damage 71 position 6 The fleets converge Edit Jellicoe was now aware that full fleet engagement was nearing but had insufficient information on the position and course of the Germans To assist Beatty early in the battle at about 16 05 Jellicoe had ordered Rear Admiral Horace Hood s 3rd Battlecruiser Squadron to speed ahead to find and support Beatty s force and Hood was now racing SSE well in advance of Jellicoe s northern force 72 Rear Admiral Arbuthnot s 1st Cruiser Squadron patrolled the van of Jellicoe s main battleship force as it advanced steadily to the south east At 17 33 the armoured cruiser HMS Black Prince of Arbuthnot s squadron on the far southwest flank of Jellicoe s force came within view of HMS Falmouth which was about 5 mi 4 3 nmi 8 0 km ahead of Beatty with the 3rd Light Cruiser Squadron establishing the first visual link between the converging bodies of the Grand Fleet 73 At 17 38 the scout cruiser HMS Chester screening Hood s oncoming battlecruisers was intercepted by the van of the German scouting forces under Rear Admiral Boedicker 74 Heavily outnumbered by Boedicker s four light cruisers Chester was pounded before being relieved by Hood s heavy units which swung westward for that purpose Hood s flagship HMS Invincible disabled the light cruiser SMS Wiesbaden shortly after 17 56 Wiesbaden became a sitting target for most of the British fleet during the next hour but remained afloat and fired some torpedoes at the passing enemy battleships from long range Meanwhile Boedicker s other ships turned toward Hipper and Scheer in the mistaken belief that Hood was leading a larger force of British capital ships from the north and east A chaotic destroyer action in mist and smoke ensued as German torpedo boats attempted to blunt the arrival of this new formation but Hood s battlecruisers dodged all the torpedoes fired at them In this action after leading a torpedo counter attack the British destroyer HMS Shark was disabled but continued to return fire at numerous passing enemy ships for the next hour 75 Fleet action EditDeployment Edit 1 18 00 Scouting forces rejoin their respective fleets 2 18 15 British fleet deploys into battle line 3 18 30 German fleet under fire turns away 4 19 00 German fleet turns back 5 19 15 German fleet turns away for second time 6 20 00 7 21 00 Nightfall Jellicoe assumes night cruising formation In the meantime Beatty and Evan Thomas had resumed their engagement with Hipper s battlecruisers this time with the visual conditions to their advantage With several of his ships damaged Hipper turned back toward Scheer at around 18 00 just as Beatty s flagship Lion was finally sighted from Jellicoe s flagship Iron Duke Jellicoe twice demanded the latest position of the German battlefleet from Beatty who could not see the German battleships and failed to respond to the question until 18 14 Meanwhile Jellicoe received confused sighting reports of varying accuracy and limited usefulness from light cruisers and battleships on the starboard southern flank of his force 76 Jellicoe was in a worrying position He needed to know the location of the German fleet to judge when and how to deploy his battleships from their cruising formation six columns of four ships each into a single battle line The deployment could be on either the westernmost or the easternmost column and had to be carried out before the Germans arrived but early deployment could mean losing any chance of a decisive encounter Deploying to the west would bring his fleet closer to Scheer gaining valuable time as dusk approached but the Germans might arrive before the manoeuvre was complete Deploying to the east would take the force away from Scheer but Jellicoe s ships might be able to cross the T and visibility would strongly favour British gunnery Scheer s forces would be silhouetted against the setting sun to the west while the Grand Fleet would be indistinct against the dark skies to the north and east and would be hidden by reflection of the low sunlight off intervening haze and smoke Deployment would take twenty irreplaceable minutes and the fleets were closing at full speed In one of the most critical and difficult tactical command decisions of the entire war Jellicoe ordered deployment to the east at 18 15 76 77 Windy Corner Edit Meanwhile Hipper had rejoined Scheer and the combined High Seas Fleet was heading north directly toward Jellicoe Scheer had no indication that Jellicoe was at sea let alone that he was bearing down from the north west and was distracted by the intervention of Hood s ships to his north and east Beatty s four surviving battlecruisers were now crossing the van of the British dreadnoughts to join Hood s three battlecruisers at this time Arbuthnot s flagship the armoured cruiser HMS Defence and her squadron mate HMS Warrior both charged across Beatty s bows and Lion narrowly avoided a collision with Warrior 78 Nearby numerous British light cruisers and destroyers on the south western flank of the deploying battleships were also crossing each other s courses in attempts to reach their proper stations often barely escaping collisions and under fire from some of the approaching German ships This period of peril and heavy traffic attending the merger and deployment of the British forces later became known as Windy Corner 79 Arbuthnot was attracted by the drifting hull of the crippled Wiesbaden With Warrior Defence closed in for the kill only to blunder right into the gun sights of Hipper s and Scheer s oncoming capital ships Defence was deluged by heavy calibre gunfire from many German battleships which detonated her magazines in a spectacular explosion viewed by most of the deploying Grand Fleet She sank with all hands 903 officers and men Warrior was also hit badly but was spared destruction by a mishap to the nearby battleship Warspite Warspite had her steering gear overheat and jam under heavy load at high speed as the 5th Battle Squadron made a turn to the north at 18 19 80 Steaming at top speed in wide circles Warspite attracted the attention of German dreadnoughts and took 13 hits inadvertently drawing fire away from the hapless Warrior Warspite was brought back under control and survived the onslaught but was badly damaged had to reduce speed and withdrew northward later at 21 07 she was ordered back to port by Evan Thomas 81 Warspite went on to a long and illustrious career serving also in World War II Warrior on the other hand was abandoned and sank the next day after her crew was taken off at 08 25 on 1 June by Engadine which towed the sinking armoured cruiser 100 mi 87 nmi 160 km during the night 82 Invincible blowing up after being struck by shells from Lutzow and Derfflinger As Defence sank and Warspite circled at about 18 19 Hipper moved within range of Hood s 3rd Battlecruiser Squadron but was still also within range of Beatty s ships At first visibility favoured the British HMS Indomitable hit Derfflinger three times and Seydlitz once 83 while Lutzow quickly took 10 hits from Lion Inflexible and Invincible including two below waterline hits forward by Invincible that would ultimately doom Hipper s flagship 84 But at 18 30 Invincible abruptly appeared as a clear target before Lutzow and Derfflinger The two German ships then fired three salvoes each at Invincible and sank her in 90 seconds A 30 5 cm 12 0 in shell from the third salvo struck Invincible s Q turret amidships detonating the magazines below and causing her to blow up and sink All but six of her crew of 1 032 officers and men including Rear Admiral Hood were killed 85 Of the remaining British battlecruisers only Princess Royal received heavy calibre hits at this time two 30 5 cm 12 0 in by the battleship Markgraf Lutzow flooding forward and unable to communicate by radio was now out of action and began to attempt to withdraw therefore Hipper left his flagship and transferred to the torpedo boat SMS G39 hoping to board one of the other battlecruisers later Crossing the T Edit By 18 30 the main battle fleet action was joined for the first time with Jellicoe effectively crossing Scheer s T The officers on the lead German battleships and Scheer himself were taken completely by surprise when they emerged from drifting clouds of smoky mist to suddenly find themselves facing the massed firepower of the entire Grand Fleet main battle line which they did not know was even at sea 86 Jellicoe s flagship Iron Duke quickly scored seven hits on the lead German dreadnought SMS Konig but in this brief exchange which lasted only minutes as few as 10 of the Grand Fleet s 24 dreadnoughts actually opened fire 87 The Germans were hampered by poor visibility in addition to being in an unfavourable tactical position just as Jellicoe had intended Realising he was heading into a death trap Scheer ordered his fleet to turn and disengage at 18 33 Under a pall of smoke and mist Scheer s forces succeeded in disengaging by an expertly executed 180 turn in unison battle about turn to starboard German Gefechtskehrtwendung nach Steuerbord which was a well practised emergency manoeuvre of the High Seas Fleet 88 Scheer declared It was now obvious that we were confronted by a large portion of the English fleet The entire arc stretching from north to east was a sea of fire The flash from the muzzles of the guns was seen distinctly through the mist and smoke on the horizon although the ships themselves were not distinguishable 86 Conscious of the risks to his capital ships posed by torpedoes Jellicoe did not chase directly but headed south determined to keep the High Seas Fleet west of him Starting at 18 40 battleships at the rear of Jellicoe s line were in fact sighting and avoiding torpedoes and at 18 54 HMS Marlborough was hit by a torpedo probably from the disabled Wiesbaden which reduced her speed to 16 knots 30 km h 18 mph 89 Meanwhile Scheer knowing that it was not yet dark enough to escape and that his fleet would suffer terribly in a stern chase doubled back