Keynes' Cruisers

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The drive for an appropriate landing craft for the Marines had been started in the early 1930's. ITTL I don't see anything that would have aborted or delayed this, if anything it would be accelerated. Also don't forget Roebling and the "alligator".

The drive is still there but the Marines are still trying to figure out their requirements. Initial contracts and deliveries will be +/- weeks Ittl vs OTL
 
Story 0036

October 15, 1939 Southeast Atlantic


The boat crew hurried back aboard their ship. Ten minutes after the whale boat was secured, the seven thousand ton merchant ship began to evenly sink beneath the waves as demolition charges blasted the bottom of her single hull. The merchant crew had been made prisoners of Graf Spee an hour earlier. Their captivity was made easier as her captain did not attempt to be brave and send off a raider signal before lowering her flag when he saw the triple 11 inch guns pointed at his ship armed only with a pair of rifles and half a dozen pistols.

Three hundred feet away and four decks higher than the merchant captain, Captain Langsdorff spared one last second to see the sinking ship gargle its way under the waves, an air bubble coming up from a hold bursting through the surface. Hunting had been decent in the Capetown to Freetown trade routes, but he knew that success meant danger. He would take his ship to South America in a few days. With the loss of Altmark, fuel and perishables would occupy more and more of his mind. He had enough fuel for another month in the South Atlantic before needing to head home with sufficient reserves to allow for some tactical maneuvering. If he could arrange for a German merchant ship to meet him at sea to transfer a thousand tons of diesel fuel and hundreds of dozens of eggs and other fresh food, that would make his supply worries fade like the light of the day.
 
Story 0037
October 17, 1939 Wake Island

Eighty eight men were climbing aboard the light cruiser Detroit. She had dropped off a company of construction engineers and a small detachment from the Army Corps of Engineers. The construction engineers were tasked to create a hard surface landing strip capable of handling heavy bombers. The Army detachment was tasked to investigate the resources on the island that could support a garrison of 1,200 men and then determine what items and projects would need to be imported. Thirty three of the original dredgers extended their contracts to complete a dredge to the Pan Am seaplane base. The rest of the original dredgers would return home soon enough, exhausted but satisfied as the liberal use of dynamite had blasted enough coral to clear a large shipping channel. The new shipping basin could accommodate a dozen decent sized merchant ships. Their final task was underneath them as they walked up a gangway to the deck of Detroit from a recently completed pier.
 
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...With the loss of Altmark, fuel and perishables would occupy more and more of his mind. He had enough fuel for another month in the South Atlantic before needing to head home with sufficient reserves to allow for some tactical maneuvering. If he could arrange for a German merchant ship to meet him at sea to transfer a thousand tons of diesel fuel and hundreds of dozens of eggs and other fresh food, that would make his supply worries fade like the light of the day.

Been looking at Richard Woodman's The Battle of the River Plate, and her supply situation was even worse than it appears. The problem was the refrigeration units - some of whose output had to be used for further cooling of the magazines in hot conditions. "Defects in the system ...prevented her from operating north of 5o S" (p23); by 23 September Graf Spee's "auxiliaries were failing, along with the freezer plant" (p50). This was somewhat alleviated on 3 October when the capture of the SS Tairoa yielded 18 bottles of carbonic acid, "which proved a boon for the Graf Spee's failing refrigeration machinery" (p65).

Apparently there were severe vibration problems, peaking at 21kts, lessening though not disappearing when the ship reached 24kts (which may have been all she could make at that stage: neither Woodman nor Eric Grove credit her with more during the engagement with Harwood's force). Just before the clash, "the vibration affected a small screw in the electrical control motors driving the forward turret [which] could only fire when the ship turned to starboard to bring it on the target. The middle gun had to be disconnected to operate independently, so that the turret could traverse." (p90) Not precise about the time, but probably about 0615 13 December.

At "around 0620..the offending screw had been located and replaced, bringing the forward turret back into action" (p93).

