Admiral Graf Spee was aDeutschland-classPanzerschiff (armored ship), nicknamed a "pocket battleship" by the British, which served with theKriegsmarine ofNazi Germany duringWorld War II. The vessel was named afterWorld War I AdmiralMaximilian von Spee, commander of theEast Asia Squadron who fought the battles ofCoronel and theFalkland Islands, where he was killed in action. She waslaid down at theReichsmarinewerft shipyard inWilhelmshaven in October 1932 and completed by January 1936. The ship was nominally under the 10,000 long tons (10,160 t) limitation on warship size imposed by theTreaty of Versailles, though with afull load displacement of 16,020 long tons (16,280 t), she significantly exceeded it. Armed with six 28 cm (11 in) guns in two triplegun turrets,Admiral Graf Spee and her sisters were designed to outgun anycruiser fast enough to catch them. Their top speed of 28 knots (52 km/h; 32 mph) left only a fewcapital ships in the Anglo-French navies fast enough and powerful enough to sink them.[1]
The ship conducted fivenon-intervention patrols during theSpanish Civil War in 1936–1938 and participated in theCoronation Review ofKing George VI in May 1937.Admiral Graf Spee was deployed to the South Atlantic in the weeks before the outbreak of World War II, to be positioned in merchant sea lanes once war was declared. Between September and December 1939, the warship sank nine vessels totaling 50,089 gross register tons (GRT), before being confronted by three British cruisers at theBattle of the River Plate on 13 December.Admiral Graf Spee inflicted heavy damage on the British ships, but she too was damaged and was forced to put into port atMontevideo,Uruguay. Convinced by false reports of superior British naval forces gathering,Hans Langsdorff, commander of the ship, ordered the vessel to bescuttled. The ship was partially broken upin situ, though part of the ship remained visible above the surface of the water for years.
Admiral Graf Spee was 186 meters (610 ft)long overall and had abeam of 21.65 m (71 ft) and a maximumdraft of 7.34 m (24 ft 1 in). The ship had a designdisplacement of 14,890 t (14,650long tons) and afull load displacement of 16,020 long tons (16,280 t),[2] though the ship was officially stated to be within the 10,000-long-ton (10,160 t) limit of theTreaty of Versailles.[3]Admiral Graf Spee was powered by four sets ofMAN 9-cylinder double-acting two-strokediesel engines.[2] The ship's top speed was 28.5knots (52.8 km/h; 32.8 mph), at 54,000 PS (53,260 shp; 39,720 kW). At a cruising speed of 18.69 knots (34.61 km/h; 21.51 mph), the ship had a range of 16,300nautical miles (30,200 km; 18,800 mi).[4] As designed, her standard complement consisted of 33 officers and 586 enlisted men, though after 1935 this was significantly increased to 30 officers and 921–1,040 sailors.[2] The ship was equipped onecatapult but had no aircraft hangar. One floatplane was carried on the catapult. The initialHeinkel He 60 was replaced with anArado Ar 196 before the outbreak of the war.[5]Admiral Graf Spee was the first German warship to be equipped withradar.[6] AFMG G(gO) "Seetakt" set[7][a] was mounted on the foretop range finder.[5]
Admiral Graf Spee'sarmored belt was 100 mm (3.9 in) thick; her upper deck was 17 mm (0.67 in) thick while the main armored deck was 45 to 70 mm (1.8 to 2.8 in) thick. The main battery turrets had 140 mm (5.5 in) thick faces and 80 mm thick sides.[2]
Admiral Graf Spee was ordered by theReichsmarine from theReichsmarinewerft shipyard inWilhelmshaven.[2] Ordered asErsatz Braunschweig,Admiral Graf Spee replaced the oldpre-dreadnought battleshipBraunschweig. Herkeel waslaid down on 1 October 1932,[9] under construction number 125.[2] The ship waslaunched on 30 June 1934; at her launching, she was christened by the daughter of AdmiralMaximilian von Spee, the ship's namesake.[10] She was completed slightly over a year and a half later on 6 January 1936, the day she wascommissioned into the German fleet.[11]
Admiral Graf Spee spent the first three months of her career conducting extensivesea trials to ready the ship for service. The ship's first commander wasKapitän zur See (KzS)Conrad Patzig [de]; he was replaced in 1937 byKzSWalter Warzecha.[10] After joining the fleet,Admiral Graf Spee became the flagship of the German Navy.[12] In the summer of 1936, following the outbreak of theSpanish Civil War, she deployed to the Atlantic to participate innon-intervention patrols off theRepublican-held coast of Spain. Between August 1936 and May 1937, the ship conducted three patrols off Spain.[13] On the return voyage from Spain,Admiral Graf Spee stopped in Great Britain to represent Germany in theCoronation Review atSpithead forKing George VI on 20 May.[12]