to the east at 18 55 In his memoirs he wrote the manoeuvre would be bound to surprise the enemy to upset his plans for the rest of the day and if the blow fell heavily it would facilitate the breaking loose at night But the turn to the east took his ships again directly towards Jellicoe s fully deployed battle line 90 Simultaneously the disabled British destroyer HMS Shark fought desperately against a group of four German torpedo boats and disabled V48 with gunfire but was eventually torpedoed and sunk at 19 02 by the German destroyer S54 Shark s Captain Loftus Jones was awarded the Victoria Cross for his heroism in continuing to fight against all odds 91 Turn Of The Battle Edit HMS Birmingham under fire Commodore Goodenough s 2nd Light Cruiser Squadron dodged the fire of German battleships for a second time to re establish contact with the High Seas Fleet shortly after 19 00 By 19 15 Jellicoe had crossed Scheer s T again This time his arc of fire was tighter and deadlier causing severe damage to the German battleships particularly Rear Admiral Behncke s leading 3rd Squadron SMS Konig Grosser Kurfurst Markgraf and Kaiser all being hit along with SMS Helgoland of the 1st Squadron 92 while on the British side only the battleship HMS Colossus was hit twice by Seydlitz but with little damage done 93 At 19 17 for the second time in less than an hour Scheer turned his outnumbered and out gunned fleet to the west using the battle about turn German Gefechtskehrtwendung but this time it was executed only with difficulty as the High Seas Fleet s lead squadrons began to lose formation under concentrated gunfire 94 To deter a British chase Scheer ordered a major torpedo attack by his destroyers and a potentially sacrificial charge by Scouting Group I s four remaining battlecruisers Hipper was still aboard the torpedo boat G39 and was unable to command his squadron for this attack 95 Therefore Derfflinger under Captain Hartog led the already badly damaged German battlecruisers directly into the greatest concentration of naval gunfire any fleet commander had ever faced at ranges down to 4 mi 3 5 nmi 6 4 km 96 In what became known as the death ride all the battlecruisers except Moltke were hit and further damaged as 18 of the British battleships fired at them simultaneously 92 97 Derfflinger had two main gun turrets destroyed The crews of Scouting Group I suffered heavy casualties but survived the pounding and veered away with the other battlecruisers once Scheer was out of trouble and the German destroyers were moving in to attack 96 In this brief but intense portion of the engagement from about 19 05 to about 19 30 the Germans sustained a total of 37 heavy hits while inflicting only two Derfflinger alone received 14 92 98 While his battlecruisers drew the fire of the British fleet Scheer slipped away laying smoke screens Meanwhile from about 19 16 to about 19 40 the British battleships were also engaging Scheer s torpedo boats which executed several waves of torpedo attacks to cover his withdrawal Jellicoe s ships turned away from the attacks and successfully evaded all 31 of the torpedoes launched at them though in several cases only barely and sank the German destroyer S35 attributed to a salvo from Iron Duke British light forces also sank V48 which had previously been disabled by HMS Shark 99 100 This action and the turn away cost the British critical time and range in the last hour of daylight as Scheer intended allowing him to get his heavy ships out of immediate danger The last major exchanges between capital ships in this battle and in the war took place just after sunset from about 20 19 to about 20 35 as the surviving British battlecruisers caught up with their German counterparts which were briefly relieved by Rear Admiral Mauve s obsolete pre dreadnoughts the German 2nd Squadron 101 The British received one heavy hit on Princess Royal but scored five more on Seydlitz and three on other German ships 102 As twilight faded to night HMS King George V exchanged a few final shots with SMS Westfalen citation needed Night action and German withdrawal EditMain article Night action at the Battle of Jutland At 21 00 Jellicoe conscious of the Grand Fleet s deficiencies in night fighting decided to try to avoid a major engagement until early dawn 103 He placed a screen of cruisers and destroyers 5 mi 4 3 nmi 8 0 km behind his battle fleet to patrol the rear as he headed south to guard Scheer s expected escape route 104 In reality Scheer opted to cross Jellicoe s wake and escape via Horns Reef Luckily for Scheer most of the light forces in Jellicoe s rearguard failed to report the seven separate encounters with the German fleet during the night 105 106 the very few radio reports that were sent to the British flagship were never received possibly because the Germans were jamming British frequencies 107 Many of the destroyers failed to make the most of their opportunities to attack discovered ships despite Jellicoe s expectations that the destroyer forces would if necessary be able to block the path of the German fleet 108 Jellicoe and his commanders did not understand that the furious gunfire and explosions to the north seen and heard for hours by all the British battleships indicated that the German heavy ships were breaking through the screen astern of the British fleet 105 Instead it was believed that the fighting was the result of night attacks by German destroyers 109 The most powerful British ships of all the 15 inch guns of the 5th Battle Squadron directly observed German battleships crossing astern of them in action with British light forces at ranges of 3 mi 2 6 nmi 4 8 km or less and gunners on HMS Malaya made ready to fire but her captain declined 110 deferring to the authority of Rear Admiral Evan Thomas and neither commander reported the sightings to Jellicoe assuming that he could see for himself and that revealing the fleet s position by radio signals or gunfire was unwise While the nature of Scheer s escape and Jellicoe s inaction indicate the overall German superiority in night fighting the results of the night action were no more clear cut than were those of the battle as a whole In the first of many surprise encounters by darkened ships at point blank range Southampton Commodore Goodenough s flagship which had scouted so proficiently was heavily damaged in action with a German Scouting Group composed of light cruisers but managed to torpedo SMS Frauenlob which went down at 22 23 with all but 9 hands 320 officers and men 111 Damage to HMS Spitfire after being rammed by SMS Nassau From 23 20 to approximately 02 15 several British destroyer flotillas launched torpedo attacks on the German battle fleet in a series of violent and chaotic engagements at extremely short range often under 0 5 mi 0 80 km 112 At the cost of five destroyers sunk and some others damaged they managed to torpedo the light cruiser SMS Rostock which sank several hours later and the pre dreadnought SMS Pommern which blew up and sank with all hands 839 officers and men at 03 10 during the last wave of attacks before dawn 112 Three of the British destroyers collided in the chaos and the German battleship SMS Nassau rammed the British destroyer HMS Spitfire blowing away most of the British ship s superstructure merely with the muzzle blast of its big guns which could not be aimed low enough to hit the ship Nassau was left with an 11 ft 3 4 m hole in her side reducing her maximum speed to 15 knots 28 km h 17 mph while the removed plating was left lying on Spitfire s deck 113 Spitfire survived and made it back to port 114 Another German cruiser Elbing was accidentally rammed by the dreadnought Posen and abandoned sinking early the next day Of the British destroyers HMS Tipperary Ardent Fortune Sparrowhawk and Turbulent were lost during the night fighting Just after midnight on 1 June SMS Thuringen and other German battleships sank Black Prince of the ill fated 1st Cruiser Squadron which had blundered into the German battle line Deployed as part of a screening force several miles ahead of the main force of the Grand Fleet Black Prince had lost contact in the darkness and took a position near what she thought was the British line The Germans soon identified the new addition to their line and opened fire Overwhelmed by point blank gunfire Black Prince blew up all 857 officers and men were lost as her squadron leader Defence had done hours earlier 115 Lost in the darkness the battlecruisers Moltke and Seydlitz had similar point blank encounters with the British battle line and were recognised but were spared the fate of Black Prince when the captains of the British ships again declined to open fire reluctant to reveal their fleet s position 116 At 01 45 the sinking battlecruiser Lutzow fatally damaged by Invincible during the main action was torpedoed by the destroyer G38 on orders of Lutzow s Captain Viktor von Harder after the surviving crew of 1 150 transferred to destroyers that came alongside 117 At 02 15 the German torpedo boat V4 suddenly had its bow blown off V2 and V6 came alongside and took off the remaining crew and the V2 then sank the hulk Since there was no enemy nearby it was assumed that she had hit a mine or had been torpedoed by a submarine 118 At 02 15 five British ships of the 13th Destroyer Flotilla under Captain James Uchtred Farie regrouped and headed south At 02 25 they sighted the rear of the German line HMS Marksman inquired of the leader Champion as to whether he thought they were British or German ships Answering that he thought they were German Farie then veered off to the east and away from the German line All but Moresby in the rear followed as through the gloom she sighted what she thought were four pre dreadnought battleships 2 mi 1 7 nmi 3 2 km away She hoisted a flag signal indicating that the enemy was to the west and then closed to firing range letting off a torpedo set for high running at 02 37 then veering off to rejoin