Everything about Battle Of The River Plate totally explained
» This article is about the naval battle. For the film depiction, see The Battle of the River Plate (film).
The
Battle of the River Plate (
December 13,
1939) was the first major naval battle in
World War II. The
German pocket battleship (
heavy cruiser)
Admiral Graf Spee had been
commerce raiding since the start of the war in September. It was found and engaged off the
estuary of the
River Plate off the coast of
Argentina and
Uruguay in
South America by three smaller
Royal Navy (RN)
cruisers:
HMS Exeter,
HMS Ajax and
HMS Achilles, which was part of the RN's
New Zealand Division.
In the ensuing battle,
Exeter was severely damaged and forced to retire, while all other ships received moderate damage.
Ajax and
Achilles then shadowed the
Graf Spee which entered the neutral Uruguayan capital
Montevideo. After a tense period, the captain of the
Graf Spee,
Hans Langsdorff,
scuttled his damaged ship rather than face the overwhelmingly superior force that the British had led him to believe had assembled.
Although the actual engagement between the German and Allied forces could be regarded as a German victory in terms of losses, the following actions resulted in the overall battle being an Allied victory.
Background
The
Admiral Graf Spee had been at sea at the start of the
Second World War in September 1939 and had sunk several merchantmen in the
Indian Ocean and
South Atlantic Ocean without loss of life due to her captain's policy of taking all crews on board before sinking the victim.
The Royal Navy assembled forces to search for the surface raider. Force G, the South American Cruiser Squadron, comprised the
heavy cruiser HMS Exeter (8,400 tonnes, six 8-
inch (203
mm) guns) and two
Leander-class light cruisers (both 7,000
tons, eight 6-inch (152 mm) guns) —
HMS Ajax and
HMS Achilles. The force was commanded by Commodore
Henry Harwood from
Ajax, which was captained by
Charles Woodhouse.
Achilles was of the
New Zealand Division (precursor to the
Royal New Zealand Navy) and captained by
Edward Parry.
Exeter was captained by
F. S. Bell. A
County-class heavy cruiser,
HMS Cumberland (10,000 tons, eight 8-inch (203 mm) guns), was self-refitting in the
Falkland Islands at the time but available at short notice.
Harwood suspected that the raider would try to strike next at the merchant shipping off the
River Plate estuary between
Uruguay and
Argentina. He ordered his squadron to steam towards the position 32 degrees South, 47 degrees West. Harwood chose this position, according to his despatch, due to its being the most congested part of the shipping routes in the area, and therefore the point where a raider could do the most damage to enemy shipping.
The three cruisers were convened off the estuary on
12 December and conducted manoeuvres. Harwood's combat policy of three cruisers versus one pocket battleship was to attack at once day or night. By day the ships would attack as two units,
Exeter separate from
Ajax and
Achilles. By night the ships would remain in company in open order. By attacking from two sides, Harwood hoped to give his lighter ships a chance of overcoming the German advantage of greater range and heavier broadside by dividing the enemy's fire.
The battle
On 13 December the ships sighted each other and closed.
Admiral Graf Spee, despite having correctly identified Exeter, initially suspected that the two light cruisers were smaller destroyers and that the British ships were protecting a merchant convoy, the destruction of which would be a major prize. Since Admiral Graf Spee's reconnaissance aircraft was out of service, Langsdorf relied on lookouts for this information. He decided to engage despite having received a broadly accurate report from the German naval staff on 4 December outlining British activity in the River Plate area. This report included information that Ajax, Achilles, Exeter and Cumberland were patrolling the South American coast. Langsdorf realized too late that he was facing three cruisers. Falling back on the immediate acceleration of Admiral Graf Spee's diesel engines, he closed at 24 knots in the hope of engaging the steam-driven British ships before they could work up from cruising speed to full power.
The British executed their battle plan:
Exeter turned to the north-west whilst
Ajax and
Achilles, operating together, turned to the north-east.
Admiral Graf Spee opened fire on
Exeter at 19,000 yards with her six 11-inch (280 mm) guns at 06:18.
Exeter opened fire at 06:20,
Achilles at 06:21,
Exeter's aft guns at 06:22 and
Ajax at 06:23. From her opening salvo,
Admiral Graf Spee's gunfire proved rather accurate, her third salvo straddling
Exeter At 06:23 an 11-inch (280 mm)
shell burst just short of
Exeter, abreast the middle of the ship. Splinters from this shell killed the torpedo tubes' crews, damaged the ship's communications, riddled the ship's funnels and searchlights and wrecked the ship's Walrus aircraft just as it was to be launched for gunnery spotting. Three minutes later
Exeter suffered a direct hit. This shell struck her B-turret, putting it and its two guns out of action. Shrapnel swept the bridge, killing or wounding all bridge personnel except the captain and two others. Captain Bell's communications were wrecked. Communications from the
aft conning position were also destroyed, and the ship had to be steered via a chain of messengers for the rest of the battle.
