- SMS Derfflinger
SMS "Derfflinger" was a
World War I battlecruiser of the GermanKaiserliche Marine . The ship was named afterBrandenburg Field Marshal "Reichsfreiherr"Georg von Derfflinger who fought in theThirty Years' War . She was the lead ship of her class, her sister ships being SMS "Lützow" and SMS "Hindenburg".Construction
, she was fully operational by November of that year.
The "Derfflinger" and the ships of her class were designed to be improvements on the previous battlecruisers of the German Navy, the Moltke class and the SMS "Seydlitz" as well as to complement the
König class battleship s.Both the "Königs" and the "Derfflingers" mounted their main battery in twin turrets on the centerline and both classes were outfitted with a partially oil-fired boiler arrangement. Derfflinger was the first German capital ship to have a flush deck design, while the lack of secondary casements mounts in the hull itself was a preview of more modern naval designs by the 1930s.
ervice
Upon commissioning she was attached to the First Scouting Group (I "Aufklärungsgeschwader") commanded by Vice Admiral
Franz von Hipper . After the outbreak ofWorld War I she took part in the bombardment ofScarborough, Yorkshire on14 December 1914.Subsequently, she fought at the Battle of Dogger Bank in 1915 where she was hit by three shells but in the process also managed to hit and cripple the
Royal Navy battlecruiser HMS "Lion".On
24 April 1916 the "Derfflinger" took part in the coastal bombardment ofYarmouth andLowestoft .Jutland
Participating in the
Battle of Jutland as part of the GermanHigh Seas Fleet on31 May 1916 , the "Derfflinger" and her sister-ship the SMS "Lützow" were between them credited with sinking the British battlecruisers HMS "Queen Mary" and HMS "Invincible". In the process she was herself heavily damaged by hits from ten 15-inch, one 13.5-inch, and ten 12-inch heavy shells, and took on 3,000 tons of water. One 15-inch shell struck "Derfflinger's" "D" turret and detonated inside, killing most of the turret crew, rendering it useless. One 15-inch shell from "Revenge" penetrated "Derfflinger's" "C" barbette, knocking it out of action. She nevertheless was able to limp home, and the resulting repairs took her out of commission for four months. This was the highest amount of hits on a ship not sunk at the Battle of Jutland; because of this, the British nicknamed her the "Iron Dog". [Staff, Gary: "German Battlecruisers: 1914-1918", page 39. Osprey Books, 2006. ISBN 978-1-84603-009-3]After the Battle of Jutland the German Navy seemed to have less inclination to challenge the
Royal Navy , and aside from an unsuccessful sortie into theNorth Sea on3 April 1918 , the rest of the First World War passed uneventfully for the "Derfflinger".After the end of
World War I , she was interned atScapa Flow where her crew scuttled her on21 June 1919 . The wreck was raised in 1939 but was not scrapped until the end ofWorld War II , in 1946.External links & References
* [http://www.german-navy.de/hochseeflotte/ships/battlecruiser/derfflinger/index.html SMS Derfflinger] at the German Navy History website
* [http://www.maritimequest.com/warship_directory/germany/battleships/derfflinger/sms_derfflinger.htm SMS Derfflinger photo gallery] at MaritimeQuest.com
* [http://german-navy.tripod.com/sms_bc_derfflinger.htm Gross Kreuzer] of the Derfflinger class at German-Navy.tripod.com.
*Koop, Gerhard & Schmolke, Klaus-Peter. "Vom Original zum Modell: Die Großen Kreuzer Von der Tann, Moltke-Klasse, Seydlitz, Derfflinger-Klasse." Bonn: Bernard & Graefe Verlag, 1998. ISBN 3-7637-5673-5See also
*
List of ship launches in 1913
*List of ship commissionings in 1914
*SMS Hindenburg
*SMS Lützow References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.