her flotilla The four pre dreadnought battleships were in fact two pre dreadnoughts Schleswig Holstein and Schlesien and the battlecruisers Von der Tann and Derfflinger Von der Tann sighted the torpedo and was forced to steer sharply to starboard to avoid it as it passed close to her bows Moresby rejoined Champion convinced she had scored a hit 118 Finally at 05 20 as Scheer s fleet was safely on its way home the battleship SMS Ostfriesland struck a British mine on her starboard side killing one man and wounding ten but was able to make port 119 Seydlitz critically damaged and very nearly sinking barely survived the return voyage after grounding and taking on even more water on the evening of 1 June she had to be assisted stern first into port where she dropped anchor at 07 30 on the morning of 2 June 120 The Germans were helped in their escape by the failure of the British Admiralty in London to pass on seven critical radio intercepts obtained by naval intelligence indicating the true position course and intentions of the High Seas Fleet during the night 121 One message was transmitted to Jellicoe at 23 15 that accurately reported the German fleet s course and speed as of 21 14 However the erroneous signal from earlier in the day that reported the German fleet still in port and an intelligence signal received at 22 45 giving another unlikely position for the German fleet had reduced his confidence in intelligence reports Had the other messages been forwarded which confirmed the information received at 23 15 or had British ships reported accurately sightings and engagements with German destroyers cruisers and battleships then Jellicoe could have altered course to intercept Scheer at the Horns Reef The unsent intercepted messages had been duly filed by the junior officer left on duty that night who failed to appreciate their significance 122 By the time Jellicoe finally learned of Scheer s whereabouts at 04 15 the German fleet was too far away to catch and it was clear that the battle could no longer be resumed Outcome EditAs both the Grand Fleet and the High Seas Fleet could claim to have at least partially satisfied their objectives both Britain and Germany have at various points claimed victory in the Battle of Jutland There is no consensus over which nation was victorious or if there was a victor at all Reporting Edit At midday on 2 June German authorities released a press statement claiming a victory including the destruction of a battleship two battlecruisers two armoured cruisers a light cruiser a submarine and several destroyers for the loss of Pommern and Wiesbaden News that Lutzow Elbing and Rostock had been scuttled was withheld on the grounds this information would not be known to the enemy The victory of the Skagerrak was celebrated in the press children were given a holiday and the nation celebrated The Kaiser announced a new chapter in world history Post war the official German history hailed the battle as a victory and it continued to be celebrated until after World War II 123 In Britain the first official news came from German wireless broadcasts Ships began to arrive in port their crews sending messages to friends and relatives both of their survival and the loss of some 6 000 others The authorities considered suppressing the news but it had already spread widely Some crews coming ashore found rumours had already reported them dead to relatives while others were jeered for the defeat they had suffered 44 At 19 00 on 2 June the Admiralty released a statement based on information from Jellicoe containing the bare news of losses on each side The following day British newspapers reported a German victory 124 The Daily Mirror described the German Director of the Naval Department telling the Reichstag The result of the fighting is a significant success for our forces against a much stronger adversary 125 The British population was shocked that the long anticipated battle had been a victory for Germany On 3 June the Admiralty issued a further statement expanding on German losses and another the following day with exaggerated claims However on 7 June the German admission of the losses of Lutzow and Rostock started to redress the sense of the battle as a loss International perception of the battle began to change towards a qualified British victory the German attempt to change the balance of power in the North Sea having been repulsed In July bad news from the Somme campaign swept concern over Jutland from the British consciousness 126 Assessments Edit SMS Seydlitz was heavily damaged in the battle hit by twenty one main calibre shells several secondary calibre and one torpedo 98 men were killed and 55 injured At Jutland the Germans with a 99 strong fleet sank 115 000 long tons 117 000 t of British ships while a 151 strong British fleet sank 62 000 long tons 63 000 t of German ships The British lost 6 094 seamen the Germans 2 551 Several other ships were badly damaged such as Lion and Seydlitz As of the summer of 1916 the High Seas Fleet s strategy was to whittle away the numerical advantage of the Royal Navy by bringing its full strength to bear against isolated squadrons of enemy capital ships whilst declining to be drawn into a general fleet battle until it had achieved something resembling parity in heavy ships In tactical terms the High Seas Fleet had clearly inflicted significantly greater losses on the Grand Fleet than it had suffered itself at Jutland and the Germans never had any intention of attempting to hold the site of the battle 127 so some historians support the German claim of victory at Jutland However Scheer seems to have quickly realised that further battles with a similar rate of attrition would exhaust the High Seas Fleet long before they reduced the Grand Fleet 128 Further after the 19 August advance was nearly intercepted by the Grand Fleet he no longer believed that it would be possible to trap a single squadron of Royal Navy warships without having the Grand Fleet intervene before he could return to port Therefore the High Seas Fleet abandoned its forays into the North Sea and turned its attention to the Baltic for most of 1917 whilst Scheer switched tactics against Britain to unrestricted submarine warfare in the Atlantic At a strategic level the outcome has been the subject of a huge amount of literature with no clear consensus The battle was widely viewed as indecisive in the immediate aftermath and this view remains influential Despite numerical superiority the British had been disappointed in their hopes for a decisive battle 129 comparable to Trafalgar and the objective of the influential strategic doctrines of Alfred Mahan The High Seas Fleet survived as a fleet in being Most of its losses were made good within a month even Seydlitz the most badly damaged ship to survive the battle was repaired by October and officially back in service by November However the Germans had failed in their objective of destroying a substantial portion of the British Fleet and no progress had been made towards the goal of allowing the High Seas Fleet to operate in the Atlantic Ocean Subsequently there has been considerable support for the view of Jutland as a strategic victory for the British While the British had not destroyed the German fleet and had lost more ships and lives than their enemy the Germans had retreated to harbour at the end of the battle the British were in command of the area Britain enforced the blockade reducing Germany s vital imports to 55 affecting the ability of Germany to fight the war 130 131 The German fleet would only sortie into the North Sea thrice more with a raid on 19 August one in October 1916 and another in April 1918 All three were unopposed by capital ships and quickly aborted as neither side was prepared to take the risks of mines and submarines Apart from these three abortive operations the High Seas Fleet unwilling to risk another encounter with the British fleet confined its activities to the Baltic Sea for the remainder of the war Jellicoe issued an order prohibiting the Grand Fleet from steaming south of the line of Horns Reef owing to the threat of mines and U boats 132 A German naval expert writing publicly about Jutland in November 1918 commented Our Fleet losses were severe On 1 June 1916 it was clear to every thinking person that this battle must and would be the last one 133 There is also significant support for viewing the battle as a German tactical victory due to the much higher losses sustained by the British 134 The Germans declared a great victory immediately afterwards while the British by contrast had only reported short and simple results In response to public outrage the First Lord of the Admiralty Arthur Balfour asked Winston Churchill to write a second report that was more positive and detailed 135 A crew member of SMS Westfalen At the end of the battle the British had maintained their numerical superiority and had 23 dreadnoughts ready and four battlecruisers still able to fight while the Germans had only 10 dreadnoughts 136 One month after the battle the Grand Fleet was stronger than it had been before sailing to Jutland 136 Warspite was dry docked at Rosyth returning to the fleet on 22 July while Malaya was repaired in the floating dock at Invergordon returning to duty on 11 July Barham was docked for a month at Devonport before undergoing speed trials and returning to Scapa Flow on 8 July Princess Royal stayed initially at Rosyth but transferred to dry dock at Portsmouth before returning to duty at Rosyth 21 July Tiger was dry docked at Rosyth and ready for service 2 July Queen Elizabeth Emperor of India and HMAS Australia which had been undergoing maintenance at the time of the battle returned to the fleet immediately followed shortly after by Resolution and Ramillies Lion initially remained ready for sea duty despite the damaged turret then underwent a month s repairs in July when Q turret was removed temporarily and replaced in