Meanwhile
Ajax and
Achilles had closed to 13,000 yards and started making in front of the
Admiral Graf Spee, causing
Admiral Graf Spee to split her main armament at 06:30, and otherwise using her 5.9-inch (150 mm) guns against them. At 06:32
Exeter fired two
torpedoes from her
starboard tubes but both missed. At 06:37
Ajax launched her spotter
aircraft from its
catapult. At 06:38
Exeter turned so that she could fire her
port torpedoes, and received two more direct hits from 11-inch shells. One hit A-turret and put it out of action, the other entered the hull and started fires. At this point
Exeter was severely damaged, having only Y-turret in action, a seven degree list, was being flooded and being steered with the use of her small boat's
compass. In return, one of
Exeter's 8-inch shell penetrated two decks then exploded in
Graf Spee’s funnel area — destroying her raw fuel processing system and leaving her with just 16 hours fuel, insufficient to allow her to return home. The ship was doomed but this was kept secret for 60 years.
At approximately 0636,
Admiral Graf Spee hauled around from an easterly course, now behind
Ajax and
Achilles, toward the northwest and laid smoke. This position brought Langsdorf roughly parallel to
Exeter. By 1650
Exeter listed heavily to starboard, taking water forward. Nevertheless, she still steamed at full speed and fired with her one remaining turret. Forty minutes later, water splashed in by an 11-inch near-miss short-circuited
Exeter's electrical system for that turret. Captain Bell was forced to break off action. This would have been the opportunity to finish off
Exeter. Instead, the combined fire of
Ajax and
Achilles drew Langsdorf's attention as both ships closed.
At 06:56,
Ajax and
Achilles turned to starboard to bring all their guns to bear, causing at 07:10
Admiral Graf Spee to turn away and lay a smokescreen. At 07:10 the two light cruisers turned to reduce the range from 8
miles (13
km), even though this meant only their forward guns could fire. At 07:16
Admiral Graf Spee turned to port and headed straight for the heavily damaged
Exeter, but fire from
Ajax and
Achilles forced the Graf Spee at 07:20 to turn and fire her 11-inch guns at them, who turned to starboard to bring all their guns to bear.
Ajax turned to starboard at 07:24 and fired her torpedoes at a range of 4.5 miles (7 km), causing
Admiral Graf Spee to turn away under a smokescreen. At 07:25
Ajax was hit by an 11-inch shell that put X-turret out of action and jammed Y-turret, causing some casualties. By 07:40,
Ajax and
Achilles were running low on resources and the British decided to change tactics, moving to the east under a smokescreen. Harwood decided to
shadow Admiral Graf Spee and try to attack at night when he could attack with torpedoes and better utilise his advantage of speed and manoeuvrability while minimising his deficiencies in armour.
Ajax was again hit by an 11-inch shell that destroyed her mast and caused some casualties.
Admiral Graf Spee continued on a south-westward course.
The pursuit
The battle now turned into a pursuit. The British and New Zealand cruisers split up keeping about 15 miles (24 km) from
Admiral Graf Spee.
Ajax kept to the German's port and
Achilles to the starboard. At 09:15
Ajax recovered her aircraft. At 09:46 Harwood signalled to
Cumberland for reinforcements and the Admiralty also ordered ships within 3,000 miles (5,000 km) to proceed to the River Plate. At 10:05
Achilles had overestimated the
Graf Spee's speed and came into range of German guns.
Admiral Graf Spee turned and fired two three-gun salvoes with her foreguns.
Achilles turned away under a smokescreen. The shadowing continued for the rest of the day until 19:15, when
Admiral Graf Spee turned and opened fire on
Ajax, who turned away under a smokescreen.
It was now clear that
Admiral Graf Spee was entering the
River Plate. As the estuary had
sandbanks, Harwood ordered
Achilles to shadow
Admiral Graf Spee while
Ajax would cover any attempt to double back through a different channel. The sun set at 20:48 with the
Admiral Graf Spee silhouetted against the sun.
Achilles had again closed the range and
Admiral Graf Spee opened fire, while
Achilles turned away. During the battle, a total of 108 men had been killed on the two sides, including 36 on
Admiral Graf Spee.
