Deutschland-class battleship explained

The German: Deutschland class was a group of five pre-dreadnought battleships built for the German German: [[Kaiserliche Marine]] (Imperial Navy), the last vessels of that type to be built in Germany. The class comprised, the lead ship,,,, and . The ships closely resembled those of the preceding, but with stronger armor and a rearranged secondary battery. Built between 1903 and 1908, they were completed after the launch of the revolutionary British all-big-gun battleship in 1906. As a result, they were obsolescent before entering service. The ships nevertheless saw extensive service in the High Seas Fleet, Germany's primary naval formation, through the late 1900s and early 1910s, when they were used for training, which included overseas cruises.

Following the start of World War I in July 1914, the German fleet adopted a strategy of raids on the British coast, which the five German: Deutschland-class ships supported. These operations culminated in the Battle of Jutland on 31 May – 1 June 1916, where all five ships saw action, despite their marked inferiority to British dreadnoughts. Regardless, they intervened to protect the battered German battlecruisers from their British counterparts, allowing them to escape. In the confused night actions, German: Pommern was torpedoed and sunk by a British destroyer. After the battle, the four surviving ships were removed from front-line service and used for coastal defense through mid-1917. Thereafter, German: Hannover alone remained on patrol duty, while the rest were used as barracks or training ships. After Germany's defeat, the Treaty of Versailles permitted the postwar navy to retain several old battleships for coastal defense, including the four German: Deutschland-class ships.

German: Deutschland was broken up in 1920–1922, but the remainder were modernized and returned to active service in the mid-1920s. Their activities mirrored those of the pre-war period, including overseas training cruises and extensive fleet maneuvers. German: Hannover was decommissioned in 1931 and was to be converted into a target vessel, although this was never done. She was eventually broken up in 1944–1946. German: Schlesien and German: Schleswig-Holstein remained in service for training duties through the 1930s into the Nazi-era German: [[Kriegsmarine]] (War Navy). Both ships saw limited duty during World War II, including bombardment of Polish forces during the invasion of Poland in September 1939 and the occupation of Denmark and invasion of Norway in April 1940. Both ships were sunk near the end of the war.

Design

In 1900, German: [[Vizeadmiral]] (Vice Admiral) Alfred von Tirpitz, the State Secretary for the German: [[Reichsmarineamt]] (Imperial Naval Office), secured the passage of the Second Naval Law, an amendment to the First Naval Law of 1898. The previous law had called for a total strength of nineteen battleships by 1 April 1904, which was reached with the five s, but the new law increased the projected battle fleet to a total of thirty-eight. The first tranche of vessels—the —introduced the gun, marking a significant increase in firepower over earlier German battleships. The naval command had intended to build ten battleships of the German: Braunschweig type, starting with the 1901 fiscal year with two ships built per year, but they ultimately only built five. During construction of the German: Braunschweigs, a series of minor improvements were incorporated into subsequent designs. By the time work began on the second vessel of the 1903 fiscal year, which became, a more significantly altered design had been prepared.

A series of changes were made to the secondary and tertiary batteries for what became German: Deutschland, the lead ship of the new class. The designers discarded the wing turrets that the German: Braunschweigs had used for some of their secondary guns; the turrets had required support structures whose elimination saved weight and allowed the designers to place the secondary battery entirely in casemates in a more efficient arrangement. Removing the turrets freed up deck space that was used to add another pair of guns and place the forward set of four in protective embrasures. German: Deutschland and her sister ship were designed for use as flagships for the fleet and a squadron, respectively, which required additional accommodation spaces. After German: Deutschland, which mixed sets of fire-tube and water-tube boilers, the remaining four members of the class received a uniform set of water-tube boilers. These were lighter, and the weight savings were passed on to the armor layout in the form of a slightly thicker armor belt and a strengthened upper deck.