September 137 A third view presented in a number of recent evaluations is that Jutland the last major fleet action between battleships illustrated the irrelevance of battleship fleets following the development of the submarine mine and torpedo 138 In this view the most important consequence of Jutland was the decision of the Germans to engage in unrestricted submarine warfare Although large numbers of battleships were constructed in the decades between the wars it has been argued that this outcome reflected the social dominance among naval decision makers of battleship advocates who constrained technological choices to fit traditional paradigms of fleet action 139 Battleships played a relatively minor role in World War II in which the submarine and aircraft carrier emerged as the dominant offensive weapons of naval warfare 140 British self critique Edit The official British Admiralty examination of the Grand Fleet s performance recognised two main problems British armour piercing shells exploded outside the German armour rather than penetrating and exploding within As a result some German ships with only 8 in 20 cm thick armour survived hits from 15 inch 38 cm projectiles Had these shells penetrated the armour and then exploded German losses would probably have been far greater 141 142 Communication between ships and the British commander in chief was comparatively poor For most of the battle Jellicoe had no idea where the German ships were even though British ships were in contact They failed to report enemy positions contrary to the Grand Fleet s Battle Plan Some of the most important signalling was carried out solely by flag instead of wireless or using redundant methods to ensure communications a questionable procedure given the mixture of haze and smoke that obscured the battlefield and a foreshadowing of similar failures by habit bound and conservatively minded professional officers of rank to take advantage of new technology in World War II 143 144 Shell performance Edit German armour piercing shells were far more effective than the British ones which often failed to penetrate heavy armour 145 The issue particularly concerned shells striking at oblique angles which became increasingly the case at long range 146 Germany had adopted trinitrotoluene TNT as the explosive filler for artillery shells in 1902 while the United Kingdom was still using a picric acid mixture Lyddite The shock of impact of a shell against armour often prematurely detonated Lyddite in advance of fuze function while TNT detonation could be delayed until after the shell had penetrated and the fuze had functioned in the vulnerable area behind the armour plate 147 Some 17 British shells hit the side armour of the German dreadnoughts or battlecruisers Of these four would not have penetrated under any circumstances Of the remaining 13 one penetrated the armour and exploded inside This showed a 7 5 chance of proper shell function on the British side a result of overly brittle shells and Lyddite exploding too soon 148 The issue of poorly performing shells had been known to Jellicoe who as Third Sea Lord from 1908 to 1910 had ordered new shells to be designed However the matter had not been followed through after his posting to sea and new shells had never been thoroughly tested 149 Beatty discovered the problem at a party aboard Lion a short time after the battle when a Swedish Naval officer was present He had recently visited Berlin where the German navy had scoffed at how British shells had broken up on their ships armour 150 The question of shell effectiveness had also been raised after the Battle of Dogger Bank but no action had been taken 151 Hipper later commented It was nothing but the poor quality of their bursting charges which saved us from disaster 152 Admiral Dreyer writing later about the battle during which he had been captain of the British flagship Iron Duke estimated that effective shells as later introduced would have led to the sinking of six more German capital ships based upon the actual number of hits achieved in the battle 153 The system of testing shells which remained in use up to 1944 meant that statistically a batch of shells of which 70 were faulty stood an even chance of being accepted Indeed even shells that failed this relatively mild test had still been issued to ships Analysis of the test results afterwards by the Ordnance Board suggested the likelihood that 30 70 of shells would not have passed the standard penetration test specified by the Admiralty 151 Efforts to replace the shells were initially resisted by the Admiralty and action was not taken until Jellicoe became First Sea Lord in December 1916 As an initial response the worst of the existing shells were withdrawn from ships in early 1917 and replaced from reserve supplies 154 New shells were designed but did not arrive until April 1918 and were never used in action 150 Battlecruiser losses Edit British battlecruisers were designed to chase and destroy enemy cruisers from out of the range of those ships They were not designed to be ships of the line and exchange broadsides with the enemy One German and three British battlecruisers were sunk but none were destroyed by enemy shells penetrating the belt armour and detonating the magazines Each of the British battlecruisers was penetrated through a turret roof and their magazines ignited by flash fires passing through the turret and shell handling rooms 155 Lutzow sustained 24 hits and her flooding could not be contained She was eventually sunk by her escorts torpedoes after most of her crew had been safely removed though six trapped stokers died when the ship was scuttled 156 Derfflinger and Seydlitz sustained 22 hits each but reached port although in Seydlitz s case only just 157 The disturbing feature of the battlecruiser action is the fact that five German battle cruisers engaging six British vessels of this class supported after the first twenty minutes although at great range by the fire of four battleships of the Queen Elizabeth class were yet able to sink Queen Mary and Indefatigable The facts which contributed to the British losses first were the indifferent armour protection of our battle cruisers particularly as regards turret armour and second deck plating and the disadvantage under which our vessels laboured in regard to the light Of this there can be no question But it is also undoubted that the gunnery of the German battle cruisers in the early stages was of a very high standard Sir John Jellicoe Jellicoe s official despatch 158 Jellicoe and Beatty as well as other senior officers gave an impression that the loss of the battlecruisers was caused by weak armour despite reports by two committees and earlier statements by Jellicoe and other senior officers that Cordite and its management were to blame This led to calls for armour to be increased and an additional 1 in 2 5 cm was placed over the relatively thin decks above magazines To compensate for the increase in weight ships had to carry correspondingly less fuel water and other supplies Whether or not thin deck armour was a potential weakness of British ships the battle provided no evidence that it was the case At least amongst the surviving ships no enemy shell was found to have penetrated deck armour anywhere 159 The design of the new battlecruiser HMS Hood which was being built at the time of the battle was altered to give her 5 000 long tons 5 100 t of additional armour 160 Ammunition handling Edit British and German propellant charges differed in packaging handling and chemistry The British propellant was of two types MK1 and MD The Mark 1 cordite had a formula of 37 nitrocellulose 58 nitroglycerine and 5 petroleum jelly It was a good propellant but burned hot and caused an erosion problem in gun barrels The petroleum jelly served as both a lubricant and a stabiliser Cordite MD was developed to reduce barrel wear its formula being 65 nitrocellulose 30 nitroglycerine and 5 petroleum jelly While cordite MD solved the gun barrel erosion issue it did nothing to improve its storage properties which were poor Cordite was very sensitive to variations of temperature and acid propagation cordite deterioration would take place at a very rapid rate Cordite MD also shed micro dust particles of nitrocellulose and iron pyrite 161 While cordite propellant was manageable it required a vigilant gunnery officer strict cordite lot control and frequent testing of the cordite lots in the ships magazines 162 British cordite propellant when uncased and exposed in the silk bag tended to burn violently causing uncontrollable flash fires when ignited by nearby shell hits In 1945 a test was conducted by the U S N Bureau of Ordnance Bulletin of Ordnance Information No 245 pp 54 60 163 testing the sensitivity of cordite to then current U S Naval propellant powders against a measurable and repeatable flash source It found that cordite would ignite at 530 mm 21 in from the flash the current U S powder at 120 mm 4 7 in and the U S flashless powder at 25 mm 0 98 in This meant that about 75 times the propellant would immediately ignite when exposed to flash as compared to the U S powder British ships had inadequate protection against these flash fires German propellant RP C 12 handled in brass cartridge cases which were used in German artillery since traditional there sliding wedge breeches were hard to obturate with smokeless powder otherwise 164 was less vulnerable and less volatile in composition 165 German propellants were not that different in composition from cordite with one major exception centralite This was symmetrical diethyl diphenyl urea which served as a stabiliser that was superior to the petroleum jelly used in British practice It stored better and burned but did not explode Stored and used in brass cases it proved much less sensitive to flash RP C 12 was composed of 64 13 nitrocellulose 29 77 nitroglycerine 5 75 centralite 0 25 magnesium oxide and 0 10 graphite 