Английская Википедия:HMS Audacious (1912)

Материал из Онлайн справочника
Перейти к навигацииПерейти к поиску

Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Other ships Шаблон:Good article Шаблон:Use British English Шаблон:Use dmy dates

Шаблон:Infobox ship imageШаблон:Infobox ship careerШаблон:Infobox ship characteristics

HMS Audacious was the fourth and last Шаблон:Sclass dreadnought battleship built for the Royal Navy in the early 1910s. After completion in 1913, she spent her brief career assigned to the Home and Grand Fleets. The ship was sunk by a German naval mine off the northern coast of County Donegal, Ireland, early during the First World War. Audacious slowly flooded, allowing all of her crew to be rescued and finally sank after the British were unable to tow her to shore. However, a petty officer on a nearby cruiser was killed by shrapnel when Audacious subsequently exploded. Even though American tourists aboard one of the rescuing ships photographed and filmed the sinking battleship, the Admiralty embargoed news of her loss in Britain to prevent the Germans from taking advantage of the weakened Grand Fleet. She is the largest warship ever sunk by naval mines.[1]

Design and description

The King George V–class ships were designed as enlarged and improved versions of the preceding Шаблон:Sclasss.[2] They had an overall length of Шаблон:Convert, a beam of Шаблон:Convert and a draught of Шаблон:Convert. They displaced Шаблон:Convert at normal load and Шаблон:Convert at deep load. AudaciousШаблон:'s crew numbered 860 officers and ratings in 1914.[3]

Ships of the King George V class were powered by two sets of Parsons direct-drive steam turbines, each driving two shafts using steam provided by 18 Yarrow boilers. The turbines were rated at a total of Шаблон:Convert and were intended to give the battleships a speed of Шаблон:Convert.[4] Audacious carried enough coal and fuel oil to give her a range of Шаблон:Convert at a cruising speed of Шаблон:Convert.[3]

Armament and armour

Like the Orion class, the King George Vs were equipped with 10 breech-loading (BL) [[BL 13.5 inch Mk V naval gun|Шаблон:Convert Mark V guns]] in five hydraulically powered twin-gun turrets. There were a pair of superfiring turrets fore and aft of the superstructure and another amidships, all on the centreline. Their secondary armament consisted of 16 [[BL 4 inch naval gun Mk VII|BL Шаблон:Convert Mark VII]] guns. Eight of these were mounted in the forward superstructure, four in the aft superstructure, and four in casemates in the side of the hull abreast of the forward main-gun turrets, all in single mounts. The ships were equipped with three 21-inch (533 mm) submerged torpedo tubes, one on each broadside and another in the stern, for which 14 torpedoes were provided.[5]

The King George V–class ships were protected by a waterline Шаблон:Convert armoured belt that extended between the end barbettes. Their decks ranged in thickness between Шаблон:Convert and 4 inches with the thickest portions protecting the steering gear in the stern. The main battery turret faces were Шаблон:Convert thick, and the turrets were supported by Шаблон:Convert barbettes.[3]

Modifications

Audacious was fitted with a fire-control director on the roof of the spotting top before her loss.[3]

Construction and career

Файл:HMS Audacious KGV Class.jpg
Audacious as completed, 1913

Ordered under the 1910–1911 Naval Estimates,[6] Audacious was the third ship of her name to serve in the Royal Navy.[7] The ship was laid down by Cammell Laird at their shipyard in Birkenhead on 23 March 1911[8] and launched on 14 September 1912.[9] She was completed in August 1913 at a cost of £1,918,813,[3] but was not commissioned until 15 October, joining her sister ships in the 2nd Battle Squadron. All four sisters represented the Royal Navy during the celebrations of the re-opening of the Kaiser Wilhelm Canal in Germany in June 1914.[10]

World War I

Between 17 and 20 July, Audacious took part in a test mobilisation and fleet review as part of the British response to the July Crisis. Arriving at the Isle of Portland on 25 July, she was ordered to proceed with the rest of the Home Fleet to Scapa Flow off the coast of Scotland four days later to safeguard the fleet from a possible surprise attack by the Imperial German Navy.[11] Following the start of World War I in August, the Home Fleet was reorganised as the Grand Fleet, and placed under the command of Admiral Sir John Jellicoe.[12] The following month, the ship was refitted at HM Dockyard, Devonport, and rejoined the Grand Fleet at the beginning of October.[13]

