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Grand Scuttle: The Sinking of the German Fleet at Scapa Flow in 1919
Grand Scuttle: The Sinking of the German Fleet at Scapa Flow in 1919 | Dan Van der Vat
2 posts | 2 read
At Scapa Flow on 21 June 1919, there occurred an event unique in naval history. The German High Seas Fleet, one of the most formidable ever built was deliberately sent to the bottom of the sea at the British Grand Fleet's principal anchorage at Orkney by its own officers and men.The Grand Scuttle became a folk legend in both Germany and Britain. However, few people are aware that Rear Admiral Ludwig von Reuter became the only man in history to sink his own navy because of a misleading report in a British newspaper; that the Royal Navy guessed his intention but could do nothing to thwart it; that the sinking produced the last casualties and the last prisoners of the war; and that fragments of the Kaiser's fleet are probably on the moon.This is the remarkable story of the scuttling of the German fleet in Scapa Flow. It contains previously unused German archive material, eye-witness accounts and the recollections of survivors, as well as many contemporary photos which capture the awesome spectacle of the finest ships of the time being deliberately sunk by their own crew.
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review
rabbitprincess
Bailedbailed

This would have been an interesting book for me before the pandemic, perhaps. I don‘t have the attention span for it now.

quote
rabbitprincess
post image

"The Germans called it the Battle of the Skagerrak because that was where their battlecruisers won on 31 May; the British called it Jutland and celebrated one day later."

Book/world synchronicity!