161 The Royal Navy Battle Cruiser Fleet had also emphasised speed in ammunition handling over established safety protocol In practice drills cordite could not be supplied to the guns rapidly enough through the hoists and hatches To bring up the propellant in good time to load for the next broadside many safety doors were kept open that should have been shut to safeguard against flash fires Bags of cordite were also stocked and kept locally creating a total breakdown of safety design features By staging charges in the chambers between the gun turret and magazine the Royal Navy enhanced their rate of fire but left their ships vulnerable to chain reaction ammunition fires and magazine explosions 162 166 This bad safety habit carried over into real battle practices 162 Furthermore the doctrine of a high rate of fire also led to the decision in 1913 to increase the supply of shells and cordite held on the British ships by 50 for fear of running out of ammunition When this exceeded the capacity of the ships magazines cordite was stored in insecure places 167 The British cordite charges were stored two silk bags to a metal cylindrical container with a 16 oz gunpowder igniter charge which was covered with a thick paper wad four charges being used on each projectile The gun crews were removing the charges from their containers and removing the paper covering over the gunpowder igniter charges The effect of having eight loads at the ready was to have 4 short tons 3 600 kg of exposed explosive with each charge leaking small amounts of gunpowder from the igniter bags In effect the gun crews had laid an explosive train from the turret to the magazines and one shell hit to a battlecruiser turret was enough to end a ship 168 A diving expedition during the summer of 2003 provided corroboration of this practice It examined the wrecks of Invincible Queen Mary Defence and Lutzow to investigate the cause of the British ships tendency to suffer from internal explosions From this evidence a major part of the blame may be laid on lax handling of the cordite propellant for the shells of the main guns The wreck of the Queen Mary revealed cordite containers stacked in the working chamber of the X turret instead of the magazine 169 There was a further difference in the propellant itself While the German RP C 12 burned when exposed to fire it did not explode as opposed to cordite RP C 12 was extensively studied by the British and after World War I would form the basis of the later Cordite SC 170 The memoirs of Alexander Grant Gunner on Lion suggest that some British officers were aware of the dangers of careless handling of cordite With the introduction of cordite to replace powder for firing guns regulations regarding the necessary precautions for handling explosives became unconsciously considerably relaxed even I regret to say to a dangerous degree throughout the Service The gradual lapse in the regulations on board ship seemed to be due to two factors First cordite is a much safer explosive to handle than gun powder Second but more important the altered construction of the magazines on board led to a feeling of false security The iron or steel deck the disappearance of the wood lining the electric lights fitted inside the steel doors open because there was now no chute for passing cartridges out all this gave officers and men a comparative easiness of mind regarding the precautions necessary with explosive material 171 Grant had already introduced measures onboard Lion to limit the number of cartridges kept outside the magazine and to ensure doors were kept closed probably contributing to her survival 172 On 5 June 1916 the First Lord of the Admiralty advised Cabinet Members that the three battlecruisers had been lost due to unsafe cordite management 173 After the battle the B C F Gunnery Committee issued a report at the command of Admiral David Beatty advocating immediate changes in flash protection and charge handling It reported among other things that Some vent plates in magazines allowed flash into the magazines and should be retro fitted to a new standard Bulkheads in HMS Lion s magazine showed buckling from fire under pressure overpressure despite being flooded and therefore supported by water pressure and must be made stronger Doors opening inward to magazines were an extreme danger Current designs of turrets could not eliminate flash from shell bursts in the turret from reaching the handling rooms Ignition pads must not be attached to charges but instead be placed just before ramming Better methods must be found for safe storage of ready charges than the current method Some method for rapidly drowning charges already in the handling path must be devised Handling scuttles special flash proof fittings for moving propellant charges through ship s bulkheads designed to handle overpressure must be fitted 174 Gunnery Edit British gunnery control systems based on Dreyer tables were well in advance of the German ones as demonstrated by the proportion of main calibre hits made on the German fleet Because of its demonstrated advantages it was installed on ships progressively as the war went on had been fitted to a majority of British capital ships by May 1916 and had been installed on the main guns of all but two of the Grand Fleet s capital ships 175 The Royal Navy used centralised fire control systems on their capital ships directed from a point high up on the ship where the fall of shells could best be seen utilising a director sight for both training and elevating the guns In contrast the German battlecruisers controlled the fire of turrets using a training only director which also did not fire the guns at once The rest of the German capital ships were without even this innovation German range finding equipment was generally superior to the British 9 ft 2 7 m FT24 as its operators were trained to a higher standard due to the complexity of the Zeiss 3 m 9 8 ft range finders Their stereoscopic design meant that in certain conditions they could range on a target enshrouded by smoke 176 The German equipment was not superior in range to the British Barr amp Stroud 15 ft 4 6 m rangefinder found in the newest British capital ships and unlike the British range finders the German range takers had to be replaced as often as every thirty minutes as their eyesight became impaired affecting the ranges provided to their gunnery equipment 177 The results of the battle confirmed the value of firing guns by centralised director The battle prompted the Royal Navy to install director firing systems in cruisers and destroyers where it had not thus far been used and for secondary armament on battleships 178 German ships were considered to have been quicker in determining the correct range to targets thus obtaining an early advantage The British used a bracket system whereby a salvo was fired at the best guess range and depending where it landed the range was progressively corrected up or down until successive shots were landing in front of and behind the enemy The Germans used a ladder system whereby an initial volley of three shots at different ranges was used with the centre shot at the best guess range The ladder system allowed the gunners to get ranging information from the three shots more quickly than the bracket system which required waiting between shots to see how the last had landed British ships adopted the German system 179 It was determined that 9 foot 2 7 m range finders of the sort issued to most British ships were not adequate at long range and did not perform as well as the 15 foot 4 6 m range finders on some of the most modern ships In 1917 range finders of base lengths of 25 and 30 ft 7 6 and 9 1 m were introduced on the battleships to improve accuracy 180 Signalling Edit Throughout the battle British ships experienced difficulties with communications whereas the Germans did not suffer such problems The British preferred signalling using ship to ship flag and lamp signals avoiding wireless whereas the Germans used wireless successfully One conclusion drawn was that flag signals were not a satisfactory way to control the fleet Experience using lamps particularly at night when issuing challenges to other ships demonstrated this was an excellent way to advertise your precise location to an enemy inviting a reply by gunfire Recognition signals by lamp once seen could also easily be copied in future engagements 181 British ships both failed to report engagements with the enemy but also in the case of cruisers and destroyers failed to actively seek out the enemy A culture had arisen within the fleet of not acting without orders which could prove fatal when any circumstances prevented orders being sent or received Commanders failed to engage the enemy because they believed other more senior officers must also be aware of the enemy nearby and would have given orders to act if this was expected Wireless the most direct way to pass messages across the fleet although it was being jammed by German ships was avoided either for perceived reasons of not giving away the presence of ships or for fear of cluttering up the airwaves with unnecessary reports 182 Fleet Standing Orders Edit Naval operations were governed by standing orders issued to all the ships These attempted to set out what ships should do in all circumstances particularly in situations where ships would have to react without referring to higher authority or when communications failed A number of changes were introduced as a result of experience gained in the battle A new signal was introduced instructing squadron commanders to act independently as they thought best while still supporting the main fleet particularly for use when circumstances would make it difficult to send detailed orders The description stressed that this was not intended to be the only time commanders might take independent action but was intended to make plain times when they definitely should Similarly instructions