H.M.S.
c/o G.P.O., LONDON.
June 30th, 1916.
MY DEAR DANIEL,
You ask me for a more elaborate account
of a certain little affair which took place some time
ago. It was merely an episode of a few light
cruisers, anything up to a score of destroyers, and
some seaplanes; quite a minor and a comparatively
unimportant little business which elicited a brief
announcement from the Secretary of the Admiralty,
and must have proved rather a Godsend to those newspapers
whose readers were anxious for naval news in any shape
or form.
They made a certain amount of fuss
about it, and the naval correspondents were soon hard
at work elaborating the simple statement according
to their usual habit. Indeed, the nautical expert
of Earth and Sea, with the very best intentions
in the world, even went so far as to devote the greater
part of a column to the business. It is to be
hoped that his readers were duly edified; but we, who
had taken part in the affair, were merely rather amused.
And so, for perhaps a week, and before
being banished to the limbo of forgotten and unconsidered
trifles, the business was a subject for intermittent
conversation and a certain amount of conjecture.
Then it was forgotten, and it is doubtful if it will
ever be resurrected in any naval history of the war.
We had quite a good passage across
the North Sea, and at dawn on the day of the operation
we arrived in the vicinity of the Danish coast not
far from the German frontier. The weather was
good for the time of year. Bitterly cold, of
course, besides which there were frequent low-lying
snow flurries which came sweeping down across the sea
and made it barely possible to see more than a quarter
of a mile; while our decks, except where the heat
of the engine and boiler rooms melted the snow as
it fell, were soon covered. But in between the
squalls the sky was blue, the sea was flat calm, and
there was hardly any wind. Moreover, there was
not a sign or a vestige of a Hun anywhere, not even
a Zeppelin; nothing in sight except a few Danish fishing
craft.
The seaplanes were soon hoisted out
and started off on their job. They all seemed
to get away without the slightest hitch, and it was
a fine sight watching them taxi-ing along the calm
water to get up speed, and then rising in the air
one by one to disappear in the faint haze towards
the horizon. What they were to do, exactly, I
cannot say, but within ten minutes they had all disappeared
and the squadron steamed to and fro waiting for their
return. They were expected back in about an
hour.
The full hour passed, and nothing
happened. Another quarter of an hour; but still
no signs of the ’planes. On board the ships
people began to get rather anxious, thinking that
they had been brought down by the Huns, and everybody
with glasses was looking to the south-eastward for
signs of them. But at last, when they had almost
been given up, the first one suddenly reappeared in
the midst of a snow squall. He was hoisted in,
and within the next ten minutes the whole covey, except
two, had returned.
How their business had gone off was
never divulged. A story did get about afterwards, I
saw it mentioned in some of the newspapers, to
the effect that one of them had arrived within two
hundred feet immediately over the object he wanted
to drop his bombs on, and then found he could not
let them go because the releasing gear was clogged
up with frozen snow. Whether or not the yarn
is true it is impossible to say, but imagine the fellow’s
feelings when, after planing down to two hundred feet
with all the anti-aircraft guns in the place going
full blast, he found he could not drop a single egg!
Poor devil!
The seaplanes that did return were
soon hoisted in, but in the meanwhile eight destroyers
and a couple of other craft had been sent on to steam
down the coast in line abreast to see if by any chance
the two missing ones had come down on the water.
We were with this lot, and after an hour’s
steaming at 20 knots, by which time the island of Sylt
was plainly visible about nine or ten miles dead ahead
and no trace of the lost sheep had been seen, the
search had to be abandoned.
It was then that the three destroyers
to seaward sighted two steam trawlers some way off
to the south-westward. They were flying no colours
so far as we could see, but seemed to be in single
line ahead, and as they were going straight for Sylt
it was pretty obvious that they were mine-sweepers
or patrol boats, and not mere fishermen.
The three outer destroyers, we
happened to be one of them, promptly altered
course to cut them off from the coast, and before very
long we were buzzing along at something like 30 knots
with an enormous mountain of water piled up in our
wake, the water being rather shallow.
The trawlers, poor chaps, hadn’t
a dog’s chance of getting away or of doing anything;
but I must say we all admired them for their pluck.
They had got into line abreast, and soon, when we were
within about 5,000 yards, our leading craft hoisted
some signal. We had no time to look it up in
the book, but took it to be a signal asking if they
would surrender. But not a bit of it.
They were patrol boats, and each of them had a small
gun, and presently there came a flash and a little
cloud of brown smoke from the nearer one of the two.
The shell fell some distance short.
