Australia in 1914 | |
| Class overview | |
|---|---|
| Name | Indefatigable class |
| Builders | |
| Operators | |
| Preceded by | Invincible class |
| Succeeded by | Lion class |
| Subclasses | New Zealand |
| Built | 1909–1913 |
| In service | 1911–1923 |
| In commission | 1911–1923 |
| Completed | 3 |
| Lost | 1 |
| Retired | 1 (Australia wasscuttled) |
| Scrapped | 1 |
| General characteristics | |
| Type | Battlecruiser |
| Displacement | |
| Length | 590 ft (179.8 m) |
| Beam | 80 ft (24.4 m) |
| Draught | 27 ft (8.2 m) |
| Installed power |
|
| Propulsion | 4 shafts; 2steam turbine sets |
| Speed | 25.8knots (47.8 km/h; 29.7 mph) |
| Range | 6,690 nmi (12,390 km; 7,700 mi) at 10 knots (19 km/h; 12 mph) |
| Complement | 800 |
| Armament |
|
| Armour |
|
TheIndefatigable class were the secondclass built of Britishbattlecruisers[Note 1] which served in theRoyal Navy and theRoyal Australian Navy duringWorld War I. The design represented a modest reworking of the precedingInvincible class, featuring increased endurance and an improved cross-deckarc of fire for their midshipswing turrets achieved by a lengthening of the hull. Like its predecessor, the design resembled thecontemporary dreadnought of the Royal Navy, but sacrificed armour protection and one turret from the main battery for a 4-knot (7.4 km/h; 4.6 mph) speed advantage.
OriginallyIndefatigable was the only ship of the class, butAustralia andNew Zealand were later built as part of a scheme to improve the defence of theDominions by having each Dominion purchase a "fleet unit" of one battlecruiser, three light cruisers and six destroyers. Only Australia fully acceded to the idea, forming the Royal Australian Navy, but New Zealand agreed to fund one battlecruiser. A modifiedIndefatigable design was chosen rather than theLion-class battlecruiser then building for the Royal Navy.
They spent most of the war patrolling the North Sea, and participated in most of the battles there, although onlyNew Zealand was in theUnited Kingdom when the war began.Indefatigable was in theMediterranean where she pursued the German warshipsGoeben andBreslau as they fled toward Turkey, andAustralia wasflagship of theRoyal Australian Navy in Australian waters where she helped to secure the German Pacific colonies and searched, unsuccessfully, for the GermanEast Asia Squadron before sailing for the United Kingdom in December 1914.New Zealand participated in a number of the early actions in theNorth Sea including theBattle of Heligoland Bight and the inconclusiveScarborough Raid.Australia was still under repair after a collision withNew Zealand before theBattle of Jutland so onlyIndefatigable andNew Zealand were present when the former was destroyed by a magazine explosion. BothAustralia andNew Zealand spent much uneventful time at sea after Jutland waiting for the next appearance of theHigh Seas Fleet, but that had been forbidden by theKaiser.New Zealand conducted AdmiralJellicoe on his tour ofIndia and the Dominions after the war whileAustralia returned home where she again became the flagship of theRoyal Australian Navy.New Zealand was sold for scrap in 1922, whileAustralia lasted only two years more before beingscuttled to comply with the terms of theWashington Naval Treaty.
