I read “Castles of Steel” by Robert K
Massie recently.
This book gives a comprehensive account of
the war at sea between Britain and Germany from 1914 to 1918.
The key naval battle of the war was fought
at Jutland in late May and June of 1916. It was a stalemate. Britain suffered
the more casualties, in ships and men. But the British fleet still dominated
the North Sea after the battle, and a British naval blockade of
Germany continued as before. So in that sense, Jutland was a defeat for
Germany.
Germany retaliated by submarine warfare,
but that eventually provoked America so much that America entered the war on
the British side.
For political and nationalistic reasons,
Irish history teaching has underplayed Irish people’s sacrifice in the First
World War. It will surprise many to know that more Irish people probably died in
one naval battle at Jutland in
1916, than did in the Easter Rebellion in Dublin a
month earlier.
From my own county of Meath alone , three people gave their
lives at Jutland in June 1916.
They were
Michael
Clarke from Ratoath,
Laurence
Hamilton from Dean Hill, Navan ,and
John Keappock from Claremont , Navan, whose family I know particularly well, and whose father was a member of
Navan Urban Council at the time
The descriptions of naval tactics, in
Robert Massie’s very readable book, are enlivened by excellent sketches of the
characters of the leaders involved, particularly on the British side.
The First World War had been preceded by a
naval arms race between Britain and Germany. The Kaiser had great admiration
for the Royal Navy and wanted his navy to overtake it.
In the pre World War One period, the world economy had become
globalised and interlinked, much like it is today. The Kaiser saw control of the seas, as vital to Germany
becoming the ultimate arbiter of world affairs, in much the same way that
control of space gives the United States strategic dominance today.
By the time the war broke out, Britain
still had a bigger navy than Germany.
But Germany’s ships were
better constructed, and German gunnery was more accurate.
The relative range of guns, and the relative speed of ships,
decided who won in a naval battle.
If an enemy ship could be kept within the range of your own guns, and
you were fast enough to be able to stay out of range of his, you would win the
day.
The Kaiser kept his navy in port for much
of the war, because he did not want to put them at risk. Germany had secure natural ports at
Kiel and Wilhelmshaven, whereas the UK had no really secure ports, apart from Lough
Swilly in Ireland , which was very remote from the field of conflict.
Britain used Scapa Flow in the Orkneys as its principal naval
port, but it was quite vulnerable until major defensive investments had been undertaken.
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