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|6 x 280 mm (11 inch)<br>8 x 150 mm (5.9 inch)<br>6 x 105 mm (4.1 inch)<br>8 x 37 mm<br>10 x 20 mm<br>8 x 533 mm (21 inch) torpedo tubes |Six 11&nbsp;inch (280&nbsp;mm) guns in two triple turrets, <br> eight 5.9&nbsp;inch (150&nbsp;mm) guns, <br> six 150 mm guns <br> eight 37 mm anti-aircraft guns <br> ten 20 mm anti-aircraft guns <br> eight 21&nbsp;inch (530&nbsp;mm) ] tubes in 2 quadruple mounts
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|Rate of fire: |Rate of fire:

Revision as of 00:45, 28 May 2006

Admiral Graf Spee
Career Kriegsmarine Jack
Ordered:
Laid down: October 1, 1932
Launched: June 30, 1934
Commissioned: January 6, 1936
Fate: Scuttled December 17, 1939
General Characteristics
Displacement: 12,100 t standard; 16,200 t full load
Length: 186 m (610 ft)
Beam: 21.6 m (71 ft)
Draft (max.): 7.4 m (24 ft)
Armament: Six 11 inch (280 mm) guns in two triple turrets,
eight 5.9 inch (150 mm) guns,
six 150 mm guns
eight 37 mm anti-aircraft guns
ten 20 mm anti-aircraft guns
eight 21 inch (530 mm) torpedo tubes in 2 quadruple mounts
Rate of fire: 28 cm guns: 2.5 round/min each
15 cm guns: 6 to 8 round/min each
Gun range: 28 cm guns at 40 deg; (armor-piercing shells): 36,475 m
Estimated gun life: 28 cm guns: about 340 rounds; 15 cm guns: about 1,100 rounds
Munitions supply: 28 cm guns: 105 to 120 rounds per gun
Armor: turret face: (160 mm)
belt: (80 mm)
deck: 40 mm)
Aircraft: Two Arado 196 seaplanes, one catapult
Propulsion: Eight 9-cylinder double-acting two-stroke MAN diesels
two screws, 52,050 hp (40 MW)
Speed: 28.5 knots (53 km/h)
Range: 8,900 nautical miles at 20 knots (16,500 km at 37 km/h)
or 19,000 nautical miles at 10 knots (35,000 km at 18.5 km/h)
Crew: 1,150

Admiral Graf Spee was a Heavy Cruiser, originally classified as a Panzerschiff, which served with the German Kriegsmarine before and during World War II. In view of her comparatively heavy artillery of 28 cm (11 inch) guns, she and her two sisters, Deutschland (later renamed Lützow) and Admiral Scheer, were frequently referred to as a pocket battleships by the British.

Admiral Graf Spee was launched in 1934 and named after the World War I Admiral Graf Maximilian von Spee who died, along with two of his sons, in the first Battle of the Falkland Islands on 8 December 1914. She was the second vessel to be named after him, the first being the uncompleted World War I German battlecruiser SMS Graf Spee.

Description

After World War I, replacement capital ships for the German Navy were limited to 10,000 tons and 11 inch (280 mm) guns. Before Admiral Graf Spee was given her official name, she was referred to as Panzerschiff C and Ersatz Braunschweig, as she would be replacing the old battleship Braunschweig in the fleet inventory. The ship cost 82 million Reichsmarks to build. Much weight was saved by using electric arc welding instead of rivets.

Technologically, Admiral Graf Spee was ahead of her time, especially in terms of her speed. At one point, the Allies were convinced that two such ships must exist so as to explain her near-simultaneous appearance in distant locations, unexplainable by conventional sea travel at the time.

History

After commissioning in 1936, Admiral Graf Spee served as fleet flagship until 1938, and performed international maritime control duties off the coast of Spain during the Spanish Civil War. Prior to the invasion of Poland plans were made to deploy the Panzerschiffe as raiders in the Atlantic Ocean. Admiral Graf Spee sailed from Wilhelmshaven on 21 August 1939, her mission to act as a raider in the South Atlantic. Supported by her supply ship, the tanker Altmark, her orders were to sink British merchant ships but to avoid combat with strong enemy forces, thus threatening vital Allied supply lines and drawing British naval units off their stations in other parts of the world.