Indefatigable was the successor to theInvincible-class battlecruisers. A number of options for large cruisers were considered for the 1906 Naval Programme, including the X4 design of 22,500 long tons (22,861 t) with 11-inch (280 mm) armour and 25-knot (46 km/h; 29 mph) speed, but in the end this programme consisted only of three ships of theDreadnought type. A number of options were considered for the 1907–08 programme, ranging from 18,100 long tons (18,390 t) to 21,400 long tons (21,743 t), but in the end battleships were again favoured and no battlecruisers were ordered until the subsequent programme year.[1]
At the time the final design ofIndefatigable was approved, theAdmiralty was already moving on, Fisher writing in September 1908 "I've got SirPhilip Watts into a newIndomitable that will make your mouth water when you see it", a design that was to eventually emerge asHMS Lion. In August 1909 the self-governing dominions met at the 1909Imperial Conference, and in discussion of Imperial defence, the Admiralty proposed the creation of indigenous fleet units, each to consist of oneInvincible-class battlecruiser, threelight cruisers of theBristol class, and six destroyers. These were to be based inAustralia,New Zealand,Canada andSouth Africa in an attempt to secure the naval defence of the Dominions while the Royal Navy concentrated in home waters to meet the German threat. While the scheme was rejected by Canada and South Africa, Australia and New Zealand subscribed, each ordering a modified version of theIndefatigable, rather than the originally proposedInvincible class.[2]Australia became a ship of the newly formedRoyal Australian Navy, whileNew Zealand was retained in European waters as a wholly RN unit.[3] Eventually, only one fleet unit was formed, the Australian squadron in 1913.[4]

TheIndefatigable was ordered as the lone battlecruiser of the 1908–9 programme. Her outline design was prepared in March 1908, and the final design was approved in November 1908. This design was essentially an enlargedInvincible with revised arrangements of protection and main armament.[6]
TheIndefatigables were slightly larger than their predecessors of theInvincible class. They had anoverall length of 590 ft (179.8 m), abeam of 80 ft (24.4 m), and adraught of 29 ft 9 in (9.1 m) at deep load. The ships displaced 18,500long tons (18,800 t) at load and 22,130 long tons (22,490 t) at deep load, over 1,500 long tons (1,524 t) more than the earlier ships. They had ametacentric height of 4.78 feet (1.5 m) at deep load.[7]
Each paired set ofParsonsdirect-drivesteam turbines was housed in a separate engine-room and drove two shafts. The wing shaft was coupled to the high-pressure ahead and astern turbines and the low-pressure turbines to the inner shafts. Each wing shaft drove a propeller 10 feet 10 inches (3.30 m) in diameter and the propellers on the inner shafts were 10 feet 3 inches (3.12 m) in diameter. The turbines were powered by thirty-oneBabcock & Wilcoxwater-tube boilers in five boiler rooms.[8]Indefatigable's turbines were designed to produce a total of 43,000shaft horsepower (32,065 kW), but reached over 55,000 shp (41,013 kW) on forced draught during trials in 1911. The turbines ofAustralia andNew Zealand were slightly more powerful at 44,000 shp (32,811 kW). They were designed for 25.8 knots (47.8 km/h; 29.7 mph), but all three bettered 26 knots (48 km/h; 30 mph) during trials.[9]
The ships carried approximately 3,200 long tons (3,251 t) of coal, and an additional 850 long tons (864 t) offuel oil that was sprayed on the coal to increase its burn rate.[10] At full capacity, the ships could steam for 6,690 nautical miles (12,390 km; 7,700 mi) at a speed of 10 knots (19 km/h; 12 mph).[11]

Each ship carried eightBL12-inch (305 mm) Mk X guns in four BVIII or BVIII* twin-gun turrets. Two turrets were mounted fore and aft of thesuperstructure on thecentreline, identified as 'A' and 'X' respectively. Twowing turrets were mountedamidshipsen echelon between thefunnels, identified as 'P' and 'Q'. 'P' turret was mounted on the port side and normally faced forward, 'Q' turret was mounted on the starboard side and normally faced aft (rearwards). 'P' and 'Q' turrets were staggered—'P' was forward of 'Q', enabling 'P' to fire in a 70° arc to the starboard side and 'Q' to likewise fire towards the port side. These were the same guns as those mounted inDreadnought, theLord Nelson class andBellerophon class.[12]
The guns could initially be depressed to −3° andelevated to 13.5°, although the turrets were modified to allow 16° of elevation duringWorld War I. They fired 850-pound (390 kg) projectiles at amuzzle velocity of 2,746 ft/s (837 m/s); at 13.5°, this provided a maximum range of 18,850 yards (17,240 m) using 4crh shells. Therate of fire of these guns was about two rounds per minute.[13] The ships carried a total of 880 rounds during wartime for 110 shells per gun.[14]