The German: Deutschland design was criticized in Germany at the time the ships were being built, as the trend in all the major navies pointed to battleships armed with all-big-gun batteries; indeed, work on what would become the design for the of dreadnought battleships had already begun in 1903. Tirpitz insisted on building the German: Deutschlands because they were the largest design that could fit in Germany's existing naval infrastructure, most significantly the Kaiser Wilhelm Canal. Widening the canal and improving harbor facilities would be excessively expensive and Tirpitz sought to avoid another budgetary fight with the German: [[Reichstag (German Empire)|Reichstag]] so soon after the passage of the 1900 law. As a result, the German: Deutschland-class battleships were rendered obsolescent almost immediately by the commissioning of the British in December 1906.

General characteristics

The German: Deutschland-class ships were 125.9m (413.1feet) long at the waterline and 127.6m (418.6feet) overall. They had a beam of 22.2m (72.8feet) and a draft of 8.21m (26.94feet) forward. The ships were designed to displace 13191sp=usNaNsp=us normally, and displaced up to 14218sp=usNaNsp=us at full load. Their hulls were built with transverse and longitudinal steel frames, to which steel hull plates were riveted. The hull was divided into twelve watertight compartments, although German: Pommern had thirteen compartments. Their hulls included a double bottom that ran for 84 percent of the length of the ship.

Because German: Deutschland and German: Hannover were completed as flagships, they had an enlarged superstructure aft to house the larger command staffs they typically carried. German: Deutschland had a larger forward conning tower that incorporated a central fire-control position; German: Pommern received the same conning tower, but the other three ships had shorter towers without the fire-control room. All five members of the class were fitted with short military masts with lighter poles atop them that were fitted with spotting tops. The ships handled less easily than the preceding German: Braunschweig-class ships, though they suffered less marked weather helm. Their metacentric height was 0.98m (03.22feet). Steering was controlled with a single rudder.

The ships' crews numbered 35 officers and 708 enlisted men. When one of them was a flagship, the crew was augmented with an admiral's staff. A squadron commander's staff consisted of 13 officers and 66 enlisted men, while a divisional commander had a staff of 2 officers and 23 enlisted men. After she became a training ship in 1935, German: Schlesiens crew consisted of 29 officers and 559 enlisted men, plus up to 214 cadets. German: Schleswig-Holstein differed somewhat; her crew as a training ship numbered 31 officers and 565 men and up to 175 cadets. German: Deutschland and her sisters carried several smaller vessels, including two picket boats, one admiral's barge, two launches, one pinnace, two cutters, two yawls, and two dinghies. The boats were handled with a pair of large cranes amidships; German: Deutschland had hers located further forward than the other members of the class.

Machinery

German: Deutschland and her sisters were equipped with three triple-expansion steam engines that each drove a screw propeller; the outer screws were three-bladed and in diameter, while the center shaft used a four-bladed screw that was in diameter. Each engine was placed in its own engine room. German: Deutschland was fitted with eight water-tube boilers and six fire-tube boilers, but the rest of the vessels received twelve water-tube models, all of which were coal-fired. These were divided into three boiler rooms, each of which was ducted into a funnel.

German: Deutschlands engines were rated at 16000lk=onNaNlk=on, while the other four ships' engines were rated at 17000PS. The design speed for all of the ships was 18kn, though on trials all five ships exceeded both figures, German: Deutschland reaching 17000PS for and the other members of the class making 17696PS19330PS for 18.5to. German: Schleswig-Holstein was the fastest member of the class on her trials.

German: Deutschland was designed to carry of coal and the other members could carry, though other spaces could be utilized as fuel storage, which increased fuel capacity to for German: Deutschland and for the other four vessels. This provided a maximum range of 4800nmi at a cruising speed of . Electrical power was supplied from four turbo generators that provided each at 110 volts.