Graf Spee wasn't in good condition even before she met the RN.
 
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Been looking at Richard Woodman's The Battle of the River Plate, and her supply situation was even worse than it appears. The problem was the refrigeration units - some of whose output had to be used for further cooling of the magazines in hot conditions. "Defects in the system ...prevented her from operating north of 5' S" (p23); by 23 September Graf Spee's "auxiliaries were failing, along with the freezer plant" (p50). This was somewhat alleviated on 3 October when the capture of the SS Tairoa yielded 18 bottles of carbonic acid, "which proved a boon for the Graf Spee's failing refrigeration machinery" (p65).

Apparently there were severe vibration problems, peaking at 21kts, lessening though not disappearing when the ship reached 24kts (which may have been all she could make at that stage: neither Woodman nor Eric Grove credit her with more during the engagement with Harwood's force). Just before the clash, "the vibration affected a small screw in the electrical control motors driving the forward turret {which] could only fire when the ship turned to starboard to bring it on the target. The middle gun had to be disconnected to operate independently, so that the turret could traverse." (p90) Not precise about the time, but probably about 0615 13 December.

At "around 0620..the offending screw had been located and replaced, bringing the forward turret back into action" (p93).

Graf Spee wasn't in good condition even before she met the RN.
Thanks, love it when my readers do my research for me.... I might shift him to the South Atlantic earlier now that I know this
 
Story 0038

October 27, 1939 Gothenburg Sweden


Three large warehouses had become impromptu aircraft assembly plants over the past few months. Seversky EP-1 fighter planes were being delivered at the end of each month. Two Swedish squadrons were getting ready to receive their first machines. The fighter was only adequate at best compared to other foreign designs but she was far better than the handful of biplanes available. Another two dozen Fairy Battle bombers were being slowly put together. A dozen would go to Finland and a dozen would form a light attack squadron for Sweden. Finally, the Brewster warehouse was a cacophony of noise and curses in at least three languages. The “surplus” fighters had seen all of their US government supplied equipment ripped out before they were shipped. Mechanics, technicians, engineers, and pilots were in a constant struggle to re-equip the fighters with Finnish owned equipment. The pilots were split between wanting a heavily armed fighter and a lightweight hummingbird so a few different variants were being tested outside of the city.


October 29, 1939 300 miles from Lobito, Portuguese South Africa


A large bubble broke the surface. The German merchant ship Windhuk had gone beneath the waves four minutes ago. Sussex’s boats rowed out to meet the German merchant sailors in their boats to bring them aboard the cruiser. By nightfall, the heavy cruiser had turned south back to Simonstown for fuel and food.
 
Story 0039

November 1, 1939 near Strasburg

The small French village had enough excitement for the day. A battalion of pied-noirs marched through town on their way to their positions in front of the Maginot Line while a brigade of the British Saar Force had motored through after quartering the night just outside of town. Half a dozen young women and older teen girls had to sneak back into their houses with a flush on their cheeks, and more than a few of the exotically sounding men had enjoyed some of the cheaper wines (appropriately marked up of course) the village could offer. The war so far was far quieter and less dangerous than it was a generation ago. Artillery would fire overhead as new units found their firing positions and began the slow process of laying wire and firing ranging rounds. Patrols would occasionally go forward to probe the German lines that were becoming thicker as some of the units that took part in the Polish campaign came west. But there were no large clashes, no engagements where battalions were destroyed in a morning, just a few men here and there seeing their lives blink out, sometimes silently, often loudly as their ends approached and the medics failed to forestall.
 
Story 0040

November 5, 1939 South Atlantic


Thirty foot waves crashed over the bows of the three cruisers strung out on a line two miles apart. The admiral intended that the ships should have been twelve miles apart during daylight with a single float plane overhead but the weather and the seas dominated his desires. Instead the three cruisers struggled to keep each other in sight and all men aboard. Neptune lost a man overboard overnight as he was attempting to de-ice the range-finding equipment for the forward six inch gun turrets. A rogue wave hit the ship by surprise and he was carried overboard as he had no time to anchor himself.