Thesecondary armament consisted of sixteenBL 4-inch (102 mm) Mk VII guns positioned in the superstructure. All of the guns were enclosed incasemates and givengun shields during refits in 1914 and 1915 to better protect the gun crews from weather and enemy action, although two guns were removed at the same time.[15] The guns on their PII* mounts had a maximum depression of 7° and a maximum elevation of 15°. They fired 31-pound (14 kg) projectiles at a muzzle velocity of 2,821 ft/s (860 m/s); this gave a maximum range of 11,400 yd (10,400 m).[16] They were provided with 100 rounds per gun.[17]
An additional 4-inch gun was fitted in the surviving ships during 1917 as ananti-aircraft (AA) gun. It was mounted on a Mark II high-angle mounting with a maximum elevation of 60°. It had a reduced propellant charge with a muzzle velocity of only 2,400 ft/s (730 m/s).[18] Earlier anti-aircraft guns included a singleQF 3-inch (76.2 mm) 20 cwt AA gun on a high-angle Mark II mount that was added during refits in 1914–1915.[14] This had a maximum depression of 10° and a maximum elevation of 90°. It fired a 12.5-pound (5.7 kg) shell at a muzzle velocity of 2,604 ft/s (794 m/s) at a rate of fire of 12–14 rounds per minute. They had a maximum effectiveceiling of 23,000 ft (7,000 m).[19] It was provided with 500 rounds.[17]New Zealand carried a singleQF six-pounder (2.2-inch (56 mm)) Hotchkiss AA gun on a HA MkIc mounting from October 1914 to the end of 1915.[14] This had a maximum depression of 8° and a maximum elevation of 60°. It fired a 6-pound (2.7 kg) shell at a muzzle velocity of 1,773 ft/s (540 m/s) at a rate of fire of 20 rounds per minute against surface targets. It had a maximum ceiling of 10,000 ft (3,050 m).[20]
The battlecruisers were also equipped with two18-inch (450 mm) submergedtorpedo tubes, one on each side of the forward hull, for which twelve torpedoes were carried.[21]

The spotting tops, a modern equivalent of the sailing ship'sfighting top, at the head of the tripod fore and main masts controlled the fire of theIndefatigable's main guns. Data from a 9-foot (2.7 m) Barr and Stroudrangefinder was input into aDumaresq mechanical computer and electrically transmitted toVickers range clocks located in the Transmitting Station (TS) located beneath each spotting top where it was converted into range and deflection data for use by the guns. The target's data was also graphically recorded on a plotting table to assist the gunnery officer in predicting the movement of the target. Each gun turret had its own transmission equipment and the turrets, Transmitting Stations, and spotting tops could be connected in almost any combination. Firing trials againstHero in 1907 revealed this system's vulnerability to gunfire as the spotting top was hit twice and a large splinter severed thevoice pipe and all wiring running along the mast. To guard against this possibility 'A' turret ofIndefatigable was fitted with a 9-foot rangefinder at the rear of the turret roof and it was equipped to control the entire main armament during a refit between 1911 and 1914.[22]
Australia andNew Zealand were built with a different arrangement. The spotting top on the main mast was deleted and an armoured spotting tower was built instead into theconning tower where it was better protected, had an improved field of vision and direct access to the primary conning position. The rear Transmitting Station was also deleted and the forward TS was consequently enlarged. Their 'A' turrets were built with the improvements listed above.[23]
Fire control technology advanced quickly during the years immediately preceding World War I and the development of theDreyer Fire Control Table was one such advance. It combined the functions of the Dumaresq and the range clock and a simplified version, the Mk I, was fitted to theIndefatigables during refits in 1915–1916. The more important development was the director firing system. This consisted of afire-control director mounted high in the ship which electrically transmitted training and elevation angles to the gun turrets via pointers, which the turret crewmen had only to follow. The director layer's trigger fired the guns simultaneously which aided in spotting the shell splashes and minimized the effects of the roll on the dispersion of the shells. A gun within the 'Y' turret was also equipped with transmitters so that, as a backup, it could function as a "directing gun",[24] but there was no provision for the gun battery to be split between the main director and this directing gun.[25] TheIndefatigables received their director equipment between mid-1915 and May 1916.[26]