We had all held our fire up till then,
for it was mere baby killing and we did not want to
do the dirty on them if it could be avoided, but as
they started the game of firing on us, we had no alternative
but to reply. The sea round about the nearer
craft was soon spouting with shell splashes, and between
the fountains of spray and clouds of dense smoke in
which she tried to hide herself, we could see the red
flashes of some of our shell as they hit and burst,
and the spurt of flame from her own little gun as
she fired at us. Only three or four of her projectiles
came anywhere near, while the havoc on board her must
have been indescribable. It was a hateful business
to have to fire at her at all, but what else could
we do as she would not surrender?
It was all over very soon. The
nearer trawler was almost hidden in smoke, and presently,
when we got ahead of her and to windward at a range
of about 1,500 yards, we noticed a white thing fluttering
in her mizzen rigging. It was a shirt, as we
discovered afterwards, and a signal of surrender,
so we ceased firing at once and ran down to her to
pick up the survivors.
The further trawler, meanwhile, had
been sunk by the destroyer ahead of us, the crew having
abandoned her beforehand in two boats.
We steamed fairly close to our fellow
and lowered a boat, for we could see all the survivors
standing up with their hands above their heads.
The ship herself was in a deplorable state. Shell
seemed to have burst everywhere, and one of the first
which struck her had cut a steam pipe in the engine-room
and had stopped the engines. Clouds of steam
were coming from aft, her upper deck was a shambles,
and she was badly holed and on fire. She was
still afloat, though sinking fast.
Our boat went across and brought back
those that remained of her crew. There were thirteen
of them all told, including the skipper, and of the
men one was badly, and four more slightly, wounded.
Nine had been killed outright.
Then occurred rather a pleasing incident.
Our men, a long time before, were going to do all
sorts of desperate things to any Germans they got
hold of. They were full of the Lusitania business,
bomb dropping from Zeppelins, and the treatment
of our prisoners. But when the time came there
was a complete revulsion of feeling. They were
kindness itself, and when the prisoners came on board
the seamen met the seamen and escorted them forward
like honoured guests, while our stokers did the
same for their opposite numbers.
We took all necessary precautions,
of course, but the Germans were very well behaved
and gave us no trouble at all. They were a particularly
fine and intelligent-looking lot of men, and presently,
when the wounded had been attended to, our fellows
were filling them up with food and cocoa on the mess-deck.
They seemed very pleased to get it, and judging from
what one heard afterwards, they had evidently expected
to be manacled, leg-ironed, and fed on biscuit and
water. But our men did the best they could for
them; gave them food, clothes, and cigarettes.
The Germans were profoundly grateful, but couldn’t
quite understand it.
Their skipper, a reserve officer who
spoke English like a native, had served as an officer
in British ships, and seemed a good fellow. He
was pleased to be congratulated on his plucky fight;
but it was rather pathetic all the same, for he had
been cut off practically at his own front door.
“You came upon us so suddenly
and so near home,” he said, looking at Sylt
which was only six or seven miles away. “We
had not a chance to do anything.”
He told us that he had been in the
wheelhouse of his trawler when the show started.
One of our first shell passed through the glass windows
within a foot of his head without bursting, and the
very next did the damage in the engine-room.
He ran down there to see what could be done, and
this must have saved his life, for while he was away
another shell burst in the wheelhouse and put about
twenty holes in his greatcoat which was lying on the
settee. I saw the coat and the holes when he
came on board, and noticed it had the ribbon of the
Iron Cross and that of some other decoration in the
button-hole. He showed me his Iron Cross and
was very proud of it, but what he got it for I did
not gather. He seemed rather secretive about
it. The other decoration, with a red-and-white
ribbon, was the “Hamburg Cross,” which
is given to all officers and men belonging to the
town who get the Iron Cross. I believe the other
Hansa towns follow the same custom with their
braves.
One thing about the skipper which
struck me favourably was that he seemed very keen
on the welfare of his men. The poor fellow who
was badly wounded had been hit in the back, and three
or four pieces of shell were still inside him.
He must have been in terrible agony, but was very
brave and did not utter a sound. An operation
was quite out of the question, and as the poor chap
was obviously in great pain our Surgeon-Probationer
put him in a hammock on the mess-deck and gave him
morphia. Soon afterwards the skipper asked to
be allowed to visit him, and when the Doc. next went
forward he found him swabbing the patient’s
brow with icy cold water to bring him to! The
Doc. was rather peevish about it.
But to get on with the story of what
happened. The trawler was sinking, but not quite
fast enough, so we finished her off with a couple
of lyddite shell on the waterline. In the meanwhile,
as you probably know, for it was officially announced
at the time, two destroyers had been in collision.