The squadron was moving northwards to cover the critical meat trade from Australia and New Zealand. Fast reefers could make three or four trips a year, each carrying enough frozen meat to feed a million mouths for a week. Two reefers had been seen struggling through the spring storm but nothing else had been sighted today. Everyone from the lowest boy to the admiral aboard Sussex hoped that the weather would ease shortly as they continued the hunt for Graf Spee.
 
Story 0041
November 8, 1939 Newport News Virginia

Hundreds of workers put down their tools as the shift whistle blew. Their work was beginning to resemble a ship instead of a steel framed whale beached on an industrial landscape. The keel had been laid a few weeks ago, and great struts and braces were emerging. Engineering spaces were already laid out although the heavy equipment had not yet arrived for construction nor installation. Men clambered down off the scaffolding, rivet guns gently placed, mobile furnaces vented as the skeleton of Hornet rested after another day of growth. A small second shift of seventy men were due on board to clean up the tools, complete complex assemblies and prepare the ship to grow again after a night’s rest.
 
Story 0042
November 9, 1939 Rio de Janiero
HMS Ajax’s chiefs had finished putting the fear of God and more importantly the fear of the Captain into the minds of the crew. Four hundred men who had not had stepped on dry land in two months were due to go ashore in an hour. The bars and women of the waterfront were ready for them. The rest of the crew would get ashore the next time Ajax landed at a friendly neutral port. Until then, an extra ration of rum would be offered and a long night of sleep with only minimal watches would be maintained. The light cruiser had spent the past two months cruising up and down the Brazilian and Argentinian coast. She had captured a single German merchant ship and took aboard the crews of two that had chosen to scuttle. More importantly, she was protecting the steady procession of royally flagged merchants taking meat, leather and minerals from the River Plate to the mother country. There was a rumor that a pocket battleship was still on the loose and potentially heading to South America, so tonight’s festivities might be the last moment of joviality for many of the young boys and hardened men before they had to drag down a great prey and his mighty horns.
 
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Story 0043
November 10, 1939 22:00 Lowell Massachusetts

A few snowflakes whipped through the air, dancing subtly with the winds and the hot air vents. Private Donahue hunched over in his olive green wool coat as his hands closed around a cup of somewhat warm chicken soup. Three hours of drill tonight on assembling and dissembling the Springfield rifle had gone well. It was easier to feel the flaws in the rifle than in a loom. Some of the other new privates had much harder times taking their rifles apart and putting them back together as they were just no good with their hands. The company met for three hours on the second and fourth Wednesday of the month while the new enlistees had to also meet on the off week for remedial drill.

Between the promotion to junior mechanic and now the National Guard pay, he was now a desirable man. Elaine Therousiski had agreed to go to the movies next Friday and her reputation among his buddies was that she was a lot of fun.
 
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I don't think this was contemporary useage at the time (in the RN, at any rate). Vessels such as destroyers will have a First Lieutenant, known as The Jimmy (or simply "Numbers", after No 1). With a cruiser, the second-in-command will be The Commander (because he's a three striper). XO is quite common current useage, but I don't think so in 1939.

The Captain is of course referred to as The Owner, The Driver, or Himself - or Herself, these days.
The pernicious influence of football. When I was reading the Woodman book I realised that I was (mentally) pronouncing Ajax as Eyeyax, after the Amsterdam club.
 
I don't think this was contemporary useage at the time (in the RN, at any rate). Vessels such as destroyers will have a First Lieutenant, known as The Jimmy (or simply "Numbers", after No 1). With a cruiser, the second-in-command will be The Commander (because he's a three striper). XO is quite common current useage, but I don't think so in 1939.

The Captain is of course referred to as The Owner, The Driver, or Himself - or Herself, these days.