The cruise of Admiral Graf Spee with ships sunk

From September through December 1939 Admiral Graf Spee sank nine merchant ships in the South Atlantic and Indian Ocean, the first on 30 September 1939. Captain Langsdorff strictly adhered to the rules of mercantile warfare at the time and saved all of the crew members of these ships; not a life was lost in these sinkings. The captured crews were transferred to the tanker Altmark. Later, these 303 crew members were freed by force in neutral Norwegian territorial waters by the British destroyer HMS Cossack (the Altmark Incident).

Battle of the River Plate

See main article: Battle of the River Plate

Britain formed seven hunting groups in the Atlantic and one in the Indian Ocean to look for Admiral Graf Spee, totalling three battleships, two battlecruisers, four aircraft carriers, and 16 cruisers (including several French ships). More groups were assembled later.

On 13 December 1939, she was located by the British Hunting Group G, consisting of the 8 inch (203 mm) gunned cruiser HMS Exeter and the 6 inch (152 mm) gunned light cruisers HMS Ajax and HMS Achilles, and the Battle of the River Plate ensued. After taking spectacular-looking but actually relatively superficial damage, Admiral Graf Spee entered the neutral port of Montevideo, Uruguay, for repairs. During this time, the ship's dead were buried in a Montevideo cemetery. At the funeral ceremony, Captain Hans Langsdorff used the naval salute, while all others around him used the Nazi salute. A ruse by the British made the captain think that he was out-numbered, with a fleet of aircraft carriers and battleships on its way (in fact, not a single additional vessel could have arrived in time), and that his escape route was cut off. On 17 December 1939, with the British cruisers Ajax, Achilles, and Cumberland waiting in international waters outside the mouth of the Río de la Plata, the ship sailed just outside the harbor and was scuttled by her crew to avoid risking the crew in what he expected to be a losing battle. Captain Langsdorff committed suicide three days later by shooting himself.

Salvage

In 1997, one of Admiral Graf Spee's 15 cm secondary gun mounts was raised and restored; it can now be seen outside Montevideo's National Maritime Museum.

In February 2004 a salvage team began work raising the wreck of Admiral Graf Spee. The operation is in part being funded by the government of Uruguay, in part by the private sector, as the wreck is now a hazard to navigation. The first major section, the 27-ton heavy gunnery control station, was raised on 25 February 2004. It is expected to take several years to raise the entire wreck. Film director James Cameron is filming the salvage operation. After it has been raised, it is planned that the ship will be restored and put on display at the National Marine Museum in Montevideo.

Many German veterans do not approve of this restoration attempt, as they consider the wreck to be a war grave and an underwater historical monument that should be respected. One of them, Hans Eupel, former specialist torpedo mechanic, 87 years old in 2005, added "this is madness, too expensive, and senseless. It is also dangerous, as one of the three explosive charges we placed did not explode."

On 10 February 2006, the eagle figurehead of the Admiral Graf Spee was recovered. To protect the feelings of those still sensitive to Nazi Germany, the swastika on the figurehead was covered as it was pulled from the water.

Commanding Officers

  • Kapitän zur See Konrad Patzig: January 1936 - October 1937
  • Kapitän zur See Walter Warzecha: October 1937 - October 1938
  • Kapitän zur See Hans Langsdorff: October 1938 - 17 December 1939

References

File:Graf spee.JPG
I Was Graf Spee's Prisoner (1940), 1940 Cherry Tree paperback edition. 143 pages
  • Captain Patrick Dove, I Was Graf Spee's Prisoner (Cherry Tree Books, London & Manchester, 1940)
  • Siegfried Breyer, Battleships and Battlecruisers 1905-1970 (Doubleday and Company; Garden City, New York, 1973) (originally published in German as Schlachtschiffe und Schlachtkreuzer 1905-1970, J.F. Lehmanns, Verlag, Munchen, 1970). Contains various line drawings of the ship as designed and as built.
  • Jak P. Malmann Showell, The German Navy in World War Two (Naval Institute Press, Annapolis, 1979), ISBN 0-87021-933-2
  • Dudley Pope, The Battle of the River Plate (William Kimber & Co, 1956; Republished Pan Books 1974), ISBN 0 330 24020

See also

External links

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