In some ways the armour protection given to theIndefatigables was weaker than that of their predecessors as the armour was reduced in thickness in a number of places, but it was spread out to a greater extent.Indefatigable's main belt ran from stem to stern; it was 6 inches (152 mm) thick for the middle 298 feet (91 m) of the ship, but was reduced to 4 inches (102 mm) abreast the end 12-inch gun barbettes andmagazines and thinned still further to 2.5 inches (64 mm) at the ends of the ship. A 4.5-inch (114 mm)bulkhead met the barbette of X turret while the forward bulkhead was 3–4 inches (76–102 mm) in thickness. The gun turrets and barbettes were protected by 7 in (178 mm) of armour, except for the turret roofs which used 3 inches ofKrupp non-cemented armour (KNC).[27] The supporting beams for the turret roofs were reinforced over those of theInvincibles based on lessons learned in firing trials conducted during 1907.[28] The thickness of the maindeck was generally 1 in (25 mm) ofnickel steel, but increased to 2 inches (51 mm) around the base of the barbettes. The lower deck armour of nickel steel was 1.5 in (38 mm) on the flat and 2 inches thick on the slope, but increased to two inches at the ship's ends. The sides of the forward conning tower were 10 in (254 mm) thick while the spotting tower had four inches. The roof and floor of both towers were KNC armour 3 inches thick while the conning tower's communication tube was four inches of KNC. The torpedo director tower is 1 inch of nickel steel all around. Nickel-steeltorpedo bulkheads of 2.5-inch thickness were fitted abreast the magazines and shell rooms. The funnel uptakes were protected with 1.5 inches of nickel steel on the sides and 1 inch on the ends.Krupp cemented armour was used throughout, unless otherwise mentioned.[29]
Australia andNew Zealand were built with a different arrangement. The waterline belt did not extend to the ends, but terminated 60 feet (18.3 m) short of the bow and 55 feet (16.8 m) short of the stern. The sections abreast the barbettes were thickened to 5 inches (127 mm) and the sections at each end were increased to 4 inches. The main deck armour was increased to 2.5 inches around the barbettes and was extended 55 feet past the rear barbette.[30] The lower deck armour was decreased from 1.5–2 inches to one inch, both on the flat and slope, except at the ends where it was thickened to 2.5 inches.[27] After Jutland one inch of armour was added to the magazine crowns and the turret roofs[31] with a total weight of 110 long tons (112 t).[32]
The following table gives the build details and purchase cost of the members of theIndefatigable class. Whilst standard British practice at that time was for these costs toexclude armament and stores, for some reason the cost quoted inThe Naval Annual forIndefatigableincludes the armament.
| Ship | Builder | Engine builder | Laid down | Launched | Completed | Cost according to | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BNA (1914)[33] | Parkes[34] | Gillett[35] | ||||||
| Indefatigable | Devonport Dockyard | John Brown, Parsons turbines | 23 February 1909 | 28 October 1909 | 24 February 1911 | £1,536,769* | £1,547,500 guns £94,200 | not stated |
| New Zealand | Fairfield,Govan | Fairfield, Parsons turbines | 20 June 1910 | 1 July 1911 | November 1912 | not stated | £1,684,990 guns £94,200 | not stated |
| Australia | John Brown,Clydebank | John Brown, Parsons turbines | 23 June 1910 | 25 October 1911 | 21 June 1913 | not stated | not stated | £2,000,000 |
* = estimated cost, including guns
Indefatigable was initially assigned to the 1st Cruiser Squadron of the Home Fleet upon her commissioning in 1911. She was transferred to the 2nd Battlecruiser Squadron in the Mediterranean Fleet in December 1913.New Zealand was only briefly assigned to the Home Fleet before she sailed forNew Zealand in February 1912. She returned to Portsmouth the following December and was assigned again to the Home Fleet. She made a number of port visits to France and Russia before the war began.Australia set sail forAustralia almost immediately after she was commissioned in June 1913 to assume her duties as the first flagship of the Royal Australian Navy.[4][36]