After the conclusion of the Review,Admiral Graf Spee returned to Spain for a fourth non-intervention patrol. Following fleet maneuvers and a brief visit to Sweden, the ship conducted a fifth and final patrol in February 1938.[13] In 1938,KzSHans Langsdorff took command of the vessel;[10] she conducted a series of goodwill visits to various foreign ports throughout the year.[13] These included cruises into the Atlantic, where she stopped inTangier andVigo.[14] She also participated in extensive fleet maneuvers in German waters. She was part of the celebrations for the reintegration of the port ofMemel into Germany,[13] and a fleet review in honor of AdmiralMiklós Horthy, the Regent of Hungary. Between 18 April and 17 May 1939, she conducted another cruise into the Atlantic, stopping in the ports ofCeuta andLisbon.[14] On 21 August 1939,Admiral Graf Spee departed Wilhelmshaven, bound for the South Atlantic.[12]
Following the outbreak of war between Germany and theAllies in September 1939,Adolf Hitler ordered the German Navy to begincommerce raiding against Allied merchant traffic. Hitler nevertheless delayed issuing the order until it became clear that Britain would not countenance a peace treaty following the conquest of Poland. TheAdmiral Graf Spee was instructed to strictly adhere toprize rules, which required raiders to stop and search ships for contraband before sinking them, and to ensure that their crews were safely evacuated. Langsdorff was ordered to avoid combat, even with inferior opponents, and to frequently change position.[15] On 1 September, the cruiser rendezvoused with her supply shipAltmark southwest of theCanary Islands. While replenishing his fuel supplies, Langsdorff ordered superfluous equipment transferred toAltmark; this included several of the ship's boats, flammable paint, and two of her ten 2 cm anti-aircraft guns, which were installed on the tanker.[16]
On 11 September, while still transferring supplies fromAltmark,Admiral Graf Spee's Aradofloatplane spotted the British heavy cruiserHMS Cumberland approaching the two German ships. Langsdorff ordered both vessels to depart at high speed, successfully evading the British cruiser.[16] On 26 September, the ship finally received orders authorizing attacks on Allied merchant shipping. Four days laterAdmiral Graf Spee's Arado locatedBooth Steam Ship Co's cargo shipClement off the coast of Brazil. The cargo ship transmitted an "RRR" signal ("I am under attack by a raider") before the cruiser ordered her to stop.Admiral Graf Spee tookClement'scaptain andchief engineer prisoner but left the rest of her crew to abandon ship in the lifeboats.[17] The cruiser then fired 30 rounds from her 28 cm and 15 cm guns and two torpedoes at the cargo ship, which broke up and sank.[18] Langsdorff ordered a distress signal sent to the naval station inPernambuco to ensure the rescue of the ship's crew. TheBritish Admiralty immediately issued a warning to merchant shipping that a German surface raider was in the area.[19] The British crew later reached the Brazilian coast in their lifeboats.[17]
On the same day as the formation of the Anglo-French hunter groups,Admiral Graf Spee captured the steamerNewton Beech. Two days later, she encountered and sank the merchant shipAshlea. On 8 October, the following day, she sankNewton Beech,[22] which Langsdorff had been using to house prisoners.[23]Newton Beech was too slow to keep up withAdmiral Graf Spee, and so the prisoners were transferred to the cruiser. On 10 October, she captured the steamerHuntsman, the captain of which had not sent a distress signal until the last minute, as he had mistakenly identifiedAdmiral Graf Spee as a French warship. Unable to accommodate the crew fromHuntsman,Admiral Graf Spee sent the ship to a rendezvous location with a prize crew. On 15 October,Admiral Graf Spee rendezvoused withAltmark to refuel and transfer prisoners; the following morning, the prizeHuntsman joined the two ships. The prisoners aboardHuntsman were transferred toAltmark and Langsdorff then sankHuntsman on the night of 17 October.[24]
Admiral Graf Spee before the war
On 22 October,Admiral Graf Spee encountered and sank the steamerTrevanion.[25] At the end of October, Langsdorff sailed his ship into the Indian Ocean south of Madagascar. The purpose of that foray was to divert Allied warships away from the South Atlantic, and to confuse the Allies about his intentions. By this time,Admiral Graf Spee had cruised for almost 30,000 nautical miles (56,000 km; 35,000 mi) and needed an engine overhaul.[26] On 15 November, the ship sank thetankerMV Africa Shell, and the following day, she stopped an unidentified Dutch steamer, though did not sink her.Admiral Graf Spee returned to the Atlantic between 17 and 26 November to refuel fromAltmark.[27] While replenishing supplies, the crew ofAdmiral Graf Spee built a dummy gun turret on herbridge and erected a dummy second funnel behind the aircraft catapult to alter her silhouette significantly in a bid to confuse allied shipping as to her true identity.[28]
