COMBINED NACH DEM TAG/DARK COLOSSUS TIMELINE

In a bid to make the story more accessible I would like to present a combined timeline of the two stories. As previosly mentioned the Dark Colossus story is one continuation of the Nach dem Tag timeline - there are others sketched out, but not yet developed.

There have been a couple of changes to both stories but nothing major enough to re-post the entirety.

The Dark Colossus will commence again next week for a run of eight new episodes.
 
COMBINED NACH DEM TAG/DARK COLOSSUS TIMELINE

16th December 1914 – The Battle of Flamborough Head.

Set free from their moorings by bad weather, drifting mines in the gap opposite Scarborough in the minefields off the north-east coast of England cause Admiral Hipper’s battlecruisers (which are returning from the Scarborough Raid) to slow down drastically in their headlong dash to rejoin the van of the High Seas Fleet. In consequence they are intercepted outside the minefields by the sixth Battle Squadron of the Grand Fleet under Vice Admiral Warrander and the battle cruiser Squadron of the Grand Fleet commanded by Admiral Beatty.

Despite being outnumbered and suffering several hits Hipper is able to extricate his force and it returns to base with only minor damage. The incident causes disquiet in several senior flag commanders of the Royal Navy about the effectiveness of British shells. This is reinforced by the results of the Dogger Bank and Falklands actions and the matter is bought to the attention of Winston Churchill, the First Lord of the Admiralty and Jackie Fisher, the First Sea Lord. They are both alarmed at the situation and all steps are taken to remedy it as quickly as possible.

31st May 1916 - the Battle of Jutland

By this time some 80% of the ships of the Grand Fleet have been re-equipped with the new ‘Greenboy’ shells. The action is a decisive British victory, seven German capital ships are lost for the loss of three British battlecruisers. What remains of the High Seas Fleet does not venture into the North Sea again.

The U-boat campaign 1917 to 18

The defeat of the HSF and its subsequent reluctance to leave harbour except for Baltic operations then frees large numbers of British destroyers and light cruisers for merchant Escort and convoy duty making the task of the U-boat's significantly more difficult and their successes significantly more limited than they might otherwise have been.

6th February 1922 - Successful conclusion of the Washington Naval Disarmament Conference

The principal differences from the OTL treaty are as follows.
  • By the end of the treaty's term (10 years) the British and Americans are each permitted 20 capital ships, the Japanese 12 and the French and Italians 7 each.
  • There is no battleship building holiday as such, instead the powers agree to managed replacement schedules.
  • The maximum tonnage of individual cruisers is permitted to be 12,000 tons.
  • Submarines are bought in to the treaty structure and are permitted on a tonnage ratio of 5/5/3/1.75/1.75 (The United States and the British Commonwealth are permitted to complete or retain a quantity of submarines not displacing more than 75,000 tons. Japan is permitted to complete or retain a quantity of submarines not displacing more than 45,000 tons. France and Italy are permitted to complete or retain a quantity of submarines not displacing more than 26,250 tons.)
28th April 1925

Winston Churchill, the chancellor of the Exchequer, is jeered in the House of Commons as he announces in the UK budget that the pound sterling will remain ‘off gold’ (ie its value will not be linked to gold) for ‘The foreseeable future’.

1st June 1929

Upon the Labour victory in the general election Oswald Mosley is given the post of Lord privy Seal, his brief is to coordinate the effort against unemployment.

16th of May 1930

Disillusioned with his role and finding himself unable to cause a fundamental shift in the attitudes and outlook of the Labour Party Mosley resigns from the Cabinet. He uses the following months to build a Parliamentary following advocating Keynesian monetary reform, loan financed public works and massive ‘state action’, all of which would be accompanied by a reorganisation of the cabinet and civil service intended to improve governmental efficiency. He is careful to establish contact with figures from across the political spectrum and to cultivate a small group of parliamentary rebels within the Labour Party, but attempts to impose his policies upon the cabinet meet with little success. His agitation culminates in February 1931 with a speech in Edgbaston attacking the Cabinet. In May he considers leaving the Labour Party but is dissuaded from so doing.