The pernicious influence of football. When I was reading the Woodman book I realised that I was (mentally) pronouncing Ajax as Eyeyax, after the Amsterdam club.
Updated
 
More thoughts.

Four hundred men who had not had liberty in two months

Not sure if this was RN useage at the time - or since. Shore leave would be the term - or a run ashore, eg:

"We had a good run ashore in Gib after SPRINGTRAIN 89 - quite low key, only 30 arrests and 200 in sick bay"
 
Story 0044 Graf Spee November 14, 1939
November 14, 1939 0530 South Atlantic 33.87 South, 12.24 West

Slate gray skies greeted the men looking for dawn aboard HMS Sussex. Reveille had been called and all guns and stations were manned. Her sisters flanked her, steaming through mild swells at a steady fourteen knots. They had swept north and westward from the Cape of Good Hope sea lanes to this desolate stretch of nothingness between the great sea lanes. Tristan da Cunha laid several hundred miles to the south, a sparse settlement of whalers and fishermen whose social graces benefited from their profound isolation. Napoleon’s exile laid over a thousand miles to the north. No man had seen anything other than the isolated dolphin pod for days as there was no reason for a merchant ship or their hunters to be here. Yet they swept on, looking for a raider whose trail had grown colder since the last confirmed success weeks ago. They had patrolled south of the Cape to prevent a break into the Indian Ocean. Force G was concentrating near the River Plate while Ark Royal and Renown had moved back north after their failed efforts to conduct aerial sweeps in thirty five foot seas.


“Smoke, 2 points of north” A sudden cry went up from a look-out stationed on the port bridge wing. A darker and slightly thicker patch of gray against gray could be seen against the northern sky. Every man on deck who had an excuse to turn their heads did. Most could see nothing, they were too low and the horizon too fine of a camouflage. But a few men with better eyes or vantage points could squint and see that something looked unnatural at the very edge of their vision.

Signal lamps began to flicker between the three cruisers, two heavy London Counties and the light Leander class ship, HMS Neptune. Men were scurrying below decks preparing for action as stewards brought tea to the officers, and junior sailors were dismissed from their teams to bring tea and bread to their mates. Neptune began to diverge from Sussex and Shropshire as all three ships turned north at twenty four knots to close on the contact.

0558

Captain Langsdorff sipped his coffee as his ship was coming to life. Lookouts had spotted smoke nine minutes ago to the south. At first he had hoped it was a freighter supplying one of the English South Atlantic colonies, but the quantity of smoke and the soon visible three distinct sources of smoke indicated warships. He knew that he was a hunted man and had hoped that two weeks cruising in the desolate South Atlantic would have created an opportunity of escape to the trade routes near South America but that was not to be the case. His armored cruiser had been continually at sea for almost a hundred days with only the repairs that could be performed by his crew. His fuel reserves were sufficient for another two weeks of cruiser warfare before he had to head home.

He had enough fuel to flee but if the English had deployed cruisers, they could nip at his heels like dogs while the heavy ships that he knew were in the region converged on his position. Anyways, his ship was lamed. Her design speed of more than twenty eight knots was a distant memory. He vibrated whenever he approached twenty one knots and the engineers were worried about the shafts staying on above twenty four knots. The diesels were in need of an overhaul. No, the English ships could track him down. His only hope was to cripple or sink these warships with his heavy guns and then escape back into the vast emptiness of the ocean and evade any follow-on search. Anything else would lead to his ship's guaranteed destruction.

He ordered his ship to turn towards the yapping English terriers and for a twenty meter battle flag to be raised to the highest heights.

0611

The radio room crackled with life as the Admiralty acknowledged the sighting report. The great hunt was almost over. Shropshire and Sussex had split from Neptune. The lighter cruiser would fight independently of the heavier, better armed and armored cruisers. She would be a terrier, nipping at the pocket battleship’s heels while the heavy cruisers’ guns attempted to penetrate armor. The range was closing rapidly as the German ship had not turned to flee, instead she edged eastward so that the sun would be behind her. It was a calculated gamble that the darkness would hide the British ships for less time than the sun’s rising glare would blind the directors. As the range closed to 30,000 yards, every man aboard was tense. Thousands of miles steamed, hundreds of neutral and friendly ships checked, three men lost to the sea had all been for this moment, a moment to take on a superior foe to protect the unarmed and vulnerable.