on what to do if the fleet was instructed to take evasive action against torpedoes were amended Commanders were given discretion that if their part of the fleet was not under immediate attack they should continue engaging the enemy rather than turning away with the rest of the fleet In this battle when the fleet turned away from Scheer s destroyer attack covering his retreat not all the British ships had been affected and could have continued to engage the enemy 183 A number of opportunities to attack enemy ships by torpedo had presented themselves but had been missed All ships not just the destroyers armed principally with torpedoes but also battleships were reminded that they carried torpedoes intended to be used whenever an opportunity arose Destroyers were instructed to close the enemy fleet to fire torpedoes as soon as engagements between the main ships on either side would keep enemy guns busy directed at larger targets Destroyers should also be ready to immediately engage enemy destroyers if they should launch an attack endeavouring to disrupt their chances of launching torpedoes and keep them away from the main fleet 184 To add some flexibility when deploying for attack a new signal was provided for deploying the fleet to the centre rather than as previously only either to left or right of the standard closed up formation for travelling The fast and powerful 5th Battle Squadron was moved to the front of the cruising formation so it would have the option of deploying left or right depending upon the enemy position In the event of engagements at night although the fleet still preferred to avoid night fighting a destroyer and cruiser squadron would be specifically detailed to seek out the enemy and launch destroyer attacks 185 The German propaganda poster proudly boasts of German achievements in the Battle of JutlandControversy EditAt the time Jellicoe was criticised for his caution and for allowing Scheer to escape 186 Beatty in particular was convinced that Jellicoe had missed a tremendous opportunity to annihilate the High Seas Fleet 187 and win what would amount to another Trafalgar Jellicoe was promoted away from active command to become First Sea Lord the professional head of the Royal Navy while Beatty replaced him as commander of the Grand Fleet The controversy raged within the navy and in public for about a decade after the war Criticism focused on Jellicoe s decision at 19 15 Scheer had ordered his cruisers and destroyers forward in a torpedo attack to cover the turning away of his battleships Jellicoe chose to turn to the south east and so keep out of range of the torpedoes Supporters of Jellicoe including the historian Cyril Falls pointed to the folly of risking defeat in battle when one already has command of the sea 188 Jellicoe himself in a letter to the Admiralty seventeen months before the battle said that he intended to turn his fleet away from any mass torpedo attack that being the universally accepted proper tactical response to such attacks practised by all the major navies of the world 188 He said that in the event of a fleet engagement in which the enemy turned away he would assume they intended to draw him over mines or submarines and he would decline to be so drawn The Admiralty approved this plan and expressed full confidence in Jellicoe at the time October 1914 189 The stakes were high the pressure on Jellicoe immense and his caution certainly understandable His judgement might have been that even 90 odds in favour were not good enough to bet the British Empire Churchill said of the battle that Jellicoe was the only man on either side who could have lost the war in an afternoon 190 The criticism of Jellicoe also fails to sufficiently credit Scheer who was determined to preserve his fleet by avoiding the full British battle line and who showed great skill in effecting his escape 191 Beatty s actions Edit On the other hand some of Jellicoe s supporters condemned the actions of Beatty for the British failure to achieve a complete victory 192 Although Beatty was undeniably brave his mismanagement of the initial encounter with Hipper s squadron and the High Seas Fleet cost him a considerable advantage in the first hours of the battle 193 His most glaring failure was in not providing Jellicoe with periodic information on the position course and speed of the High Seas Fleet 194 Beatty aboard the battlecruiser Lion left behind the four fast battleships of the 5th Battle Squadron the most powerful warships in the world at the time engaging with six ships when better control would have given him 10 against Hipper s five Though Beatty s larger 13 5 in 340 mm guns out ranged Hipper s 11 and 12 in 280 and 300 mm guns by thousands of yards Beatty held his fire for 10 minutes and closed the German squadron until within range of the Germans superior gunnery under lighting conditions that favoured the Germans 195 Most of the British losses in tonnage occurred in Beatty s force Death toll EditSee also Damage to major ships at the Battle of Jutland and List of ships sunk at the Battle of Jutland The total loss of life on both sides was 9 823 personnel the British losses numbered 6 784 and the German 3 039 196 Counted among the British losses were two members of the Royal Australian Navy and one member of the Royal Canadian Navy Six Australian nationals serving in the Royal Navy were also killed 197 British Edit 113 300 tons sunk 1 Battlecruisers Indefatigable Queen Mary Invincible Armoured cruisers Black Prince Warrior Defence Flotilla leader Tipperary Destroyers Shark Sparrowhawk Turbulent Ardent Fortune Nomad NestorGerman Edit 62 300 tons sunk 1 Battlecruiser Lutzow Pre dreadnought Pommern Light cruisers Frauenlob Elbing Rostock Wiesbaden Destroyers Heavy torpedo boats V48 S35 V27 V4 V29Selected honours EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Battle of Jutland news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Victoria Cross is the highest military decoration awarded for valour in the face of the enemy to members of the British Empire armed forces The Ordre pour le Merite was the Kingdom of Prussia and consequently the German Empire s highest military order until the end of the First World War Pour le Merite Edit Franz Hipper SMS Lutzow Reinhard Scheer SMS Friedrich der Grosse Victoria Cross Edit The Hon Edward Barry Stewart Bingham HMS Nestor John Travers Cornwell HMS Chester Francis John William Harvey HMS Lion Loftus William Jones HMS Shark Status of the survivors and wrecks Edit HMS Caroline the last surviving warship that saw action at Jutland is preserved in Belfast Northern Ireland In the years following the battle the wrecks were slowly discovered Invincible was found by the Royal Navy minesweeper HMS Oakley in 1919 198 After the Second World War some of the wrecks seem to have been commercially salvaged For instance the Hydrographic Office record for SMS Lutzow No 32344 shows that salvage operations were taking place on the wreck in 1960 199 During 2000 2016 a series of diving and marine survey expeditions involving veteran shipwreck historian and archaeologist Innes McCartney located all of the wrecks sunk in the battle It was discovered that over 60 per cent of them had suffered from metal theft 200 In 2003 McCartney led a detailed survey of the wrecks for the Channel 4 documentary Clash of the Dreadnoughts 201 The film examined the last minutes of the lost ships and revealed for the first time how both P and Q turrets of Invincible had been blasted out of the ship and tossed into the sea before she broke in half This was followed by the Channel 4 documentary Jutland WWI s Greatest Sea Battle 202 broadcast in May 2016 which showed how several of the major losses at Jutland had actually occurred and just how accurate the Harper Record actually was On the 90th anniversary of the battle in 2006 the UK Ministry of Defence belatedly announced that the 14 British vessels lost in the battle were being designated as protected places under the Protection of Military Remains Act 1986 This legislation only affects British ships and citizens and in practical terms offers no real protection from non British salvors of the wreck sites 203 In May 2016 a number of British newspapers named the Dutch salvage company Friendship Offshore as one of the main salvors of the Jutland wrecks in recent years and depicted leaked photographs revealing the extent of their activities on the wreck of Queen Mary 204 The last surviving veteran of the battle Henry Allingham a British RAF originally RNAS airman died on 18 July 2009 aged 113 by which time he was the oldest documented man in the world and one of the last surviving veterans of the whole war 205 Also among the combatants was the then 20 year old Prince Albert serving as a junior officer aboard HMS Collingwood He was second in the line to the throne but would become king as George VI following his brother Edward s abdication in 1936 206 One ship from the battle survives and is still in 2023 afloat the light cruiser HMS Caroline Decommissioned in 2011 she is docked at the Alexandra Graving Dock in Belfast Northern Ireland and is a museum ship 207 Remembrance EditThe Battle of Jutland was annually celebrated as a great victory by the right wing in Weimar Germany This victory was used to repress the memory of the German navy s initiation of the German Revolution of 1918 1919 as well as the memory of the defeat in World War I in general The celebrations of the Battle of Tannenberg played a similar role This is especially true for the city of Wilhelmshaven where wreath laying ceremonies and torch lit parades were performed until the end of the 1960s 208 In 1916 Contreadmiral Friedrich von Kuhlwetter 1865 1931 wrote a detailed analysis of the battle and published it in a book under the title Skagerrak first anonymously published which was reprinted in large numbers until after WWII and had a huge influence in keeping the battle in public memory amongst