27th October 1930 - Conclusion of the first London Naval Disarmament Conference

The British delegation seeks to prevent the start of the construction of new capital ships other than those agreed to in the Washington Treaty (which is due to expire at the end of 1931) until 1936, however despite the recession, agreement is elusive, France and Italy refuse to sign and Japan will only agree to extend the treaty until December 1934. This is agreed but no new treaty is signed and the time limits on clauses regarding other types of warship are not extended.

31st July 1931

The Economy Committee on National Expenditure, chaired by Sir George May issues the ‘May Report’ It warns that in 1932 the government will have a large budget deficit that can only be closed by radical budget cuts. Publication of the report causes an economic and political crisis in Britain.

25th August 1931

Ramsay MacDonald's Labour government loses power as the retrenchment proposals irrevocably split the cabinet, he resigns as Prime Minister the following day, and a Conservative-Liberal emergency government under Stanley Baldwin takes office on the 27th August 1931.

7th September 1931

MacDonald resigns as party leader and the contest for the Party's leadership is between Mosley, championing a radical change of policy and Arthur Henderson, a veteran of Labour's establishment. Henderson’s belief that the Party cannot be reformed in time to avoid defeat at the next election causes him to inform Mosley on the 30th that he will not contest the leadership.

15th September 1931

The British Labour Party returns Mosley as leader.

22nd October 1931

The British general election returns Stanley Baldwin’s Conservative - Liberal Alliance to office. Labour however, gain more than 30 seats from the Conservatives and are now the largest single party in the House of Commons.

13th December 1931

Winston Churchill, a former First Lord of the Admiralty and Chancellor of the Exchequer dies in a traffic accident in New York.

3rd July 1932

The second British general election within a year brings the labour party to office with a working majority in the House of Commons.

8th May 1934 - Collapse of the second London Naval Disarmament Conference

Japan does not sign, neither does France or Italy; the Treaty is effectively worthless and though the British state their intention to produce treaty limited designs in the hope that other navies will follow suite they have no option but to resume new capital ship construction in 1935. The United States is the only other power to produce designs limited by the tenets of the treaty.

July 1934

The Austrian emergency

September 1934

At the London Imperial Defence Conference (called to formulate an Empire policy to the rapidly changing world situation after the collapse of both the London Naval Conference and the Geneva Disarmament Conference). The announcement that in the opinion of the UK government the prospects for war have become much more likely than they had previously appeared causes surprise and consternation among the delegates. After some debate there is general agreement that the rising power and latent expansionism of Germany, Japan, Italy and the Soviet Union are all real and immediate threats. The delegates return home from the conference bearing the unwelcome news that the British Empire must begin to prepare itself once again for the possibility of war.

December 1934

The Abyssinian crisis

8th September 1935

Senator Huey Long, the former Governor of Louisiana is shot in an assassination attempt in Baton Rouge. He is severely injured but survives.

6th March 1936

Remilitarisation of the Rhineland by Germany.

29th July 1936

The Labour Party is returned to power in the British general election with a slightly reduced majority. Oswald Mosley has reached the peak of his popularity.

10th December 1936

Abdication of King Edward VIII.

19th June 1938

England win the football World Cup for the first time.

30th October 1938

Oswald Mosley resigns as Prime Minister following the ‘Alvarez Affair’, a scandal concerning his relationship with the wife of a junior member of the Paraguayan legation in London. Clement Attlee, deputy leader of the Labour Party becomes the British Prime Minister.

3rd September 1939

War declared by Britain and France on Germany after the German invasion of Poland two days previously.

8th April 1940

The German attack on Norway and Denmark begins.

10th May 1940

The Germans attack in the West.

2nd - 3rd June 1940

Battle of the Loffoten Islands, the first in which the opposing fleets do not catch sight of one another. Action is conducted entirely by aircraft.

22nd June 1940

France surrenders.

13th August 1940

‘Adler Tag’ (Eagle Day) the beginning of the German air offensive against southern England.

7th September 1940

The Germans switch their attacks to London.