Armament

The ships carried the same main battery as the preceding German: Braunschweig class. The primary armament comprised four 28 cm SK L/40 quick-firing guns in hydraulically operated twin turrets. The turrets were placed on the centerline, one forward and one aft. The DrL C/01 turrets allowed the guns to depress to −4 degrees, and elevate to +30 degrees, which enabled a maximum range of 18800m (61,700feet). The guns fired 240sp=usNaNsp=us shells at a muzzle velocity of 820sp=usNaNsp=us. Ammunition storage amounted to 85 shells per gun.

The secondary battery consisted of fourteen 17 cm SK L/40 quick-firing guns, all of which were mounted in casemates. Five were placed on either side in the upper deck and the remaining four were located a deck above in the superstructure, one on each corner. The guns fired 64sp=usNaNsp=us shells at a muzzle velocity of 850m/s. These guns were chosen as they used the largest shell that could be reasonably handled without machinery. The guns could elevate to 22 degrees, which allowed a maximum range of . Their rate of fire was approximately one shot every nine to ten seconds, and each gun was supplied with 130 shells.

For defense against torpedo boats, the ships carried a tertiary battery of twenty-two 8.8 cm SK L/35 quick-firing guns. These were placed in casemates in hull sponsons, in embrasures in the superstructure, or in open mounts. The guns fired 15.4lb shells at a muzzle velocity of 2526ft/s, and could be elevated to 25 degrees for a maximum range of . The ammunition allotment for each gun was 130 shells. The ships were temporarily fitted with four machine cannon, but these were quickly removed.

They were also armed with six torpedo tubes, and 16 torpedoes. The tubes were all placed below the waterline, one in the bow, one in the stern, and two on each broadside. These torpedoes were long and carried a TNT warhead. They could be set at two speeds for different ranges. At, the weapons had a range of . At an increased speed of, the range was reduced to .

Armor

The German: Deutschland-class ships were equipped with Krupp cemented armor. German: Deutschland had a slightly different arrangement in the belt armor and the citadel in the superstructure. German: Deutschlands belt was 225mm at the waterline and tapered to 140mm on the lower edge. Her sister ships' belts were increased in thickness to 240mm at the waterline and down to 170mm on the bottom edge. In all five ships, this section of armor extended from the forward barbette to the aft one. On either end, the belt was reduced to . In all ships, the belt was backed by a layer of teak that was thick. Above the belt was a strake of armor that protected the casemate guns; in German: Deutschland, this was 160mm thick, while on the other four ships the armor was 170 mm thick. All members of the class were fitted with cork cofferdams, a common practice at the time intended to prevent uncontrolled flooding in the event of shell hits.

All five ships had an armored deck that was 40mm thick. The deck sloped downward at the sides to connect with the lower edge of the belt, which provided a second layer to contain shell fragments from hits that penetrated the belt. The sloped section was in the bow and stern sections where the belt was thinner, and reduced to behind the main section of belt. Their forward conning towers were protected by 300mm on the sides and 80 mm on the roofs, while the rear conning towers had 140mm worth of armor on the sides. The main battery gun turrets had armored sides that were 280mm thick and roofs that were thick. The barbettes that held the turrets were armored with 250mm thick steel.

Modifications

The ships of the German: Deutschland class were modified several times over their long careers. Modifications to the ships' masts were made between 1909 and 1914, shifting positions for searchlights and adding a fully enclosed spotting top to the fore mast. German: Schlesien and German: Schleswig-Holstein had eight oil-fired boilers installed in place of eight of their coal-fired boilers in late 1915. German: Deutschland had two of her 8.8 cm guns removed in late 1916 and a pair of 8.8 cm guns in anti-aircraft mountings were installed. Beginning in 1917, some of the ships began to be partially or fully disarmed so the guns could be used ashore during the war. German: Deutschland was completely disarmed in late 1917 and German: Schleswig-Holstein was reduced to just four SK L/45 guns and four 8.8 cm SK L/30 guns in 1918. German: Schlesien was similarly re-armed for training duties.