Germans as it was not tainted by the ideology of the Third Reich Kuhlwetter built the School for Naval Officers at Murwik near Flensburg where he is still remembered 209 In May 2016 the 100th anniversary commemoration of the Battle of Jutland was held On 29 May a commemorative service was held at St Mary s Church Wimbledon where the ensign from HMS Inflexible is on permanent display On 31 May the main service was held at St Magnus Cathedral in Orkney attended by the British prime minister David Cameron and the German president Joachim Gauck along with Princess Anne and Vice Admiral Sir Tim Laurence 210 A centennial exposition was held at the Deutsches Marinemuseum in Wilhemshaven from 29 May 2016 to 28 February 2017 211 Film EditWrath of the Seas Die versunkene Flotte 1926 director Manfred NoaSee also Edit World War I portalList of the largest artificial non nuclear explosions Sea War Museum Jutland Naval warfare of World War INotes Edit In this article the terms torpedo boat sometimes torpedo boat and destroyer are used interchangeably to refer to the same class of vessels in the German Navy Citations Edit a b c d Nasmith p 261 The Battle of Jutland History Learning Site Archived from the original on 28 July 2016 Retrieved 26 July 2016 Friedman 2013 p 68 The Russians and Japanese opened up on each other with 12 inch guns at the unheard range of over 14 200 yards 13 000 meters at a time when the world s navies were struggling to extend normal gunnery range to 6 000 yards Corbett 2015 Vol 1 p 380 381 The Russians turned back into Port Arthur to remain bottled up after a 12 inch shell killed Admiral Vitgeft in his flagship the battleship Tzesarevich The new anticipated plan would be to re enter the Yellow Sea from Port Arthur to reinforce the pending arrival of the Russian Baltic Fleet expected sometime in 1905 The Battle of the Yellow sea is known as the Battle of August 10 in Russia Corbett 2015 Vol II p 332 333 So was consummated perhaps the most decisive and complete naval victory in history Jeremy Black Jutland s Place in History Naval History June 2016 30 3 pp 16 21 Distant Victory The Battle of Jutland and the Allied Triumph in the First World War page XCIV Praeger Security International July 2006 ISBN 9780275990732 Archived from the original on 25 January 2021 Retrieved 30 May 2016 Campbell Analysis pp 274 Distant Victory The Battle of Jutland and the Allied Triumph in the First World War page XCV Praeger Security International July 2006 ISBN 9780275990732 Archived from the original on 25 January 2021 Retrieved 30 May 2016 Protasio John 2011 The Day the World was Shocked The Lusitania Disaster and Its Influence on the Course of World War I pp 200 201 Casemate Publications US ISBN 978 1 935149 45 3 Tarrant p 49 Tarrant p 55 Campbell p 2 Tarrant p 56 57 Tarrant pp 57 58 Tarrant pp 58 60 Jutland The Unfinished battle Nicolas Jellico pp 97 Jutland The Unfinished battle Nicolas Jellico pp 97 Jutland The Unfinished battle Nicolas Jellico pp 97 Tarrant p 61 Tarrant pp 62 60 65 Stille Mark British Dreadnought vs German Dreadnought Jutland 1916 2010 Osprey Publishing Page 56 Tarrant pp 63 64 Gordon pp 63 65 Tarrant p 64 a b c d The Fleet in Action Archived from the original on 6 March 2017 Retrieved 15 October 2016 Sutherland Cramwell p 13 Forczyk pp 58 62 a b Castles of Steel p 666 Marder III p 168 Tarrant p 65 Jellicoe Joe The Grand Fleet 1914 1916 London Cassell 1919 Massie p 576 a b Campbell Analysis p 26 Campbell Analysis pp 16 19 Campbell Analysis p 22 Tarrant pp 65 66 Tarrant pp 66 67 Tarrant p 67 Campbell Analysis pp 28 29 Marder III pp 41 42 Tarrant pp 69 70 Tarrant pp 70 71 a b 21 June 1916 Paul to Ted familyletters co uk 1 June 2016 Archived from the original on 16 January 2017 Retrieved 13 January 2017 Campbell Analysis p 31 a b Campbell Analysis p 35 Marder III p 55 Campbell Analysis p 32 Campbell Analysis pp 34 35 Brooks pp 234 237 Campbell Analysis pp 38 39 Brooks p 239 Campbell Analysis pp 39 41 Campbell Analysis pp 64 66 Campbell Analysis pp 60 61 Campbell Analysis p 49 Campbell Analysis pp 62 64 Bennett p 187 Campbell Analysis pp 78 94 Massie Castles p 596 Campbell Analysis pp 50 56 Campbell Analysis p 52 a b Campbell Analysis p 54 Campbell Analysis pp 58 59 Massie pp 600 601 Campbell Analysis pp 96 97 Campbell Analysis p 135 Campbell Analysis pp 124 125 145 Campbell Analysis p 100 Campbell Analysis pp 126 133 Campbell Analysis pp 134 145 Campbell Analysis p 59 Campbell Analysis p 118 Campbell Analysis p 111 Campbell Analysis pp 111 115 a b Campbell Analysis pp 120 121 Massie Castles pp 612 613 Campbell Analysis p 115 Massie p 614 Campbell Analysis pp 153 179 Campbell Analysis p 259 Campbell Analysis p 319 Campbell Analysis pp 185 187 Campbell Analysis p 183 Campbell Analysis p 159 a b Massie Castles p 621 Campbell Analysis pp 187 188 Massie Castles p 622 Campbell Analysis p 167 Massie Castles pp 624 625 Campbell Analysis p 162 a b c Campbell Analysis p 246 Campbell Analysis p 218 Campbell Analysis pp 200 201 Campbell Analysis p 197 a b Massie Castles pp 627 628 Campbell Analysis p 205 Campbell Analysis p 220 Campbell Analysis pp 211 216 Massie Castles pp 629 630 Campbell Analysis pp 252 254 Campbell Analysis p 272 Massie Castles pp 635 636 Massie p 637 a b Massie p 645 Marder pp 140 145 Massie Castles p 647 Marder p 146 Marder p 159 Massie Castles pp 645 646 Massie Castles pp 639 640 a b Massie Castles pp 642 645 pp 647 648 Marder p 142 Massie Castles p 643 Campbell Analysis p 290 Massie Castles pp 651 652 Massie Castles pp 650 651 a b Tarrant German Perspective p245 claimed p222 Arms and Armour paperback edition 1997 Tarrant German Perspective p 259 German Perspective pp 260 261 Massie Castles p 6342 Marder pp 148 151 Tarrant pp 274 276 Steel amp Hart pp 418 420 Daily Mirror Headlines The Battle of Jutland Published 3 June 1916 BBC History Archived from the original on 4 February 2008 Retrieved 20 December 2019 Steele amp Hart pp 421 422 Sutherland amp Canwell 2007 The Battle of Jutland Pen amp Sword ISBN 978 1 84415 529 3 Battle of Jutland Part IV Night Action 31st May to 1st June 1916 Archived from the original on 12 November 2018 Retrieved 12 November 2018 Battle of Jutland History Facts amp Outcome Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 26 July 2022 The war at sea www nationalarchives gov uk The National Archives United Kingdom Archived from the original on 8 February 2017 Retrieved 4 November 2019 Britain still controlled the sea and Germany never again attempted a full scale naval confrontation Germany was thus prevented from receiving vital war supplies and foodstuffs throughout the conflict The blockade of Germany www nationalarchives gov uk The National Archives United Kingdom Archived from the original on 22 July 2004 Retrieved 4 November 2019 the blockade made an important contribution to the Allied victory Massie Castles p 684 Marder III p 206 citing Captain Persius Berliner Tageblatt 18 November 1918 Moretz pp 8 Rasor pp 75 a b Massie Castles p 665 Campbell p 335 Kennedy The Rise and Fall p 257 McBride William Leon 2000 Technological change and the United States Navy 1865 1945 Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 6486 0 Polmar Norman 2006 Aircraft Carriers A History of Carrier Aviation and Its Influence on World Events 1909 1945 Vol I Washington Potomac Books ISBN 1 57488 663 0 Campbell pp 386 388 Jutland The Unfinished battle Nicolas Jellico pp 315 316 Jutland The Unfinished battle Nicolas Jellico pp 314 Jutland The Unfinished battle Nicolas Jellico pp 114 Campbell pp 386 387 Marder III p 170 Brown pp 151 152 Campbell pp 386 388 Castles p 61 a b Castles p 668 a b Marder III p 171 Castles p 671 citing Marder Vol III p 81 Marder p 169 Marder III p 215 Massie Castles pp 666 667 Gary Staff 2014 German Battlecruisers of World War One Their Design Construction and Operations Seaforth Publishing p 278 ISBN 9781848323087 Retrieved 2 June 2016 Massie Castles p 666 Battle of Jutland Jellicoe s Despatch referencing Battle of Jutland Official Despatches with Appendicies Presented to Parliament by Command of His Majesty His Majesty s Stationery Office 1920 archived from the original on 24 October 2004 retrieved 20 October 2004 Marder III p 218 Marder III p 219 a b Tony DiGiulian Naval Propellants A Brief Overview navweaps com Archived from the original on 2 July 2014 Retrieved 27 May 2014 a b c Battle of Jutland Memoir World War 1 Naval Combat worldwar1 co uk Archived from the original on 23 October 2017 Retrieved 27 May 2014 Loss of HMS Hood Part 3 warship org Archived from the original on 11 January 2015 Retrieved 27 May 2014 s Page EB1911 Volume 20 djvu 234 Campbell pp 377 378 Campbell pp 371 372 Lambert Bloody Ships 36 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help British Battlecruisers 1914 18 Lawrence Burr Tony Bryan pp 41 42 British Battlecruisers 1914 18 Lawrence Burr Tony Bryan p 43 German Ammunition Guns and Mountings Definitions Archived from the original on 17 May 2008 Retrieved 19 May 2008 Memoir of Gunnery Officer Alexander Grant Archived from the original on 23 October 2017 Retrieved 25 March 2004 marder III p 174 British Battlecruisers 1914 18 Lawrence Burr Tony Bryan p 40 Advance Report of B C F Gunnery Committee The Dreadnought Project Archived from the original on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 6 February 2011 Brooks p 224 Brooks pp 221 222 Brooks p 223 Marder III pp 213 214 Marder III pp 166 214 Marder p 215 Marder III pp 175 176 Marder III pp 176 178 MarderIII p 222 Marder III pp 224 225 Marder III p 226 Massie p 631 Massie p 670 a b Massie Castles p 675 Massie p 632 Massie Castles p 681 Massie Castles p 672 Massie Castles pp 670 679 Massie Castles pp 673 674 Massie Castles p 674 Massie Castles pp 589 590 Brewers Dictionary of 20th Century Phrase and Fable Great War Primary Documents Archive 2007 Battle of Jutland Commonwealth Casualties Archived 12 March 2021 at the Wayback Machine Access 24 February 2012 Gordon