Wednesday 19 November 2014

Jellicoe’s flagship: HMS Iron Duke – the Battle of Jutland 1916

GHQ's 1/2400 version of the HMS Iron Duke.

Time to once again rewind the clock to the afternoon of May 31st, 1916 by taking a closer look at HMS Iron Duke, the powerful flagship of Admiral Sir John Jellicoe, commander of the British Grand Fleet at the Battle of Jutland.

"The watchdog of our Empire" - Admiral Jellicoe.

Given the immense task of defending Britain’s naval supremacy against the formidable Imperial German navy, Admiral Jellicoe was under no small amount of pressure. He was, like Winston Churchill put it, “The only man on either side who could loose the war in an afternoon”.

BW picture of the Iron Duke, as she looked during the war.

If the Royal Navy and the Grand Fleet were to suffer a big defeat, the Imperial German Navy and the vast German Army was enough to pose a real threat to Britain itself. Thus the odds were sky high for Jellicoe at Jutland, as his task in effect, was to lure the Hochseeflotte, using Beatty’s battle cruisers as bate, into an ambush consisting of the massed firepower of the numerical superior British Grand Fleet, under circumstances where he could premeditate and control the risks.

The model have been name tagged, 
and is ready to see action on the table.
The bottom left flag on the tag is Jellicoe's actual admiral flag.

The HMS Iron Duke arrived to the Battle of Jutland at the head of the British main fleet, steaming out from Scapa Flow to spring the trap, so costly prepared by Beatty, on the Hochseeflotte. As Jellicoe steamed southwards he had only fragments of intelligence from Beatty, but enough to know that what was coming up from the South, close on Beatty’s tail, was the entire German fleet.

Admiral Sir John Jellicoe.

In the heat of the pursuit and heavy fighting, Beatty had lost contact with the enemy for a moment, and thus could not accurately pin point the location of the approaching enemy fleet to Jellicoe, which left the admiral guessing whether to deploy his column of hard hitting battleships to port or to starboard.

The Iron Duke along with Indefatigable and Lion.
All models are GHQ.

In this instance, Jellicoe had to rely on his many years of expertise and seaman’s gut feeling. He was about to make, what was later described as “ The Royal Navy’s most important tactical decision of the entire 20th Century”.

The floating docks at Portsmouth.
Orion Class "Monarch" ready for launch.

If he swung the wrong way, he would expose the Grand Fleet to the entire fire power of the Hochseeflotte’s Krupp guns, while an opposite turn would put him in the most formidable position, offering the line of British battleships a chance to shoot “broadsides” and the approaching German fleet, only able to fire their forward guns – what is referred to as “Crossing the T”.  Problem was, he didn’t know the position of the enemy, and thus had to make a qualified and very fateful guess.

Coat of Arms for the HMS Iron Duke.
Resemblance to the actual CoA of Wellington.

Jellicoe had character. He had a gentle firmness about him, which still translates to the reader, when going over the historical accounts of the Battle of Jutland. After a few silent moment of contemplation on his command bridge on-board HMS Iron Duke, Jellicoe gave the order deploy the battle line to port side (Left), which would prove to be a most important and decisive, as this indeed put him in a position crossing the enemy’s “T”. Scheer’s fleet was given such an initial pounding, that the Hochseeflotte had to preform as series of complicated extraction manoeuvres, turning about and heading full throttle back the safety of the Jade.

Illustration of the Iron Duke Class ships.

Jellicoe in effect turned the Battle of Jutland, which started out very gloomy for the British with the loss of three mayor ships and about 6.000 lives, into at least a strategic victory that would further confirm British naval supremacy and, likewise important, convincing the Kaiser to be even more cautious in ordering out the Hochseeflotte to sea.

The Grand Fleet steaming ahead.

HMS Iron Duke was names after the famous British general Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington, also know as ”The Iron Duke”, a name he got after entering the stormy world of politics, which resulted in Wellington fitting the windows of his London residence with iron shutters, to prevent the angry mob from smashing them.

HMS Iron Duke was the first battleship to be armed with anti-aircraft guns. A very modern ship with huge firepower, the Iron Duke also gave name to its own class of ships, to which the Benbow, Emperor of India and the Marlborough also adhere.
The Iron Duke rectified many of the errors made in earlier Dreadnought classes, for instance the beam was extended to afford more stability to the 6in guns and protection against underwater damage. However, she was more lightly armoured compared to the contemporary German class, the König. This was a compromise to enable the huge weight of her superior gunnery.


Illustration of the HMS Iron Duke.
Thanks to: www.shipbucket.com

Ship Data: HMS Iron Duke

Laid Down: Jan 1912
Launched: Oct 1912
Completed: March1914
Constructed at: Portsmouth
Displacement: 26.100 tons
Dimensions: 623 x 90 x 32 ft.
Main Guns: 10 x 13.5in 45cal
Armour: 4 – 12 inch belts / 2.5 inch deck / 11 inch Turrets.
Machinery: 4 Shaft Parsons Turbine (29.000 shp = 21knots)
Endurance: 7.780Miles at10knots
Cost: 1.945.000 Pounds in 1912 (ca. 480 million Dollars in todays currency)

Career:
She was the flagship of the Home Fleet in at the outbreak of the war in 1914, and later also became the flagship of Admiral Jellicoe’s Grand Fleet, until she was relieved from the position by Queen Elizabeth in late 1916. She served at Jutland, scoring many hits with her tremendous firepower, but did not herself receive any. After the First World Ward she served in the Mediterranean, the Black Sea and later as part of the Atlantic Fleet. In 1939 she was retired from active service and became a gunnery target at Scapa Flow. After World War Two she was sold off for scrap to the British Iron and Steel Corp. in 1946.