Admiral Graf Spee entered
Montevideo in
neutral Uruguay, dropping
anchor at about 00:10 on 14 December. This was a political error, as
Uruguay, while neutral, had benefited from significant British influence during its development and favoured the Allies. The British Hospital, for example (where the wounded from the battle were taken) was the leading hospital in
Montevideo. Had the
Admiral Graf Spee left port at this time, the damaged
Ajax and the
Achilles would have been the only
Commonwealth warships it would have encountered in the area.
The trap of Montevideo
In
Montevideo, the 13th
Hague Convention came into play. Under Article 2, "
...belligerent war-ships are not permitted to remain in the ports, roadsteads, or territorial waters of the said Power for more than twenty-four hours...", modified by Article 14 "
A belligerent war-ship may not prolong its stay in a neutral port beyond the permissible time except on account of damage..." British diplomats duly pressed for the speedy departure of the
Graf Spee. Also relevant was Article 16, of which part reads, "
A belligerent war-ship may not leave a neutral port or roadstead until twenty-four hours after the departure of a merchant ship flying the flag of its adversary."
The Germans released 61 captive British merchant seamen who had been on board. Langsdorff then asked the Uruguayan government for two weeks to make repairs. Initially, the British diplomats in
Uruguay, principally
Eugen Millington-Drake, tried to have
Admiral Graf Spee forced to leave port immediately. After consultation with London, which was aware that there were no significant British naval forces in the area, they continued to openly demand that the
Graf Spee leave. At the same time, they secretly arranged for British and French merchant ships to sail from
Montevideo at intervals of 24 hours, whether they'd originally intended to or not, thus invoking Article 16. This kept the
Graf Spee in port and allowed more time for British forces to reach the area.
At the same time, efforts were made by the British to feed false
intelligence to the Germans that an overwhelming British force was being assembled, including the
aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal and the
battlecruiser HMS Renown, when in fact only the heavy cruiser
HMS Cumberland was nearby.
Cumberland, one of the earlier
County class, was only a little more powerful than
Exeter, with two more 8-inch (203 mm) guns; she was no match alone for
Admiral Graf Spee, whose 11-inch guns had longer range and fired much heavier shells.
Cumberland arrived at 22:00 on
14 December after steaming at full speed for 36 hours from the
Falkland Islands. Overwhelming British forces (HMS
Renown,
Ark Royal,
Shropshire,
Dorsetshire and
Neptune) were en route, but wouldn't assemble until December 19. For the time being, the total force comprised the undamaged
Cumberland and damaged
Ajax and
Achilles.
The Germans, however, were entirely deceived, and expected to face a far superior force on leaving the River Plate. The
Graf Spee had also used two-thirds of her 11" ammunition and only had enough left for approximately a further 20 minutes of firing, which was hardly enough to fight her way out of
Montevideo, let alone get back to Germany.
Intense
negotiations were undertaken. While the ship was prevented from leaving the harbour, Captain Langsdorff consulted with his command in Germany. He received orders that permitted various options, but not
internment in
Uruguay. Ultimately he chose to
scuttle his ship in the
River Plate estuary (
December 17) to avoid unnecessary loss of life for no military advantage, a decision that's said to have infuriated
Hitler. The crew of
Admiral Graf Spee was taken to
Buenos Aires, where Captain Langsdorff subsequently committed suicide on
19 December. He was buried there with full military honours and several British officers attended. Many of the crew members were reported to have moved to
Montevideo with the help of local people of German origin. The German dead were buried in the "Cementerio del Norte" in
Montevideo.
Aftermath
The German
propaganda machine had reported that
Admiral Graf Spee had sunk a heavy cruiser and heavily damaged two light cruisers while only being lightly damaged herself. (This had a degree of truth in it -
Exeter had been seriously damaged and was practically a hulk, while
Admiral Graf Spee's damage appeared superficial rather than structural).
Admiral Graf Spee's scuttling however was a severe embarrassment and difficult to explain on the basis of publicly available facts. The Battle of the River Plate was a contributory factor to Adolf Hitler's low opinion of the German surface fleet. The battle was a major propaganda victory for the British during the
Phony War, and the reputation of
First Lord of the Admiralty Winston Churchill was enhanced.
Exeter limped to the Falkland Islands for emergency repairs and later to
Devonport for a 13-month refit.
Prisoners taken from merchant ships by
Admiral Graf Spee who had been transferred to her supply ship
Altmark were freed by a boarding party from the British destroyer
HMS Cossack, in the
Altmark Incident (
February 16, 1940) — whilst in
Jøssingfjord, at the time neutral
Norwegian waters. Prisoners who hadn't been transferred to
Altmark had remained aboard
Graf Spee during the battle, and were released on arrival in
Montevideo.