Indefatigable, accompanied byIndomitable, under the command ofAdmiralSir Archibald Berkeley Milne, encountered the German battlecruiserGoeben and the light cruiserBreslau on the morning of 4 August 1914 headed east after a cursory bombardment of the French Algerian port ofPhilippeville, but Britain and Germany were not yet at war so Milne turned to shadow the Germans as they headed back toMessina to recoal. All three battlecruisers had problems with their boilers, butGoeben andBreslau were able to break contact and reached Messina by the morning of the 5th. By this time war had been declared, after the German invasion of Belgium, but an Admiralty order to respect Italian neutrality and stay outside a six-mile (10 km) limit from the Italian coast precluded entrance into the passage of theStrait of Messina where they could observe the port directly. Milne therefore stationedInflexible andIndefatigable at the northern exit of the Straits of Messina, still expecting the Germans to break out to the west where they could attack French troop transports; he stationed the light cruiserGloucester at the southern exit and sentIndomitable to recoal atBizerte, where she was better positioned to react to a German sortie into the Western Mediterranean.[37]
The Germanssortied from Messina on 6 August and headed east, towardsConstantinople, trailed byGloucester. Milne, still expectingRear AdmiralWilhelm Souchon to turn west, kept the battlecruisers at Malta until shortly after midnight on 8 August, when he set sail forCape Matapan, whereGoeben had been spotted eight hours earlier, at a leisurely 12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph). At 14:30 he received an incorrect signal from the Admiralty stating that Britain was at war with Austria — war would not be declared until 12 August and the order was countermanded four hours later, but Milne followed his standing orders to guard the Adriatic against an Austrian breakout attempt, rather than seekGoeben. Finally on 9 August Milne was given clear orders to "chaseGoeben which had passed Cape Matapan on the 7th steering north-east." Milne still did not believe that Souchon was heading for the Dardanelles, and so he resolved to guard the exit from theAegean, unaware that theGoeben did not intend to come out.[38]
On 3 NovemberChurchill ordered the first British attack on the Dardanelles following the opening of hostilities between Turkey and Russia. The attack was carried out byIndomitable andIndefatigable, as well as the Frenchpre-dreadnought battleshipsSuffren andVérité. The intention of the attack was to test the fortifications and measure the Turkish response. The results were deceptively encouraging. In a twenty-minute bombardment, a single shell struck the magazine of the fort atSedd el Bahr at the tip of the Gallipoli peninsula, displacing (but not destroying) 10 guns and killing 86 Turkish soldiers. The most significant consequence was that the attention of the Turks was drawn to strengthening their defences, and they set about expanding the mine field.[39] This attack actually took place before a formaldeclaration of war had been made by Britain against theOttoman Empire which did not happen until 6 November.Indefatigable remained in the Mediterranean until she was relieved byInflexible on 24 January 1915 and proceeded to Malta to refit. Having completed her refit she sailed to England on 14 February where she joined the2nd Battlecruiser Squadron (BCS) upon her arrival.[40]

Following the declaration of war,Australia was assigned to find the GermanEast Asia Squadron, the onlyCentral Powers naval force of note in the Pacific. During this hunt, she was attached to theAustralian Naval and Military Expeditionary Force and provided support during the Force's invasion ofRabaul, in case the German squadron was present.[41] The squadron's commander, Vice AdmiralMaximilian von Spee, was wary ofAustralia, which he described as being superior to his squadron.[42]
Following von Spee's withdrawal from the Pacific,Australia was belatedly ordered on 8 November 1914 to join with several Japanese cruisers off Mexico to resume the hunt for the German cruisers. By this time, the German squadron had made its way to the South Atlantic, and in early December was destroyed by a British squadron in theBattle of the Falkland Islands.[43]Australia was sent to join the2nd Battlecruiser Squadron atRosyth, Scotland, and was made flagship of the squadron after a short refit.[40]
New Zealand's first action was as part of the battlecruiser force under the command ofAdmiral Beatty during the Battle of Heligoland Bight operation on 28 August 1914. Beatty's ships had originally been intended as distant support of the British cruisers and destroyers closer to the German coast in case large units of theHigh Seas Fleet sortied in response to the British attacks. They turned south at full speed at 11:35 AM when the British light forces failed to disengage on schedule and the rising tide meant that German capital ships would be able to clear the bar at the mouth of theJade estuary. The brand-new light cruiserArethusa had been crippled earlier in the battle and was under fire from the light cruisersStrassburg andCöln when Beatty's battlecruisers loomed out of the mist at 12:37.Strassburg was able to duck into the mists and evade fire, butCöln remained visible and was quickly crippled by fire from the squadron. But Beatty was distracted from the task of finishing her off by the sudden appearance of the elderly light cruiserAriadne directly to his front. He turned in pursuit, but reduced her to a flaming hulk in only three salvos at a range under 6,000 yards (5.5 km). At 13:10 Beatty turned north and made a general signal to retire. Shortly after turning north, Beatty's main body encountered the crippledCöln and she was sunk by two salvos fromLion.[44]