As the ships were returned to active service in the early 1920s, they received a series of modernizations and alterations to their armament. German: Hannover, which had not been disarmed, carried her original battery of 28 cm and 17 cm guns, though her 8.8 cm battery had been reduced to eight weapons by the time she was recommissioned in 1921. All six of her torpedo tubes were removed at that time. German: Schlesien and German: Schleswig-Holstein were modernized in the mid-1920s, which included the re-installation of their 28 cm batteries, but in place of their 17 cm guns they each received fourteen SK L/45 guns, along with eight 8.8 cm guns as on German: Hannover. They had large tubular fore masts installed, which had large spotting tops. German: Schlesien had her two forward funnels merged, while German: Schleswig-Holstein had hers similarly modified in 1928. German: Schlesien had her forward sponsons plated over.

In 1930 and 1931, the ships were modified again. German: Hannover had a pair of above-water torpedo tubes fitted and four of her 8.8 cm guns were replaced with 8.8 cm anti-aircraft guns. A tubular mast like her sisters' was installed, and she had her bow sponsons plated over. German: Schlesien and German: Schleswig-Holstein each lost two of their 15 cm guns, received four of the 50 cm torpedo tubes, and exchanged all of their 8.8 guns for four 8.8 cm anti-aircraft guns. Both ships had another pair of 15 cm guns removed in 1935; German: Schlesien received four anti-aircraft guns at that time and German: Schleswig-Holstein received four the next year. Also in 1936, German: Schleswig-Holstein had her sponsons removed. As part of her conversion into a training ship, German: Schlesien had her remaining coal-burning boilers removed in 1938 and the boiler room became an accommodation space and training room for the cadets. The uptake from that boiler room was removed, leaving just two straight funnels.

After the start of World War II in September 1939, both ships underwent a series of changes to their armament, particularly to their anti-aircraft batteries. German: Schleswig-Holstein received another eight 2 cm guns that year. In February 1940, German: Schlesien received four L/83 anti-aircraft guns. In April, the ship had her remaining ten 15 cm guns removed, while German: Schleswig-Holstein lost three of hers. In August, German: Schlesien had her 3.7 cm guns taken off to strengthen the anti-aircraft defenses of Hamburg and German: Schleswig-Holstein was almost completely disarmed, retaining only her 28 cm guns. The following year, German: Schlesien received four 8.8 cm guns, four 3.7 cm guns, and three 2 cm guns. By 1943, German: Hannover had been reconstructed for her planned role as a target ship, which involved removing most of her superstructure and all of her guns, though the turrets remained. German: Schlesien had the 3.7 cm guns returned that year, and in 1944, a pair of Bofors guns were added, along with sixteen more 2 cm guns, bringing the total to twenty barrels. Later that year, the 8.8 cm guns were replaced with six 10.5 cm anti-aircraft guns, her 4 cm battery was increased to seven or ten guns, and her 2 cm battery altered to either eighteen or twenty-two guns. German: Schleswig-Holstein was under refit to be similarly equipped, but work was not completed before her loss; she was slated to receive six of the 10.5 cm guns, ten 4 cm guns, and twenty-six of the 2 cm guns in addition to the four 3.7 cm weapons.

Construction

Ship! scope="col"
BuilderLaid downLaunchedCommissioned
German: [[Friedrich Krupp Germaniawerft|Germaniawerft]], Kiel20 June 190319 November 19043 August 1906
German: [[Kaiserliche Werft Wilhelmshaven|Kaiserliche Werft]], Wilhelmshaven7 November 190429 September 19051 October 1907
AG Vulcan, Stettin22 March 19042 December 19056 August 1907
German: [[Schichau-Werke]], Danzig19 November 190428 May 19065 May 1908
German: [[Friedrich Krupp Germaniawerft|Germaniawerft]], Kiel18 August 190517 December 19066 July 1908