The first 11 inch shell passed five hundred yards long of Shropshire when the German was 19,000 yards away. Within another minute, the two heavy cruisers fired partial ranging salvos. Shropshire's ladders splashed astern and short. Six seconds later, Sussex's ladder salvo threw waterspouts skyward forward and again short of the target. The two heavy cruisers alternated firing, a steady staccato rhythm with enough space between salvos for each gunnery officer to track and correct their misses. Graf Spee focused on the slightly closer Shropshire. Deliberate salvos rang out every forty five seconds, six shells arcing through the air as the heavy cruiser snaked through towering waterspouts, chasing splashes, heeling over and barking out half and full salvos whenever the firing arcs were clear.

Sussex was being harassed by the secondary guns of the German ship. The first hit of the engagement was from a 5.9 gun against her belt, popping rivets and allowing a trickle of water to enter her hull without slowing her down nor impeding her fire. A pair of 256 pound shells slammed into her target. The first bounced off of the thick face armor of the forward turret, temporarily deafening some of the gun crews who could still hear after the firing of the guns. The second shell arced over and penetrated twenty two feet from the bow and two feet above the water line. Water soon began to pour through the hole as his crew struggled to plug the hole and move pumps forward.


Neptune’s eight six inch guns joined the cacophony as Graf Spee’s secondary guns responded to her annoyingly accurate fire. An ugly brick red flash lit the horizon as Shropshire’s Y turret was torn open like a cheap sardine can, men with their limbs shattered and pulverized screamed while their mates died in the milliseconds for a shell to tear through two decks. A desperate, dying, midshipman earned a Victoria Cross as he plunged through the flaming shell room to flood the aft magazine. The flare of flames died down as the local consumables were turned into ash and the thick, sweet and sickeningly entrancing smell of burnt meat permeated the ship.

Half of her firepower gone, Shropshire heeled over in a hard turn to port to open the range and escape further punishment. Smoke, both from her wounds and from a hasty smoke screen, shielded her. In her rush to safety, her forward guns flung seven more salvos scoring two hits, none critical while a pair of 11 inch shells penetrated. One shell passed through an unarmored area cleanly, leaving a short passageway between the main deck and the hull while the other shell tipped over and punched through to a boiler room before detonating. Shell fragments opened men up while super-heated steam escaped to boil the crew alive. Men who entered that room after the action were never able to forget what they had seen despite their strongest desire and need to do so. She limped away at seventeen knots.

While Shropshire was being pounded by her superior opponent, Sussex scored a regular procession of hits. Three, four, five, six and finally seven shells landed on Graf Spee. Most caused little damage but each shell killed some men, and flayed others, each shell opened up pipes, cut wires, rattled precision machinery and each shell slowly degraded her opponent’s capability to fight.

Even as the heavy cruiser began to receive heavy return fire from Graf Spee, Neptune’s lighter guns scored what would turn out to be the critical hit. A salvo of eight six inch shells produced three hits. The first failed to penetrate the main belt. The second detonated as it passed seven feet underneath the forward range finder, eliminating his accuracy. That shell would have been important but the last shell of that critical salvo landed four yards short. It entered the water and rapidly sank seven feet at a sharp but not quite vertical angle until the shell head touched the rapidly rotating propeller shaft. It exploded. A blade broke, and another was peppered with fragments. The rapidly spinning blades that had been so precisely balanced only moments ago were drunkenly lurching. The highly trained German sailors reacted without orders, cutting power to the shaft but their reactions were limited by their humanity. The damage had been done. The starboard shaft would not be able to provide power. Graf Spee was crippled, thousands of miles from a neutral port and now months from a friendly shipyard that could repair the damage.