The German Navy had decided on a strategy of bombarding British towns on the North Sea coast in an attempt to draw out theRoyal Navy and destroy elements of it in detail. An earlierRaid on Yarmouth on 3 November had been partially successful, but a larger-scale operation was devised by AdmiralFranz von Hipper afterwards. The fast battlecruisers would actually conduct the bombardment while the entire High Seas Fleet was to station itself east ofDogger Bank to provide cover for their return and to destroy any elements of the Royal Navy that responded to the raid. But what the Germans did not know was that the British were reading the German naval codes and were planning to catch the raiding force on its return journey, although they were not aware that the High Seas Fleet would be at sea as well. Admiral Beatty's1st Battlecruiser Squadron, now reduced to four ships, includingNew Zealand, as well as the 2nd Battle Squadron with six dreadnoughts, was detached from the Grand Fleet in an attempt to intercept the Germans near Dogger Bank.[45]
Admiral Hipper set sail on 15 December 1914 for another such raid and successfully bombarded several English towns, but British destroyers escorting the 1st BCS had already encountered German destroyers of the High Seas Fleet at 5:15 and fought an inconclusive action with them. Vice AdmiralSir George Warrender, commanding the 2nd Battle Squadron, had received a signal at 05:40 thatLynx was engaging enemy destroyers although Beatty had not. The destroyerShark spotted the German armoured cruiserRoon and her escorts at about 07:00, but could not transmit the message until 7:25. Admiral Warrender received the signal, as didNew Zealand, but Beatty did not, despite the fact thatNew Zealand had been specifically tasked to relay messages between the destroyers and Beatty. Warrender attempted to pass on Shark's message to Beatty at 07:36, but did not manage to make contact until 07:55. Beatty reversed course when he got the message and dispatchedNew Zealand to search forRoon. She was being overhauled byNew Zealand when Beatty received messages thatScarborough was being shelled at 09:00. Beatty orderedNew Zealand to rejoin the squadron and turned west for Scarborough.[46]

The British forces split going around the shallow Southwest Patch of the Dogger Bank; Beatty's ships passed to the north while Warrender passed to the south as they headed west to block the main route through the minefields defending the English coast. This left a 15 nautical miles (28 km; 17 mi) gap between them through which the German light forces began to move. At 12:25, the light cruisers of the II Scouting Group began to pass the British forces searching for Hipper.Southampton spotted the light cruiserStralsund and signalled a report to Beatty. At 12:30 Beatty turned his battlecruisers towards the German ships. Beatty presumed that the German cruisers were the advance screen for Hipper's ships, however, those were some 50 km (31 mi) behind. The 2nd Light Cruiser Squadron, which had been screening for Beatty's ships, detached to pursue the German cruisers, but a misinterpreted signal from the British battlecruisers sent them back to their screening positions.[Note 2] This confusion allowed the German light cruisers to escape, and alerted Hipper to the location of the British battlecruisers. The German battlecruisers wheeled to the northeast of the British forces and made good their escape.[47]
On 23 January 1915, a force of German battlecruisers under the command of Admiral Franz von Hipper sortied to clear the Dogger Bank of any British fishing boats or small craft that might be there to collect intelligence on German movements. But the British were reading their coded messages and sailed to intercept them with a larger force of British battlecruisers under the command of Admiral Beatty, which includedNew Zealand. Contact was initiated at 07:20 on the 24th when the British light cruiserArethusa spotted the German light cruiserSMS Kolberg. By 07:35 the Germans had spotted Beatty's force and Hipper ordered a turn to the south at 20 knots (37 km/h; 23 mph), believing that this would suffice if the ships that he saw to his northwest were British battleships and that he could always increased speed toBlücher's maximum speed of 23 knots (26 mph; 43 km/h) if they were British battlecruisers.[48]
