Naval Battle (October 2005 | Volume: 56, Issue: 5)

Naval Battle

AH article image

Authors: Craig L. Symonds

Historic Era:

Historic Theme:

Subject:

October 2005 | Volume 56, Issue 5

Overrated

In the years between the World Wars, officer-students at the world’s war colleges, including the U.S. Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island, spent much of their time studying the naval Battle of Jutland (May 31, 1916). After all, the great North Sea fight between the British Grand Fleet and the German High Seas Fleet was then (and remains today) the largest battleship confrontation in history. Sixty battleships and battle cruisers slugged it out in a contest that lasted all day. Consequently, naval officers in the postwar years spent whole weeks and even months pushing little wooden ship models around on a large checkerboard floor in order to comprehend the tactical nuances of this epochal event. But, in fact, the Battle of Jutland was one of the most meaningless and historically unimportant major naval battles of all time.

When World War I broke out in 1914, many Britons expected a reprise of the Napoleonic Wars, in which a ruthless Continental land power with an apparently unstoppable army was brought at last to heel by the power of Britain’s Navy. As American theorist Alfred Thayer Mahan put it: Napoleon had been defeated less by the armies of his foes than by those far-distant, storm-tossed ships upon which the Grand Army never looked. Surely, Englishmen thought, the Royal Navy could do it again: could win another Battle of Trafalgar against the German High Seas Fleet and thereby isolate and eventually defeat the German menace.

The expected confrontation was delayed by German unwillingness to risk its fleet in a winner-takes-all showdown. But in late May of 1916, Vice Admiral Reinhold Scheer brought his fleet out into the North Sea to meet the British Grand Fleet under Admiral Sir John Jellicoe off the coast of Jutland, the western shore of Denmark. Jellicoe suffered from the high expectations of a public that assumed another Trafalgar was in the offing. But Jellicoe was no Nelson. Though he managed twice to “cap the T” (that is, cross the enemy’s battle line with his own), the Germans inflicted more damage on the British than they received, and in the end Scheer’s fleet “escaped” back into home waters largely intact.

It hardly mattered, for the German battlefleet never left port again only twice—and briefly—before surrendering when the war ended in November of 1918. Because of that, modern naval historians argue that although the Germans won the battle tactically, the British won it strategically because they continued to control the sea. In effect, the Battle of Jutland changed nothing; afterward both fleets returned to their home ports and waited out the rest of the war. As it happened, it was the U-Boat menace that dominated the war at sea both in the war and the next. For all the impact these two huge battlefleets had on the course of human history, the billions of pounds and deutsche marks spent in their construction might as well have been tossed into the sea.

Underrated

The American