Admiral Graf Spee's Arado floatplane located the merchant shipDoric Star: Langsdorff fired a shot across her bow to stop the ship.[29]Doric Star was able to send out a distress signal before she was sunk, which prompted Harwood to take his three cruisers to the mouth of the River Plate, which he suspected might be Langsdorff's next target.[30] On 3 December,Admiral Graf Spee sank the steamerSS Tairoa.[31] On 6 December, she metAltmark and transferred 140 prisoners fromDoric Star andTairoa.Admiral Graf Spee encountered her last victim on the evening of 7 December: the freighterStreonshalh. The prize crew recovered secret documents containing shipping route information.[30] Based on that information, Langsdorff decided to head for the seas offMontevideo. On 12 December, the ship's Arado 196 broke down and could not be repaired, deprivingAdmiral Graf Spee of her aerial reconnaissance.[32] The ship's disguise was removed, so it would not hinder the ship in battle.[33]
At 05:30 on the morning of 13 December 1939, lookouts spotted a pair of masts off the ship's starboard bow. Langsdorff assumed this to be the escort for a convoy mentioned in the documents recovered fromTairoa. At 05:52, however, the ship was identified asExeter; she was accompanied by a pair of smaller warships, initially thought to be destroyers but quickly identified asLeander-class cruisers. Langsdorff decided not to flee from the British ships, and ordered his ship to battle stations and to close at maximum speed.[33] At 06:08, the British spottedAdmiral Graf Spee; Harwood divided his ships to split the gunfire ofAdmiral Graf Spee's 28 cm guns.[34] The German ship opened fire with her main battery atExeter and her secondary guns at the flagshipAjax at 06:17. At 06:20,Exeter returned fire, followed byAjax at 06:21 andAchilles at 06:24. In the span of thirty minutes,Admiral Graf Spee had hitExeter three times, disabling her two forward turrets, destroying her bridge and her aircraft catapult, and starting major fires.Ajax andAchilles moved closer toAdmiral Graf Spee to relieve the pressure onExeter.[35]
Langsdorff thought the two light cruisers were making a torpedo attack, and turned away under a smokescreen.[35] The respite allowedExeter to withdraw from the action; by now, only one of her gun turrets was still in action, and she had suffered 61 dead and 23 wounded crew members.[34] At around 07:00,Exeter returned to the engagement, firing from her stern turret.Admiral Graf Spee fired on her again, scored more hits, and forcedExeter to withdraw again, this time with a list to port. At 07:25,Admiral Graf Spee scored a hit onAjax that disabled her aft turrets.[35] Both sides broke off the action,Admiral Graf Spee retreating into the River Plate estuary, while Harwood's battered cruisers remained outside to observe any possible breakout attempts. In the course of the engagement,Admiral Graf Spee had been hit approximately 70 times; 36 men were killed and 60 more were wounded,[36] including Langsdorff, who had been wounded twice by splinters while standing on the open bridge.[35]
As a result of battle damage and casualties, Langsdorff decided to put into Montevideo, where repairs could be made and the wounded men evacuated from the ship.[36] Most of the hits scored by the British cruisers had caused only minor structural and superficial damage, but the oil purification plant, which was required to prepare the diesel fuel for the engines, was destroyed. Herdesalination plant and galley were also destroyed, which would have increased the difficulty of a return to Germany. A hit in the bow would also have reduced her seaworthiness in the heavy seas of the North Atlantic.Admiral Graf Spee had fired much of her ammunition in the engagement with Harwood's cruisers.[37]
The wounded crewmen were taken to local hospitals and the dead were buried with full military honors after arriving in port. Captive Allied seamen, consisting of 6captains, 9 chief engineers, 25 officers, and 21 seamen[38] still aboard the ship, were released. Repairs necessary to make the ship seaworthy were expected to take up to two weeks.[39] British naval intelligence worked to convince Langsdorff that vastly superior forces were concentrating to destroy his ship if he attempted to break out of the harbor. The Admiralty broadcast a series of signals on frequencies known to be intercepted by German intelligence. (In reality, the closest heavy units—the carrierArk Royal and battlecruiserRenown—were some 2,500 nmi (4,600 km; 2,900 mi) away, much too far to intervene in the situation.) Believing the British reports, Langsdorff discussed his options with commanders in Berlin. These were either to break out and seek refuge inBuenos Aires, where the Argentine government would intern the ship, or to scuttle the ship in the Plate estuary.[36]