15th and 17th September 1940

Following night raids by aircraft of the Royal Navy Air Arm acting in coordination with aircraft from RAF bomber command on the German fighter bases in the Pas de Calais there is a significant reduction in the number of fighter aircraft the Luftwaffe is able to commit to escorting air raids on London. In consequence the Luftwaffe bombers suffer extremely heavy casualties.

Enraged Hitler cancels operation Sea Lion and orders the winding down of the air campaign against southern England. A limited campaign of night raids are undertaken during late September and early October but these are bought to a halt by the end of the month.

18th September 1940

A Cabinet meeting is held at number 10 Downing St to discuss Britain's financial position. It is revealed that Britain is down to her last three hundred million dollars in gold and foreign currency reserves. This means that it will be impossible for Britain to continue the war into the next year without securing other means of finance. As the United States is the only entity capable of authorising lending on the scale that Britain needs it is immediately apparent that the continuation of the war effort can only be undertaken with American support.

While the incumbent President, Franklin Roosevelt, has shown himself to be sympathetic to Britain's position he is in the midst of a presidential election and neither of the other two candidates (Wendell Wilkie and Huey Long) seem inclined to offer their support. In consequence the continuation of the war becomes dependent on the outcome of the United States presidential election.

5th November 1940

Wendell Wilkie is declared the winner in the US presidential election. His narrow victory is largely put down to a split in the Democrat vote caused by Senator Huey Long’s decision to run as a third-party candidate drawing off enough votes from Franklin Roosevelt to throw the election to the Republicans.

7th November 1940

Using neutral Swedish channels the British government seeks terms from the Nazis.

18th November 1940

The Treaty of Greenwich which brings hostilities to an end between Britain and Germany is signed on the quarterdeck of the German cruiser Prinz Eugen while the ship is moored in the Thames.

22nd June 1941

Operation Barbarossa commences.

30th June 1942

Fall Blau (Operation Blue), the German drive into the Caucasus commences.

23rd July 1942

Elements of the Imperial Japanese Army and Navy commence operations against the Soviet Far East. Fighting is bitter and the Japanese make little progress initially, however the situation in western Russia is critical and leaves no resources to reinforce the Soviet armies in the east.

28th August 1942

Start of operation Lehrer, German amphibious landings on the eastern shore of the Black Sea combined with an airborne landing at Tblisi. The operation is a success, the city is secured by 11th September and Baku is captured by 15th September. Soviet forces make a final stand in a pocket around Grozny and Astrakhan but surrender on 5th October.

22nd December 1942

Hitler declares victory in the war in the east. Cut off from its oil supplies the war machine of the Soviet Union grinds to a halt and the country begins to break up, Once Baku and Grozny have fallen the USSR is doomed by shortages of fuel and the attendant dislocation of communications and transport. Furthermore the inability to sustain a war on two fronts down the immense distances of the Trans Siberian Railway is critical in exacerbating the strain. The disintegration of the Soviet polity into minor satrapies and their subsequent coalescing into larger post collapse economic units is rapid and a direct result of the loss of the fuel producing areas.
 
I must point out that Wilkie didn't become an isolationist until late in the election.

Quite so, my perception of it is that he changed tack because he wanted to make a clear distinction between himself and FDR though he was by no means an instinctive isolationist and OTL worked with the Roosevelt administration on aid for allied countries. But the important thing to note here is the effect on the British government, unable to read Willkie's mind they will take his position at face value - worse than this they will note his flip-flopping. Note also that the British capitulation occurs between the US presidential polling day in 1940 and Willkie taking office in early 1945. There is some discussion of this issue in Part 12 of the Dark Colossus timeline, it will also be mentioned in Part 14 which I am posting next week.
 

MrHola

Banned
I haven't followed you're TL (which looks excellent) enough to know about the Austrian Emergency. Was it also in OTL or is it exclusive to this ATL?
 
I haven't followed you're TL (which looks excellent) enough to know about the Austrian Emergency. Was it also in OTL or is it exclusive to this ATL?

It was OTL also, the first German attempt to annex Austria, perhaps surprisingly - considering subsequent events OTL - it was vigorously opposed by Mussolini as well as the UK and France.
 
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