Rules p 539 Innes McCartney 2016 Jutland 1916 The Archaeology of a Naval Battlefield Bloomsbury p 256 ISBN 978 1844864164 Archived from the original on 25 November 2021 Retrieved 15 October 2020 Innes McCartney 2016 Jutland 1916 The Archaeology of a Naval Battlefield Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1844864164 Archived from the original on 25 November 2021 Retrieved 15 October 2020 Jutland Clash of the Dreadnoughts Archived from the original on 9 December 2011 Retrieved 18 December 2011 Jutland WW1 s Greatest Sea Battle Archived from the original on 27 August 2018 Retrieved 1 September 2018 Innes McCartney 2016 Jutland 1916 The Archaeology of a Naval Battlefield Bloomsbury pp 257 260 ISBN 978 1844864164 Archived from the original on 25 November 2021 Retrieved 15 October 2020 War Graves of Plymouth Sailors Looted Archived from the original on 22 December 2016 Britain s oldest veteran recalls WWI BBC News 26 June 2006 Archived from the original on 21 April 2008 Retrieved 19 May 2008 Walker Andrew 29 January 2003 Profile King George VI BBC News Archived from the original on 26 July 2008 Retrieved 22 August 2011 NMRM HMS Caroline Archived from the original on 19 May 2020 Retrieved 18 May 2020 Gotz Remembering the Battle p 360 Kuhlwetter Skagerrak Der Ruhmestag der deutschen Flotte Battle of Jutland centenary marked BBC News BBC 31 May 2016 Archived from the original on 1 June 2016 Retrieved 1 June 2016 Skagerrak Seeschlacht ohne Sieger Jutland The Unfinished Battle in German Retrieved 25 January 2020 permanent dead link Bibliography EditBennett Geoffrey 2005 Naval Battles of the First World War London Pen amp Sword Military Classics ISBN 1 84415 300 2 Black Jeremy Jutland s Place in History Naval History June 2016 30 3 pp 16 21 Brooks John 2005 Dreadnought Gunnery at the Battle of Jutland The Question of Fire Control London Routledge Frank Cass series ISBN 0 7146 5702 6 Brown G I 1998 The Big Bang A History of Explosives Gloucestershire Sutton Publishing ISBN 0 7509 1878 0 Campbell John 1998 Jutland An Analysis of the Fighting Lyons Press ISBN 1 55821 759 2 Corbett Sir Julian 2015 Maritime Operations In The Russo Japanese War 1904 1905 Vol 1 originally published Jan 1914 Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 59114 197 6 Corbett Sir Julian 2015 Maritime Operations In The Russo Japanese War 1904 1905 Vol 2 originally published Oct 1915 Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 59114 198 3 Costello John 1976 Jutland 1916 with Terry Hughes English Major J A 1979 The Trafalgar Syndrome Jutland and the Indecisiveness of Naval Warfare Naval War College Review XXXII 3 Forczyk Robert 2009 Russian Battleship vs Japanese Battleship Yellow Sea 1904 05 Great Britain Osprey ISBN 978 1 84603 330 8 Friedman Norman 2013 Naval Firepower Battleship Guns And Gunnery In The Dreadnaught Era Seaforth Publishing ISBN 978 1 84832 185 4 Gotz Georg 2010 Remembering the Battle of Jutland in Post War Wilhelmshaven In Niven William Paver Chloe eds Difficult Pasts Memorialisation In Germany since 1945 Macmillan pp 360 368 ISBN 978 0 230 20703 5 Gordon Andrew 1996 The Rules of the Game Jutland and British Naval Command London John Murray ISBN 978 0141980324 Halpern Paul G 1994 A Naval History of World War I London Routledge ISBN 1 85728 498 4 Keegan John 1999 The First World War United States Alfred A Knopf Inc ISBN 0 375 40052 4 Kennedy Paul M 1983 The Rise and Fall of British Naval Mastery London Macmillan ISBN 0 333 35094 4 Kuhlwetter von Friedrich 1916 Skagerrak Der Ruhmestag der deutschen Flotte Berlin Ullstein Lambert Nicholas A January 1998 Our Bloody Ships or Our Bloody System Jutland and the Loss of the Battle Cruisers 1916 The Journal of Military History Society for Military History Vol 62 No 1 61 1 29 55 doi 10 2307 120394 JSTOR 120394 Marder Arthur J 1966 Jutland and after May 1916 December 1916 From the Dreadnought to Scapa Flow Vol III Oxford University Press Massie Robert K 2003 Castles of Steel Britain Germany and the Winning of the Great War at Sea Random House ISBN 0 345 40878 0 Massie Robert K 1991 Dreadnought Britain Germany and the coming of the great war Random House ISBN 0 394 52833 6 McCartney Innes 2018 Scuttled in the Morning the discoveries and surveys of HMS Warrior and HMS Sparrowhawk the Battle of Jutland s last missing shipwrecks The International Journal of Nautical Archaeology 47 2 253 266 doi 10 1111 1095 9270 12302 McCartney Innes 2017 The Opening and Closing Sequences of the Battle of Jutland 1916 Re examined archaeological investigations of the wrecks of HMS Indefatigable and SMS V4 PDF The International Journal of Nautical Archaeology 46 2 317 329 doi 10 1111 1095 9270 12236 S2CID 164686388 Archived PDF from the original on 14 March 2020 Retrieved 10 December 2019 McCartney Innes 2017 The Battle of Jutland s Heritage under Threat The extent of commercial salvage on the shipwrecks as observed 2000 2016 PDF Mariner s Mirror doi 10 1080 00253359 2017 1304701 S2CID 165003480 Archived PDF from the original on 28 April 2019 Retrieved 10 December 2019 McCartney Innes 2016 Jutland 1916 The Archaeology of a Naval Battlefield Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1844864164 Archived from the original on 25 November 2021 Retrieved 15 October 2020 McCartney Innes March 2012 The Armoured Cruiser HMS Defence A Case Study in Assessing the Royal Navy Shipwrecks of the Battle of Jutland 1916 as an Archaeological Resource PDF International Journal of Nautical Archaeology 41 56 66 doi 10 1111 j 1095 9270 2011 00331 x S2CID 163077864 Archived PDF from the original on 25 October 2020 Retrieved 10 December 2019 Moretz Joseph 2002 The Royal Navy and the Capital Ship in the Interwar Period An Operational Perspective New York Routledge ISBN 0 7146 5196 6 Morrison S E 1958 Leyte June 1944 January 1945 History of United States Naval Operations in World War II Vol XII Boston Little amp Brown OCLC 3339343 Nasmith Col George 1919 Canada s Sons and Great Britain during the World War Introduction by Gen Sir Arthur W Currie Toronto Thomas Allen O Connell Robert J 1993 Sacred Vessels The Cult of the Battleship and the Rise of the U S Navy Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 508006 8 Rasor Eugene L 2000 Winston S Churchill 1874 1965 A Comprehensive Historiography and Annotated Bibliography London Greenwood ISBN 0 3133 0546 3 Tarrant V E 1995 Jutland The German Perspective A New View of the Great Battle 31 May 1916 London Arms amp Armour Press ISBN 1 85409 244 8 Further reading EditBacon Reginald 1925 The Jutland Scandal London OCLC 1900062 Butler Daniel Allen 2006 Distant Victory The Battle of Jutland and the Allied Triumph in the First World War Westport CT Praeger ISBN 0 275 99073 7 Corbett Julian 2003 Naval Operations Official History of the War Vol III repr ed London Longmans amp Co ISBN 1 84342 491 6 H W Fawcett amp G W W Hooper RN editors The fighting at Jutland abridged edition the personal experiences of forty five officers and men of the British Fleet London MacMillan amp Co 1921 Frost H H 1936 The Battle of Jutland Annapolis MD USNI OCLC 2826423 George S C 1981 Jutland to Junkyard Edinburgh Paul Harris ISBN 0 86228 029 X Groos Fregattenkapitan Otto 1925 Der Krieg in der Nordsee Der Krieg zur See 1914 1918 in German Vol Band V Berlin Mittler amp Sons OCLC 2960788 Hough Richard 1975 Dreadnought A history of the Modern Battleship Macmillan Publishers ISBN 0517293676 OCLC 5101910 Legg Stuart 1966 Jutland an Eye Witness Account of a Great Battle New York City The John Day Company OCLC 505431 Lambert Andrew Writing Writing the Battle Jutland in Sir Julian Corbett s Naval Operations Mariner s Mirror 103 2 2017 175 95 Historiography London Charles 2000 Jutland 1916 Clash of the Dreadnoughts Campaign Oxford Osprey ISBN 1 85532 992 1 Marder Arthur J 1965 From the Dreadnought to Scapa Flow The Royal Navy in the Fisher Era 1904 1919 The War Years to the eve of Jutland 1914 1916 Vol II London Oxford University Press OCLC 865180297 Roberts John Arthur 2003 Battlecruisers ShipShape London Caxton Editions ISBN 1 84067 530 6 Steel Nigel Hart Peter 2004 Jutland 1916 Death in the Grey Wastes London Cassell ISBN 0 304 35892 4 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of Jutland WW1 Centenary News Battle of Jutland Jutland Centenary Initiative Jutland Commemoration Exhibition Beatty s official report Jellicoe s official despatch Jellicoe extract from The Grand Fleet published 1919 World War I Naval Combat Despatches Scheer Germany s High Seas Fleet in the World War Archived 17 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine published 1920 Henry Allingham Last known survivor of the Battle of Jutland Jutland Casualties Listed by Ship germannavalwarfare info Some Original Documents from the British Admiralty Room 40 regarding the Battle of Jutland Photocopies from The National Archives Kew Richmond UK Battle of Jutland Crew Lists Project Memorial park for the Battle of Jutland Battle of Jutland Crew Lists Project Wiki Battle of Jutland com The website owner has a package of original documents Harley Simon A Direct Train of Cordite The Dreadnought Project Transcript of post battle correspondence between the Grand Fleet and the Admiralty concerning the loss of the battlecruisers Notable accounts Edit by Rudyard Kipling Retrieved 2009 10 31 by Alexander Grant a gunner aboard HMS Lion A North Sea diary 1914 1918 by Stephen King Hall a junior officer on the light cruiser HMS Southampton by Paul Berryman a junior officer on HMS Malaya by Moritz von Egidy captain of SMS Seydlitz by Richard Foerster gunnery officer on Seydlitz by Georg von Hase gunnery officer on Derfflinger Note Due to the time difference entries in some of the German accounts are one hour ahead of the times in this article Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Jutland amp oldid 1136914821, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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