Thank you very much for reading!

31 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. Thanks Michael - no WW1 dreadnought project without Jellicoe's flagships. And she's a real "Death Star" on the gaming board as well, sporting 10 guns on a broad side. The Huns will be running for the safety of the Jade when she turns up :0)

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  2. The quality of this blog is high, very high...great post!

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    1. Phil, you've made my day. Thanks buddy! I enjoy writing almost as much as painting, so its really nice to hear your appreciative words on the blog.

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  3. Terrific models, Soren! Accompanied by period photos, history, and links to ship line drawings, great stuff!

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    1. Cheers Jonathan - Its a favorite period with so much visual material to go for, so there is no chance of any writing block on the horizon :0) Happy you liked the old girl, she is a thing of beauty on the gaming table as well in terms of fire power.

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  4. Superbly painted and presented, Soren. You details on the ship really make it pop. The basing is also wonderful.

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    1. Thanks Dean, it's been really inspirational to shift to a naval project, just nursing those little details and doing water as well. Very nice to hear you liked the outcome.

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  5. Very impressed by your painting of such a small mini, especialy all details!
    Greate historical background!

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    1. Thanks Michael - the GHQ models can really be recommended to anyone used to painting 28s, as you can just carry on with washes and highlighting on these boats, and the small nit bits and details will pop using this technique. Hoping you'll join in for a game at some point!

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  6. Your painting is first class, I really love the shading, the bases and the bold colours.

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    1. Thank you very much for those kind words Benjamin! When I first started painting 1/2400s, I was really in doubt as how to create the best balance. My first epiphany was that its the deck and not the side of the ship which is the main focus for the viewer/gamer. So, deck color, highlighting of deck details etc. was something I really wanted to get right. I'm very happy you liked the chosen combination :0)

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  7. Absolutely outstanding. Can't find any words to do your fabulous work justice. What really impresses me most are all the small details and you haven't even forgot to add the spray of the ship's screw.

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    1. Almost forgot to add I'd really appreciate a short how to as to how you're doing the water as it looks awesome.

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    2. I'm short for words here M, thanks man. Really appreciate your comment. And you bet, I'll do a step by step on the water, or perhaps a boat from metal to finished model. Give me a weeks time or something, and it'll be up here on the blog.

      Cheers
      Sören

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    3. Can't wait to see the tutorial!

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  8. Outstanding miniatures. I can't wait to get painting mine, and I will definitely be borrowing some of your great ideas!

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    1. Hey Grant, and welcome to the blog! Thanks for the nice comment - I'm looking forward to seeing you grow your Great War site as well!

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    2. Cheers and thanks! I also have forwarded your blog link to GHQ so that they can ogle your awesome work!

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  9. Replies
    1. Thanks Christopher - yes, its turning into quite an arms race here. Fellow wargamer Mark (Rattlesnake) is bringing in the US navy for some intervention on the Kaiser's North sea plans :0)

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  10. Very impressive painting Søren!

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    1. Cheers Jonas - hope we'll get a chance to run a game with these at some point!

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  11. Hi Soren!
    Great work on the ships and the details. I remember the Iron duke looking a little different on Wednesday night after the dual we had at the end of our WWI naval game. It was a very fun game and I like how the rules are flowing now and we had a lot of different results this time. I look forward to our next game. I will be getting some American battleships to bring to the game board soon. Thanks again!

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    1. He he, yeah the old Duke wasn't doing so well then. But, she certainly went down with a fight, pouring these 10 guns broad side on the German BB's. More to come my friend!

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  12. gosh....A well thought out written article and stunning painting on your ship models Soren... marvelous!

    I enjoy visiting your blog... full stop! :o)

    cheers,

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    1. Phil, I'm honored to have such appreciative readers as yourself. Thanks for the continuous support man, and I promise to keep up the steam here. Soon there will be a painting guide as an response to request posted here and on TMP.

      Cheers
      søren

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  13. Beautiful stuff! Like your 1870's gaming this is something that I've never considered for wargaming myself but this surely makes a strong case for it. They look spectacular and it doesn't take much to imagine how great a game will look with many ships looking like that on the table.
    /Mattias

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    1. Thanks Mattias, really appreciate it! And as you know, you're very welcome to join in for a game in Solberga. We'll set up the game and minis, you just come along and roll some dice. The Naval Thunder rules we're using really makes for an easy game flow, with plenty of period spice. Hope to see you back on the south side soon :0)

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  14. War is a fascinating subject. Despite the dubious morality of using violence to achieve personal or political aims. It remains that conflict has been used to do just that throughout recorded history.

    Your article is very well done, a good read.

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    1. Thank you very much for those kind words GMB - I think it was Robert E. Lee who once said: "It's is well that war is so terrible, or we should grow too fond of it"

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