The rammer crumpled her bows up a bit, but could
still steam, but the ship rammed was rather badly
damaged, and had to be taken in tow. It was in
the middle of this operation that many hostile seaplanes,
stirred up like a wasps’ nest by our ’planes
earlier in the morning, came out and started dropping
bombs. None of them came very close to us, the
bombs, I mean, but we saw a string of five
fall and explode practically alongside one destroyer,
and heard afterwards that there had been a free fight
on her upper deck to secure as trophies the splinters
which dropped on board. We were all using our
A.-A. guns, and though we did not actually hit any
of them so far as we could see, we made them keep up
to a height from which accurate bomb-dropping was
an impossibility, so nobody was hit. But nevertheless
it was unpleasant, for no sooner had they let go one
consignment than they went home again, filled up afresh,
and came back for another go. They were bombing
us off and on for four or five hours, so far as I
can remember, and we counted seven or eight of the
blighters in sight at once, so it was “embarras
de richesse” so far as targets went.
We weren’t going very fast,
for the damaged destroyer could not be towed at a
respectable speed on account of her injuries, and at
about five o’clock in the afternoon the glass
had gone down a lot, and the wind and sea started
to get up from the westward. The prospect was
not altogether joyful. We had heard the two
trawlers shouting for help by wireless before we sank
them, and knew that the German seaplanes had probably
seen and reported an injured ship being taken in tow.
(This afterwards turned out to be the case, though,
according to their communique, the seaplanes claimed
to have bagged her with a bomb, which was not so.)
Moreover, Heligoland was a bare sixty miles away under
our lee, so the chances were L100 to 1/2d. that the
Huns would come out during the night and try to scupper
the lot of us. It was with some joy, then, that
we found there was a pretty strong supporting force
within easy distance. In fact, we actually sighted
them at about 6 p.m.
The weather grew steadily worse, and
by sunset there was a pretty big sea and a fresh breeze,
both of which were increasing every minute. The
poor old ship in tow was making very heavy weather
of it, while even we were pretty lively. But
things got worse, for by ten o’clock, and a
pitch dark night it was, it was blowing nearly a full
gale. The sea, too, had got up to such an extent
that there was nothing for it but to abandon the damaged
destroyer. It was easier said than done, for
the sea was too big for lowering boats, and the only
other alternative was for some other craft to go alongside
her and to take the men on. I did not see the
business myself, but believe another destroyer put
her stem up against the side of the one sinking and
kept it there by going slow ahead, while the men hopped
out one by one over the bows.
It was a most excellent bit of work
on the part of the salvor, for with the two ships
rolling, pitching, and grinding in the sea, and in
utter darkness, it required a very good head and cool
judgment to know how much speed was necessary to keep
the bows just touching, and no more. If they
had come into violent contact the rescuing ship might
have been very badly damaged. I believe they
had to have several shots at it, before they got every
man away, but though two fell overboard in jumping
across, they pulled it off all right without losing
a single life. The only damage to the rescuing
ship was a little bit of a bulge on the stem just
below the forecastle, but this did not make a leak
or impair her efficiency in any way, and she went
about for months afterwards without having it straightened.
They had every right to be proud of their honourable
scar!
The poor old ship which had to be
abandoned was then left to her fate, and nobody saw
the end of her.
It must have been at about this time,
though we did not see it, that some hostile destroyers
came upon our light cruisers, or rather, our cruisers
happened upon them. What took place I don’t
quite know, but the Huns were apparently sighted quite
close, and our leading ship, jamming her helm over
and increasing speed, rammed one full in the middle
and cut her in halves. It must have been an awful
moment for the poor wretches, for the stern portion
of the destroyer sank one side, and the bow part went
rushing on into the darkness at about thirty knots.
The men on board her could be heard yelling, but it
was quite impossible to do anything to save them as
other enemy destroyers were in the neighbourhood and
the sea was far too bad for lowering boats.
Nothing else of interest took place
during the night, except that the weather got worse
and worse. The next morning, when we were steaming
against it, we were having a terrible doing, and it
lasted for about twenty-four hours, until we got under
the lee of the coast. The sea was one of the
worst we had ever experienced, short and very steep,
and we couldn’t steam more than about eight
knots against it. The motion was very bad, the
ship crashing and bumping about in a most unholy manner,
and we were all wet through and rather miserable.
No hot food, either, for the galley fire had been
put out.
The prisoner who had been badly wounded
died early next morning. The Doctor said he
might have lived if the weather had been good, but
the motion finished him, poor fellow. He was
buried at sea, the German officer reading the burial
service.
We eventually got back into harbour
and disembarked the prisoners, and never was I more
pleased to get a decent meal and a little sleep.
Aunt Maria, having so many nephews, has just sent
me another fountain pen, the third since the war started.
Also a pair of crimson socks knitted by her cook.
The pen will be useful.
Do you want any more cigarettes?
You never acknowledged the last lot I sent, you ungrateful
blighter, and at any rate I think it’s high time
you wrote me a letter. Your last one was a postcard.
Forgive this letter of mine if it
is a bit disconnected, but it’s the best I can
do at present.
Well, the best of luck and may you
not stop a Hun bullet or a bit of shrapnel.
Yours always,
T.