Beatty ordered his battlecruisers to make all practicable speed to catch the Germans before they could escape.New Zealand andIndomitable were the slowest of Beatty's ships and gradually fell behind the newer and faster battlecruisers, butNew Zealand was able to open fire onBlücher by 09:35. She continued to engageBlücher after the other, faster, battlecruisers had switched targets to the German battlecruisers. After about an hourNew Zealand had knocked outBlücher's forward turret andIndomitable began to fire on her as well at 10:31. Two 12-inch shells pierced her armoured deck and exploded in an ammunition room at 10:35. This started a fire amidships that destroyed her two port 21 cm (8.3 in) turrets and the concussion damaged her engines so that her speed had dropped to 17 knots (31 km/h; 20 mph) and her steering gear jammed. At 10:48 Beatty orderedIndomitable to attack her. But due to a combination of a mistake by Beatty's flag lieutenant in signalling and heavy damage to Beatty's flagshipLion, which had knocked out her radio and caused enough smoke to obscure her signalhalyards so that Beatty could not communicate with his ships that caused the rest of the battlecruisers, temporarily under the command of Rear-Admiral SirGordon Moore inNew Zealand, to believe that that signal applied to them. So they turned away from Hipper's main body and engagedBlücher.[49]New Zealand fired 147 shells atBlücher before she capsized and sank at 12:07 after being torpedoed.[50]
On 31 May 1916 the 2nd BCS consisted ofNew Zealand (Flagship of Rear AdmiralWilliam Christopher Pakenham) andIndefatigable asAustralia was still under repair following her collision withNew Zealand on 22 April.[40] It was assigned to Admiral Beatty's Battlecruiser Fleet which had put to sea to intercept a sortie by theHigh Seas Fleet into the North Sea. The British were able to decode the German radio messages and left their bases before the Germans put to sea. Hipper's battlecruisers spotted the Battlecruiser Fleet to their west at 15:20,[Note 3] but Beatty's ships did not spot the Germans to their east until 14:30. Almost immediately afterwards, at 15:32, he ordered a course change to east south-east to position himself astride the German's line of retreat and called his ships' crews to action stations. He also ordered the 2nd BCS, which had been leading, to fall in astern of the 1st BCS. Hipper ordered his ships to turn to starboard, away from the British, to assume a south-easterly course, and reduced speed to 18 knots (33 km/h; 21 mph) to allow three light cruisers of the 2nd Scouting Group to catch up. With this turn Hipper was falling back on the High Seas Fleet, then about 60 miles (97 km) behind him. Around this time Beatty altered course to the east as it was quickly apparent that he was still far too north to cut off Hipper.[51]
This began what was to be called the 'Run to the South' as Beatty changed course to steer east south-east at 3:45, paralleling Hipper's course, now that the range closed to under 18,000 yards (16,000 m). The Germans opened fire first at 15:48, followed almost immediately afterwards by the British. The British ships were still in the process of making their turn as only the two leading ships,Lion andPrincess Royal had steadied on their course when the Germans opened fire. The British formation was echeloned to the right withIndefatigable in the rear and the furthest to the west, andNew Zealand ahead of her and slightly further east. The German fire was accurate from the beginning, but the British overestimated the range as the German ships blended into the haze.Indefatigable aimed atVon der Tann whileNew Zealand aimed atMoltke while remaining unengaged herself. By 15:54 the range was down to 12,900 yards (11,800 m) and Beatty ordered a course change twopoints to starboard to open up the range at 15:57. Around 16:00Indefatigable was hit by two or three shells fromVon der Tann around the rear turret and almost immediately fell off to starboard and was down by the stern and listing to port. She was hit twice more on the next volley, once on forecastle and on the forward turret, and blew up at about 16:03 when her magazines exploded.[52] The most likely cause of her loss was a low-order explosion in 'X' magazine that blew out her bottom and severed the control shafts between the steering engines and the steering gear, followed by the explosion of her forward magazines from the second volley.[53]Von der Tann fired only 52 28 cm (11 in) shells atIndefatigable before she exploded, taking 1017 men with her. The only two survivors were rescued by the Germantorpedo boatS68.[54]