Sinking

Repeated reports of submarines in Scapa Flow led Jellicoe to conclude that the defences there were inadequate and he ordered that the Grand Fleet be dispersed to other bases until the defences were reinforced. On 16 October, the 2nd Battle Squadron was sent to Loch na Keal on the western coast of Scotland. The squadron departed for gunnery practice off Tory Island, Ireland, on the morning of 27 October and Audacious struck a mine at 08:45, laid a few days earlier by the German auxiliary minelayer Шаблон:SS. Captain Cecil Dampier, thinking that his ship had been torpedoed, hoisted the submarine warning; in accordance with instructions the other dreadnoughts departed the area, leaving the smaller ships behind to render assistance.[14]

Файл:HMS Audacious crew take to lifeboats.jpg
The crew of Audacious take to lifeboats to be taken aboard Olympic

The explosion occurred Шаблон:Convert under the bottom of the ship, approximately Шаблон:Convert forward of the transverse bulkhead at the rear of the port engine room. The engine room and the outer compartments adjacent to it flooded immediately, with water spreading more slowly to the central engine room and adjoining spaces. The ship rapidly took on a list to port of up to 15 degrees, which was reduced by counter-flooding compartments on the starboard side, so that by 09:45, the list ranged up to only nine degrees as she rolled in the heavy swell. The light cruiser Шаблон:HMS stood by, while Jellicoe ordered every available destroyer and tug out to assist, but did not send out any battleships to tow Audacious because of the supposed submarine threat. Having intercepted the stricken dreadnought's distress calls, the White Star ocean liner Шаблон:RMS arrived on the scene.[15]

Файл:Audacious Sinking Q 75585.jpg
Destroyers evacuate crewmen

The ship could make Шаблон:Convert and Dampier believed that he had a chance of making the Шаблон:Convert to land and beaching the ship, so he turned Audacious south and made for Lough Swilly. The ship had covered Шаблон:Convert when the rising water forced the abandonment of the centre and starboard engine rooms and she drifted to a stop at 10:50. Dampier ordered all non-essential crew to be taken off, boats from Liverpool and Olympic assisting, and only 250 men were left aboard by 14:00. At 13:30, Captain Herbert Haddock, the captain of Olympic, suggested that his ship attempt to take Audacious in tow. Dampier agreed, and with the assistance of the destroyer Шаблон:HMS, a tow line was passed 30 minutes later. The ships began moving, but the line snapped as Audacious repeatedly tried to turn into the wind.[16] Liverpool and the newly arrived collier Шаблон:SS then attempted to take the battleship in tow, but the lines broke before any progress could be made.[17]

Файл:HMS Liverpool tows HMS Audacious.jpg
Liverpool (left) and Fury (centre), in combination with Olympic, try to take Audacious in tow (View from Olympic)

Vice-Admiral Sir Lewis Bayly, commander of the 1st Battle Squadron, arrived on the scene in the ocean boarding vessel Cambria and took over the rescue operation. Upon learning that two ships had been mined in the area the day before, and that there was no threat from submarines, Jellicoe ordered the pre-dreadnought battleship Шаблон:HMS to sail at 17:00 for an attempt to tow Audacious. Dampier ordered all but 50 men to be removed at 17:00 and Bayly, Dampier and the remaining men on the ship were taken off at 18:15 with dark approaching.[18]

Just as Exmouth was coming up on the group at 20:45, Audacious heeled sharply, paused, and then capsized. She floated upside down with the bow raised until 21:00, when an explosion occurred that threw wreckage Шаблон:Convert into the air, followed by two more. The explosion appeared to come from the area of 'B' magazine and was probably caused by one or more high-explosive shells falling from their racks and exploding, then igniting the cordite in the magazine. A piece of armour plate flew Шаблон:Convert and killed a petty officer on Liverpool. This was the only casualty in connection with the sinking.[19]