Langsdorff was unwilling to risk the lives of his crew, so he decided to scuttle the ship. He knew that although Uruguay was neutral, the government was on friendly terms with Britain and if he allowed his ship to be interned, the Uruguayan Navy would allow British intelligence officers access to the ship.[37] Under Article 17 of theHague Convention of 1907, neutrality restrictions limitedAdmiral Graf Spee to a period of 72 hours for repairs in Montevideo, before she would be interned for the duration of the war.[40][41] On 17 December 1939, Langsdorff ordered the destruction of all important equipment aboard the ship. The ship's remaining ammunition supply was dispersed throughout the ship, in preparation for scuttling. On 17 December, the ship, with only Langsdorff and 40 other men aboard, moved into the outerroadstead to be scuttled.[42] A crowd of 20,000 watched as the scuttling charges were set; the crew was taken off by an Argentinetug and the ship was scuttled at 20:55.[41][43] The explosions from the munitions sent jets of flame high into the air and created a large cloud of smoke that obscured the ship which burned in the shallow water for the next two days.[42]
On 20 December, in his room in a Buenos Aires hotel, Langsdorff shot himself in full dress uniform while lying on the ship's battle ensign.[42] In late January 1940, the neutral American cruiserUSS Helena arrived in Montevideo and the crew was permitted to visit the wreck ofAdmiral Graf Spee. The Americans met the German crewmen, who were still in Montevideo.[41] In the aftermath of the scuttling, the ship's crew were taken to Argentina, where they were interned for the remainder of the war.[42]
Admiral Graf Spee's salvagedoptical rangefinderThe recovered eagle crest on display with its swastika covered, 2006
The wreck was partially broken upin situ in 1942–1943, though parts of the ship were visible for some time after; the wreck lies at a depth of only 11 m (36 ft).[11] The salvage rights were purchased from the German Government by a Montevideo engineering company for£14,000, a front for the British. The British had been surprised by the accuracy of the gunnery and expected to find a radar range finder, which they did. They used the knowledge thus acquired to try to develop countermeasures, under the leadership ofFred Hoyle at the British radar project. The Admiralty complained about the large sum paid for the salvage rights.[44]
In February 2004, a salvage team began work raising the wreck ofAdmiral Graf Spee. The operation was in part being funded by the government ofUruguay, in part by the private sector as the wreck was a hazard to navigation. The first major section—a 27 metric tons (27 long tons; 30 short tons) gunneryrangefinding telemeter—was raised on 25 February.[45] On 10 February 2006, the two-metre (6 ft 7 in), 400-kilogram (880 lb) eagle andswastika crest ofAdmiral Graf Spee was recovered from thestern of the ship;[46] it was stored in a Uruguayan naval warehouse following German complaints about exhibiting "Nazi paraphernalia".[47] An attempt to sell the ornament prompted the Uruguayan government to prohibit any sale to prevent neo-Nazis from acquiring it. Instead, theUruguayan Navy kept it in a storage facility.[48]
A court case involving the private salvage company that had been involved in the effort to raise the wreck ended in 2019 with a court order for the government to sell the ornament and give some of the proceeds to the salvage company. The decision was later overruled and the government received full custody.[48] On 2 January 2022, a newspaper inPunta del Este reported that an Argentine Jewish businessman, Daniel Sielecki, had offered to buy the eagle and swastika crest from theAdmiral Graf Spee from the naval warehouse. Sielecki said he wanted to explode the crest into "a thousand pieces" in order to keep it out of the hands of neo-Nazis.[49][50]
On 17 June 2023,TheNew York Times reported that the eagle and crest would be melted down and recast into a dove by Uruguayan artistPablo Atchugarry.[48] A day later, however, Uruguayan presidentLuis Lacalle Pou dropped the plan claiming that "there is an overwhelming majority that does not share this decision" and that "if one wants to generate peace, the first thing one has to do is to generate union. Clearly this has not generated it."[51]
^ FMG stands forFunkmessgerät (radar equipment). "G" denoted that the equipment was manufactured by GEMA, "g" indicated that it operated between 335 and 440MHz, while "O" indicated the positioning of the set atop of the forwardrangefinder. SeeWilliamson, p. 7.
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