Service history

After German: Deutschland entered service in 1906, she replaced the battleship as the fleet flagship, a role she held until 1913, when the new dreadnought took her place. With the commissioning of the rest of the class, the Home Fleet was reorganized as the High Seas Fleet in 1907. The vessels were assigned to I Battle Squadron and II Battle Squadron during this period, ultimately being concentrated in II Squadron along with three of the German: Braunschweig-class ships by the early 1910s as the German: Nassau and s filled the ranks of I Squadron. German: Hannover served as the flagship of I Squadron and later as the flagship of the deputy commander of II Squadron.

The ships' peacetime careers were fairly uneventful, consisting primarily of routine fleet training. Squadron and fleet exercises typically took place in April and May every year, a major fleet cruise generally followed in June and July, after which the fleet assembled for the annual large-scale maneuvers in late August and September. The major fleet cruises typically went to Norwegian waters in company with Kaiser Wilhelm II's yacht, though in 1908 and 1909, the fleet embarked on long-distance cruises out into the Atlantic, making visits to mainland Spain, the Canary Islands, and the Azores. These came at the insistence of the fleet commander of the time, Prince Heinrich, who foresaw the need to operate at greater distances. During the summer cruise in July 1914, the fleet remained off Norway owing to the July Crisis that resulted in the start of World War I.

World War I

Following the start of the war, the German fleet adopted a strategy of raids on the British coast to try to draw out portions of the British Grand Fleet where they could be defeated in detail. The battlecruisers of I Scouting Group conducted the raids while the battle squadrons of the High Seas Fleet stood by in support; these included the raid on Yarmouth in November 1914, the raid on Scarborough, Hartlepool and Whitby in December, and bombardment of Yarmouth and Lowestoft in April 1916. All five members of the class operated with the fleet during this period, though the anticipated battle failed to materialize during these operations. While not conducting fleet operations, the ships of II Squadron also patrolled the mouth of the river Elbe to support the light forces defending the German Bight; they also conducted training exercises in the relative safety of the Baltic Sea. In February 1915, German: Deutschland became the flagship of II Squadron.

In late May 1916, the Germans planned another operation to draw out the British fleet, which resulted in the Battle of Jutland on 31 May and 1 June. During the operation, the ships were commanded by German: [[Konteradmiral]] (Rear Admiral) Franz Mauve. Being significantly slower than the rest of the German line of battle, the ships of II Squadron saw no action during the first stages of the engagement. Toward the end of the fleet battle on the evening of 31 May, the five German: Deutschland-class ships came to the aid of the mauled battlecruisers of I Scouting Group, when Mauve placed his ships between them and their counterparts in the British Battle Cruiser Fleet. In the growing darkness, the Germans had difficulty making out their targets and failed to score any hits; the British managed to hit three of the German: Deutschlands. German: Pommern was forced briefly to haul out of line. Mauve then disengaged his ships, ending their only clash with British capital ships during the battle. As the German fleet withdrew overnight, II Squadron took up positions toward the rear of the German line. British light forces repeatedly clashed with the German fleet, and in one of these night actions, German: Pommern was hit by a torpedo from the destroyer, detonating one of her ammunition magazines and destroying the ship.

The German experience at Jutland demonstrated that pre-dreadnoughts had no place in a fleet action with dreadnoughts, and so the German: Deutschlands spent the rest of 1916 on coastal defense duty in the Elbe and occasionally in the Danish straits. In August 1917, II Battle Squadron was disbanded and most of the ships were reduced to secondary duties, being partially disarmed to free up guns for use ashore. German: Deutschland and German: Schleswig-Holstein became barracks ships and German: Schlesien served as a training ship. German: Hannover remained in active service for guard duty in the straits.