On
22 December 1939 over 1,000 sailors from the
Admiral Graf Spee were taken to Buenos Aires, Argentina, and interned there; at least 92 were transferred during 1940 to a camp in
Rosario, some were transferred to
Club Hotel de la Ventana in
Buenos Aires Province and another group to
Villa General Belgrano, a small town founded by German
immigrants in 1932. Some of these sailors later settled there.
(External Link
) There are many stories, but little reliable information, about their later wartime activities, including escapees illegally returning to the German armed forces,
espionage, and clandestine German submarine landings in Argentina. After the war many German sailors settled permanently in various parts of
Uruguay, some returning after being repatriated to
Germany. Rows of simple crosses in the Cementerio del Norte, in the north of the city of Montevideo mark the burial places of the German dead. Three sailors killed aboard the Achilles are buried in the British Cemetery, in
Montevideo, while those who died on the Exeter were buried at sea. .
Plans to raise the wreck are discussed in the article on
Admiral Graf Spee .
Intelligence Gathering and Salvage
Immediately after her scuttling the wreck of the Admiral Graf Spee rested in shallow water with much of the ship's superstructure remaining above water level, but over the years the wreck subsided into the muddy bottom and today only the tip of the mast remains above the surface.
The first salvage from the ship was most likely carried out by Royal Navy intelligence teams which recovered the highly advanced
Seetakt radar not destroyed in the scuttling. In any event, a radar expert was sent to Montevideo shortly after the scuttling and reported a rotating aerial, probably for gunlaying, transmitting on either 57 or 114 cms. In February 1940, the wreck was boarded by US Navy sailors from the light cruiser
USS Helena.
In 1997, one of Admiral Graf Spee's 15 cm secondary gun mounts was raised and restored; it can now be seen outside
Montevideo's National Maritime Museum.
In February 2004 a salvage team began work raising the wreck of the Admiral Graf Spee. The operation is in part being funded by the government of
Uruguay, in part by the private sector, as the wreck is now a hazard to navigation. The first major section, the 27-ton heavy gunnery control station, was raised on
25 February 2004. It is expected to take several years to raise the entire wreck. Film director James Cameron is filming the salvage operation. After it has been raised, it's planned that the ship will be restored and put on display at the National Marine Museum in Montevideo.
Many German veterans don't approve of this restoration attempt, as they consider the wreck to be a
war grave and an underwater historical monument that should be respected. One of them, Hans Eupel, former specialist torpedo mechanic, 87 years old in 2005, said that "this is madness, too expensive, and senseless. It is also dangerous, as one of the three explosive charges we placed didn't explode."
On
10 February 2006, the eagle figurehead of the Admiral Graf Spee was recovered. To protect the feelings of those with painful memories of
Nazi Germany, the
swastika a the base of the figurehead was covered as it was pulled from the water.
Legacy
In
1956 the
film The Battle of the River Plate (U.S. title:
Pursuit of the Graf Spee) was made of the battle and
Admiral Graf Spee’s end.
HMS Achilles, which had been recommissioned in 1948 as
HMIS Delhi, flagship of the Royal Indian Navy, played herself in the movie.
The battle is re-enacted with large-scale model boats throughout the summer season at Peasholm Park in the UK seaside resort of
Scarborough.
After the battle, the town of
Ajax, Ontario in
Canada, was named after
HMS Ajax . Many of its streets are named after Admiral Harwood's crewmen on
Ajax,
Exeter and
Achilles.
The names of each ship have also been used for Cadet Corps. The Royal Canadian Sea Cadet Corps (RCSCC) Ajax #89 in Guelph, Ontario; the Navy League Cadet Corps (NLCC) Achilles #34 in Guelph, Ontario; the Navy League Wrenette Corps Lady Exeter (now disbanded) and the camp shared by all three corps, called Camp Cumberland. Similarly, the Royal Canadian Sea Cadet corps in Ajax, Ontario, has taken the name RCSCC Harwood.
According to an article in the German language paper "Albertaner" on October 6th, 2007 a street in Ajax, Ontario was named after Captain Langsdorff, this despite protests by some Canadian veterans. Steve Parish, the Mayor of Ajax, defended the decision declaring that Langsdorff hasn't been a typical Nazi-Officer. An accompanying picture shows Captain Langsdorff at the funeral of his crew members who were killed in the battle. He is saluting with a military salute while people beside and behind him, some clergy even, are giving the Roman/Fascist salute. The picture is credited to Diego Lascano (Gilby Collection)
Further Information
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