Aftermath

Jellicoe immediately proposed that the sinking be kept a secret, to which the Board of Admiralty and the British Cabinet agreed, an act open to ridicule later on. For the rest of the war, AudaciousШаблон:' name remained on all public lists of ship movements and activities. The many Americans on board Olympic were beyond British jurisdiction and discussed the sinking. Many photos, and even one moving picture, had been taken. By 19 November, the loss of the ship was accepted in Germany.[20] Jellicoe's opposite number in Germany, Reinhard Scheer, wrote after the war, "In the case of the Audacious we approve of the English attitude of not revealing a weakness to the enemy, because accurate information about the other side's strength has a decisive effect on the decisions taken."[21]

On 14 November 1918, shortly after the war ended, a notice officially announcing the loss appeared in The Times:

Шаблон:Blockquote

A Royal Navy review board judged that a contributory factor in the loss was that Audacious was not at action stations, with water-tight doors locked and damage-control teams ready. Attempts were made to use the engine-circulating pumps as additional bilge pumps, but the rapid rise of water prevented this. Although hatches were open at the time of the explosion, it was claimed that all were closed before rising water reached them. Apart from the damage to the bottom of the ship, water was found to have spread through bulkheads because of faulty seals around pipes and valves, broken pipes and hatches which did not close properly.[22]

Naval historian John Roberts stated that the incident revealed the design flaws in the Royal Navy's damage-control plans for the King George V-class battleships and the other recent dreadnought classes. In the first several class of dreadnoughts, the engine-circulating pumps had connections to the bilges to allow them to pump water overboard in case of flooding, but these were eliminated as useless in the ships designed after 1907. Furthermore, the ship's auxiliary machinery was almost entirely steam powered, which meant that the steering, hydraulics and primary electrical systems were all disabled as flooding progressed in Audacious.[23]

Two months after the battleship's loss, the Royal Navy ordered that additional bilge pumps and piping connecting the engine-circulating pumps to the bilges be added to all the dreadnoughts of the Шаблон:Sclass and Шаблон:Sclass classes and later. Additional pumps were ordered to be fitted to the submerged torpedo rooms as well as additional valves in the ventilation ducts to limit any flooding. It is uncertain how much of this was actually carried out in the older ships as space was limited as was their availability to get the work done.[23]

The wreck of Audacious was filmed for the television show Deep Wreck Mysteries on the History Channel in 2008. The programme featured an investigation of the wreck and the circumstances of its loss by nautical archaeologist Innes McCartney and naval historian Bill Jurens. The diveable wreck lies upside down at a depth of Шаблон:Convert in clear water at Шаблон:Coord, some Шаблон:Convert north-east of Tory Island. 'B' turret and part of its barbette were blown clear of the wreck by the explosion.[24][25]

Citations

Шаблон:Reflist

Bibliography

External links

Шаблон:Commons category

Шаблон:King George V class battleship 1911 Шаблон:October 1914 shipwrecks

  1. Pemsel, p. 160
  2. Burt, p. 191
  3. 3,0 3,1 3,2 3,3 3,4 Burt, p. 196
  4. Parkes, p. 538
  5. Burt, pp. 193, 196
  6. Friedman, p. 121
  7. Colledge, p. 25
  8. Friedman, p. 438
  9. Preston, p. 30
  10. Burt, p. 205
  11. Massie, p. 19
  12. Preston, p. 32
  13. Jellicoe, p. 135
  14. Goldrick, p. 156; Jellicoe, pp. 143–144, 147–148
  15. Brown, pp. 160–161; Goldrick, p. 157; Jellicoe, p. 148
  16. Brown, p. 161; Goldrick, p. 157
  17. Шаблон:Cite web
  18. Brown, p. 161; Goldrick, p. 157; Jellicoe, pp. 149–150
  19. Brown, p. 161; Goldrick, pp. 157–158; Jellicoe, p. 149
  20. Goldrick, pp. 159–160
  21. Scheer, p. 62
  22. Brown, p. 161
  23. 23,0 23,1 Roberts, p. 23
  24. McCartney, pp. 23–24
  25. Шаблон:Cite web