AfterIndefatigable's lossNew Zealand shifted her fire toVon der Tann in accordance with Beatty's standing instructions. The range had grown too far for accurate shooting so Beatty altered course four points to port to close the range again between 16:12 and 16:15. By this time the 5th Battle Squadron of fourQueen Elizabeth-class battleships had close up and was engagingVon der Tann andMoltke. At 16:23 a 13.5-inch (340 mm) shell fromTiger hit nearVon der Tann's rear turret and started a fire among the practice targets stowed there that completely enveloped the ship and causedNew Zealand to shift fire toMoltke.[55] At 16:30 the light cruiserSouthampton, scouting in front of Beatty's ships, spotted the lead elements of the High Seas Fleet charging north at top speed. Three minutes later she sighted the topmasts ofVice-AdmiralReinhard Scheer's battleships, but did not transmit a message to Beatty for another five minutes. Beatty continued south for another two minutes to confirm the sighting himself before ordering a sixteen-point turn to starboard in succession.New Zealand, last ship in the fleet, turned prematurely to stay outside the range of the oncoming battleships.[56] During the entire 'Run to the South' she was hit only once, in 'Y' turret by a 28 cm shell with little effect.[40]
New Zealand was engaged by the battleshipPrinzregent Luitpold beginning at 17:08 during what came to be called the 'Run to the North', but she was not hit, although she was straddled several times.[57] Beatty's ships maintained full speed to try to put some separation between them and the High Seas Fleet and gradually moved out of range. They turned north and then northeast to try to rendezvous with the main body of theGrand Fleet. At 17:40 they opened fire again on the German battlecruisers. The setting sun blinded the German gunners and they could not make out the British ships and turned away to the northeast at 17:47.[58] Beatty gradually turned more towards the east to allow him to cover the deployment of the Grand Fleet into its battle formation and to move ahead of it, but he mistimed his manoeuvre and forced the leading division to fall off towards the east, further away from the Germans. By 18:35 Beatty was followingIndomitable andInflexible of the 3rd BCS as they were steering east-southeast, leading the Grand Fleet, and continuing to engage Hipper's battlecruisers to their southwest. A few minutes earlier Scheer had ordered a simultaneous 180° starboard turn and Beatty lost sight of them in the haze.[59] Twenty minutes later Scheer ordered another 180° turn which put them on a converging course again with the Grand Fleet, which had altered course itself to the south. This allowed the Grand Fleet tocross Scheer's T and they badly damaged his leading ships. Scheer ordered yet another 180° turn at 19:13 in an attempt to extricate the High Seas Fleet from the trap in which he had sent them.[60]
This was successful and the British lost sight of the Germans until 20:05 whenCastor spotted smoke bearing west-northwest. Ten minutes later she had closed the range enough to identify German torpedo boats and engaged them. Beatty turned west upon hearing the sounds of gunfire and spotted the German battlecruisers only 8,500 yards (7,800 m) away.Inflexible opened fire at 20:20, followed almost immediately by the rest of Beatty's battlecruisers.[61]New Zealand andIndomitable concentrated their fire onSeydlitz and hit her five times before she turned west to disengage.[62] Shortly after 20:30 thepre-dreadnought battleships of Rear Admiral Mauve's II Battle Squadron were spotted and fire switched to them. The Germans only were able to fire a few rounds at them due to the poor visibility and turned away to the west. The British battlecruisers hit the German ships several times before they blended into the haze around 20:40.[63] After this Beatty changed course to south-southeast and maintained that course, ahead of both the Grand Fleet and the High Seas Fleet, until 02:55 the next morning when the order was given to reverse course.[64]

Australia rejoined the 2nd BCS on 9 June 1916 as the squadron flagship, but there was little significant naval activity for theIndefatigables, other than routine patrolling, thanks to theKaiser's order that his ships should not be allowed to go to sea unless assured of victory.Australia collided withRepulse on 12 December 1917 and was under repair through the following month. She was present at the internment of the High Seas fleet atScapa Flow on 21 November 1918.New Zealand was refitted between December 1918 and February 1919 for AdmiralJellicoe's year-long tour of India and the Dominions and she waspaid off upon her return on 15 March 1920 into reserve. She was sold for scrap on 19 December 1922.Australia sailed for Australia on 23 April 1921 and became flagship of theRoyal Australian Navy upon her arrival. Pursuant to the terms of theWashington Naval Treaty she was scuttled east of Sydney on 12 April 1924.[65]