Picture of the day

Deceptive.
Type: Armoured cruiser
Displacement: 12,000 long tons (12,000 t) (normal)
Length: 472 ft (143.9 m) (o/a)
Beam: 69 ft 6 in (21.2 m)
Draught: 26 ft 9 in (8.2 m) (maximum)
Installed power:
21,000 ihp (16,000 kW)
30 Belleville boilers
Propulsion:
2 × Shafts
2 × 4-cylinder triple-expansion steam engines
Speed: 21 knots (39 km/h; 24 mph)
Complement: 725–760
Armament:
2 × single BL 9.2-inch (234-mm) Mk X guns
12 × single BL 6-inch (152-mm) Mk VII guns
12 × single QF 12-pounder (76-mm) guns
3 × 3-pounder (47-mm) Hotchkiss guns
2 × single 18-inch (450-mm) torpedo tubes
Armour:
Belt: 2–6 in (51–152 mm)
Decks: 1–3 in (25–76 mm)
Barbettes: 6 in (152 mm)
Turrets: 6 in (150 mm)
Conning tower: 12 in (305 mm)
Bulkheads: 5 in (127 mm)

The disaster shook public confidence in Britain and the world in the reputation of the Royal Navy. Surviving cruisers were withdrawn from patrol duties; Admiral Christian was reprimanded and Captain Drummond was criticized by the inquiry for failing to take the anti-submarine precautions recommended by the Admiralty and praised for his conduct during the attack. The 28 officers and 258 men rescued by Flora were landed at IJmuiden and were repatriated on 26 September.[13]

Wenman "Kit" Wykeham-Musgrave (1899–1989) survived being torpedoed on all three ships.[14] His daughter recalled

He went overboard when the Aboukir was going down and he swam like mad to get away from the suction. He was then just getting on board the Hogue and she was torpedoed. He then went and swam to the Cressy and she was also torpedoed. He eventually found a bit of driftwood, became unconscious and was eventually picked up by a Dutch trawler.

— Pru Bailey-Hamilton[15]
Wykeham-Musgrave survived the war and rejoined the Royal Navy in 1939, reaching the rank of commander.[16]

Weddigen and his crew returned to a heroes' welcome: Weddigen was awarded the Iron Cross, 1st Class and his crew each received the Iron Cross, 2nd Class. The sinking of the three ships caused the danger of U-boat attack to be taken more seriously by the Admiralty.[17] Commander Dudley Pound, serving in the Grand Fleet as a commander aboard the battleship St. Vincent (who became First Sea Lord) wrote in his diary on 24 September,

Much as one regrets the loss of life one cannot help thinking that it is a useful warning to us — we had almost begun to consider the German submarines as no good and our awakening which had to come sooner or later and it might have been accompanied by the loss of some of our Battle Fleet.

— Pound[18]
In 1954, the British government sold the salvage rights to the ships and work began in 2011.[19]
 
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Weddigen broke an unwritten rule of the sea - you don't fire on ships, even enemy warships, engaged in rescue operations.

That being said, sinking three enemy cruisers in one day was one heck of an accomplishment for what was then an untried weapon. I believe those three cruisers were the first ships sunk by a submarine since the CSS Hunley sank USS Housatonic in 1864. U-9 was also the first submarine to sink an enemy warship and live to tell about it (CSS Hunley sunk almost at the same time she sank the Housatonic).
 
Cressy Class Cruisers

HMS_Euryalus_SLV_AllanGreen-c.jpg

That ship looks a lot like Russian cruiser Aurora.Was that a vouge at the time of construction or just a coincidence?
 
According to a claim in a recent book I read, they were supposedly called the 'suicide squadron.' According to this guy, they were regarded to be not fit for blue water operations. Iirc it might have been the book Dead Wake about the sinking of the Lusitania. Not sure if the author injected some good old fashioned American propaganda regarding this incident - that sort of 'Time / Life' narrative seems to never go completely away. Plays well in Peoria I suppose.
 
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Following on from their success in locating USS Lexington, Paul Allen and his R/V Petrel crew have located the light cruiser USS Juneau (CL-52):

 
Quite right - saw three turrets up front and dove in prematurely. :)

Here's something I'm a little more adept at. Any of you "old hands" remember these?

muskox2.jpg


Operation Muskox, Great Bear Lake.

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The Fabulous Nodwell, in its natural environment:

bush1 - was this the one you rode in at Alert?
Can’t remember if it had the Taxi sign on it or not, lol

We had a weekly Herc flight from Trenton to Alert with an overnight in Thule on the way up but sometimes an adventurous Aircraft Commander (military speak for Captain) would get approval for the overnight to be in Alert. The FE’s, me and another partner in crime would take the aircraft battery to the shack with us overnight and attempt to get the old bird warmed up and the frost removed the next morning. Thankfully it didn’t happen too often as the fingers were crossed hoping the damn thing would start up after being left out in the cold with no parts or equipment around to help.
 
We had them at CFB Churchill. It was the Cadillac of snow machines. The Service Corps drivers who operated them considered themselves lucky men.

However, on an exercise while the rest of us were sleeping in snow caves, a driver who slept in a Nodwell died of carbon monoxide poisoning. He closed the roof vent while operating a portable heater and that was a mistake.
 
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