This was not immediately obvious to the British sailors and commanders. They knew that they were laming the great bull for the matador in the guise of Renown to kill but in their duty as picadors, they were suffering heavily as the bull still had horns to swing widely and powerfully. Sussex slowed slightly and began to turn to cut across the stern of Graf Spee while Neptune maneuvered for a torpedo attack from the front quarter. The secondary guns of the pocket battleship had been suppressed, which is an amazingly clinical word for the deaths and wounds of dozens of men amidst twisted metal and toxic conflagrations fueled by wood, oil and rubber tubing. Only the aft main turret was still fighting with anything approaching the efficiency it had at the start of the battle. It rumbled every twenty or thirty seconds at Sussex, scoring a hit and slowing his antagonist even as the yappy hound continued to nip at his heels and broaden the wounds with effective slashes of her more numerous but light claws.

Neptune had plunged through the calm seas to a range of 4,500 yards, opposed by a single forward 11 inch gun firing in local control and a pair of anti-aircraft guns. The torpedo crews had checked their weapons and their directors twice in the past four minutes as this would be the best chance to kill the raider instead of merely crippling her. Captain Morse pressed his ship closer, the forward two turrets firing at almost point blank into the much larger cruiser. At forty two hundred yards, the ship turned to present her starboard broadside. One minute later, the light cruiser stable and running with the sea, four torpedoes entered the water. All were running towards their target as Neptune crashed hard to reverse course and fire a second salvo from her other battery.

Before those torpedoes could be fired, the first salvo arrived with devastating effect. The first and third torpedoes of the salvo missed. The second torpedo exploded forward of Anton turret while the last torpedo exploded underneath the bridge.

Fire ceased.

Sussex slowed.

Her three operating turrets tracked the gravely wounded bull and her torpedoes were made ready as well for a killing blow but nothing happened for a moment that extended into a minute and then two. Finally, the great battle flag that had hung over Graf Spee for the entire morning dropped to the deck. British tars who were on deck of the three cruisers strained their eyes. Those with binoculars or more often those manning the directors’ powerful optics could see ant like men scurry around the deck of Graf Spee. Floats, boats, and nets were lowered into the water. Within two minutes of the ceasefire, the first sailors had entered the water. Neptune closed to within five hundred yards of the burning and listing silent enemy hull. Ropes were extended along the hull as the main turrets continued to track in silence. Seven minutes later, the first German sailors had grabbed the ropes and were hauled aboard and the light cruiser had her only two undamaged boats in the water assisting in rescue operations. She could have sent over a prize crew but the German ship’s list had grown from only six degrees to eighteen degrees since she had been torpedoed.

Twenty three minutes after the first torpedo exploded, Graf Spee turtled and took to the bottom of the sea over eight hundred German sailors and seventy Allied prisoners. The two working British cruisers pulled three hundred men from the water.


By mid afternoon, critical repairs were made to Shropshire. As the cruisers steamed south at twelve knots, scores of burials were conducted, bodies returned to the sea, and the fragments of remains sent overboard with as much reverence as possible by chaplains who blessed and consecrated as they sanctified and consoled. The three ships limped to Tristan da Cunha where slightly less expedient but still temporary repairs for all three ships were made. At the end of the week, both heavy cruisers departed for Durban. Sussex would then proceed to Singapore for a comprehensive rebuild while Shropshire’s deeper wounds would be healed at the South African dockyard. The light cruiser slowly worked her way home, stopping first at Cape Town, and then Freetown where Ajax, Exeter, Renown and Ark Royal as well as a bodyguard of destroyers joined her as an escort and an honor guard. She arrived at Portsmouth for two months of repairs in the great complex, her crew released for a week at a time after they received the King's thanks. Men were home to kiss their wives and see their children open the presents under the first wartime Christmas tree.
 
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