Inter-war years

Following Germany's defeat in the war, the fleet was significantly reduced in size by the Treaty of Versailles, which permitted the Germans to retain six battleships of the German: Braunschweig and German: Deutschland classes, and another two in reserve. German: Deutschland was discarded in 1920 and was broken up by 1922, but the other three members of the class were kept by the postwar navy, which was reorganized as the German: [[Reichsmarine]] (Navy of the Realm). All three ships were heavily modernized in the early 1920s to prepare them for active service. German: Hannover was the first member of the class to return to service, in 1921, becoming the fleet flagship, a role she alternated with . German: Schlesien and German: Schleswig-Holstein remained out of service until the middle of the decade, when they were rearmed; German: Schleswig-Holstein became the flagship on her recommissioning in 1926. German: Hannover was modernized again in the late 1920s after German: Schlesien recommissioned to take her place.

Throughout the 1920s, the ships took part in a training routine similar to that of the prewar years, including training exercises throughout the year and long-range training cruises that went as far as the Mediterranean Sea. The ships frequently went to Norwegian waters, as they had done under the Imperial government. German: Hannover was decommissioned in September 1931 and saw no further service, though there were plans to convert her into a target ship. German: Schleswig-Holstein and German: Schlesien remained on active duty into the early 1930s, but by 1933, the new heavy cruiser had been commissioned, and so German: Schlesien was decommissioned to be converted into a dedicated training ship. German: Schleswig-Holstein followed for a similar rebuilding in 1935–1936. The two ships spent the rest of the decade training naval cadets, including a lengthy voyage to North and South America for German: Schlesien in 1936–1937. During this period, Germany came under the control of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi party, which set upon a rearmament strategy and an aggressive foreign policy that led to the outbreak of World War II in September 1939.

World War II

thumb|German: Schlesien firing at the Hel Fortified Area

German: Schleswig-Holstein steamed to the Free City of Danzig in late August 1939, and was moored off the Polish military depot at Westerplatte on the morning of 1 September. She opened fire on the base in Westerplatte, firing the first shots of World War II. The initial German attack was repulsed, leading to heavy fighting that German: Schleswig-Holstein supported for the next week, and culminating in the Polish garrison's surrender on 7 September. Later that month, German: Schlesien joined her sister in bombarding Polish positions along the coast, including the Hel Fortified Area. The ships returned to training duties after the Polish campaign, and in early 1940, German: Schlesien was used as an icebreaker in the Baltic Sea.

German: Schleswig-Holstein and German: Schlesien then participated in the occupation of Denmark and invasion of Norway, respectively, in April 1940. Neither vessel saw action during the operations. Afterward, German: Schleswig-Holstein was again removed from front-line service and used as a training ship, while German: Schlesien resumed her ice-breaking duties. In March 1941, German: Schlesien escorted mine-layers in the Baltic. After returning from this operation at the end of the month, she became a stationary training ship in Gotenhafen. German: Schleswig-Holstein was briefly reactivated in early 1942 for ice-breaker service in the Baltic, and in May she accidentally collided with a shipwreck in the Gulf of Riga, forcing a return to Gotenhafen for repairs. The ship was thereafter reduced to training duties.

German: Hannover was broken up in Bremerhaven between 1944 and 1946. In mid-1944, German: Schlesiens and German: Schleswig-Holsteins anti-aircraft armament was considerably strengthened to allow them to be used as air defense ships in the port of Gotenhafen. German: Schleswig-Holstein was attacked by RAF bombers in December 1944, and although she was sunk in shallow water, her weapons could still be used. After a fire permanently disabled the ship, her crew was sent ashore to assist in the defense of Marienburg. German: Schlesien provided fire support for German troops in the vicinity of Gotenhafen between 15 and 21 March 1945. In April, German: Schlesien was moved to Swinemünde to restock her ammunition supply as well as evacuate 1,000 wounded soldiers from the front. On 3 May she struck a mine outside Swinemünde; the following day she was scuttled by her crew in shallow water. Both ships were broken up in situ after the war.

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