BOOK REVIEW
With the Battlecruisers, by Filson Young
Re-published 2002 by Birlin Limited
Review by Martin J Quinn
This article originally appeared on Modelwarshps.com
Alexander Bell Filson
Young, the son of a Church of Ireland clergyman, was a leading British
journalist in the years before World War I, who traveled in the same circles as
Winston Churchill and Fred Jane (founder of Jane’s Fighting Ships).
His political connections led him to meet Admiral Jacky Fisher and then
Admiral David Beatty. It was these
connections that were to land him a commission as a Lieutenant with the “Royal
Naval Volunteer Reserve” and a spot on David Beatty’s staff from November
1914 to April 1915, while Beatty was commanding the Battle Cruiser force.
The German force –
consisting of the battlecruisers Seydlitz, Moltke, Derfflinger,
the armored cruiser Blücher and accompanying light forces – was under
the overall command of Vice-Admiral Hipper.
Once Hipper realized that British heavy units were on scene, he turned
and hightailed it back towards the Jade Estuary.
Unfortunately for Hipper, those heavy units were not the slower
battleships, but the faster battlecruisers, and a chase quickly developed.
Young – with no battle
station – made his way up to the Lion’s forward tripod mast into her
spotting top and had a ringside seat for the action.
Beatty’s faster
battlecruisers – Lion, Princess Royal and the brand new Tiger – were able to
close with the German squadron and engage in a long range gunnery duel.
Blücher was hit repeatedly and began to slow.
Beatty ordered that his ships engage the corresponding German ship, but
due to a mistake on the Tiger , the Moltke was left unmolested (a similar
mistake would haunt the British at Jutland) to concentrated her fire on Lion.
Seydlitz and Derfflinger also concentrated on Lion, and soon the
“Splendid Cat” lost power and
fell out of line. An
attempt to signal his remaining forces to close with the German battlecruisers
was misread so that Admiral Moore – commanding the 2nd BC squadron
in New Zealand and now officer in charge with Lion and Beatty out of the action
– turned the entire British force to pound the battered and doomed Blücher
into submission. Due to this
error, the rest of the German force – including the damaged Seydlitz – was able to
escape.
With Lion out of the fight,
Beatty switched his flag to a destroyer and then transferred to Princess
Royal.
Meanwhile, Indomitable took Lion under tow and brought her back to
port…which the editor points out was quite a feat of seamanship.
Young tells this whole tale
from his own vantage point as well as using dispatches from Beatty during the
course of battle. He
descended from the foremast with bloody ears – from the concussion of the Lion's main guns – covered in cordite smoke, but none the worse for the wear.
He also details how the
British – while scoring a victory – let a spectacular victory slip away.
Moore – who mistaken concentrated on Blücher and let the rest of the
German’s escape – was transferred out of the battlecruiser squadron.
Captain Pelly of the Tiger was criticized for confusing Lions shell
splashes for those of Tiger and therefore not scoring many hits.
Finally, Young shows how the Admiralty took Beatty’s original report
and changed it to alter the public perception of the battle.
The last part of the book is probably the weakest. In it, Young talks about the Navy and it’s short comings in the war and ways to improve it. Written in the early 1920’s, those thoughts were pertinent then, but I was hard pressed to keep my interest in this section.
Overall, the book was a very interesting read and a uncensored look into the war at sea in the early stages at World War one. I highly recommend it to anyone interested in the war at sea during the First World War, especially from the British side.
