This 7750 ton
vessel, armed with a main armament of two 8-inch and eight 6-inch guns, plus
smaller weapons, was already obsolete then she was commissioned in 1911. In
overall configuration – single bow and stern chasers and her remaining heavy
weapons in casemates – she had more in common with doomed British counterparts,
such as Aboukir, Cressey, Hogue and Good Hope, built a decade earlier, than
with the battle-cruisers that were already replacing armoured cruisers in the
British and German navies. Pallada
was however of only half the displacement of the old British cruisers and one
wonders why money was ever invested in her and in her sisters Bayan and Makarov.
SMS Magdeburg |
Though the Pallada was the first Russian warship to be lost in World War 1 she
had already provided a service of inestimable value, even though it came about
by pure chance. The tltra-modern German cruiser Magdeburg had run aground off the Estonian coast on 26th
August and efforts by a destroyer to tow her free had proved unsuccessful.
While the attempt continued the Pallada
arrived on the scene with another cruiser, the Bogatyr, one of the few Russian ships to survive operations in the Far
East during the Russo-Japanese War. Unable to run, and taken under fire by the Russians,
the Magdeburg’s crew attempted to
scuttle, blowing off the forepart of the ship but leaving the remainder largely
intact. More important however was the fact that priority had not been given by
the German captain to destruction of the code-books. These the Russians managed
to recover from the wreck – a fact that the
Germans did not suspect. The need to change the codes was not appreciated and the
Russians had won a treasure. The code-book was passed on to the British and was
of vital importance in allowing the Royal Navy’s “Room 40” – the WW1 centre of
code-breaking which was comparable to Bletchley Park in WW2 – to read German naval
radio-traffic through much of the war.
Short the Pallada’s service life might have been, but it was to have a massive impact on Britain’s prosecution of the war at sea. The tragedy was that her crew died without knowing it.
Short the Pallada’s service life might have been, but it was to have a massive impact on Britain’s prosecution of the war at sea. The tragedy was that her crew died without knowing it.
An interesting tale lost among the many other actions at sea in the Great War. Thanks for sharing it
ReplyDeleteThanks Paul - I'm glad you enjoyed it. I was very interested to find the German artist's impression. I doubt if has been seen outside Germany (or even in it) for decades!
DeleteBest Wishes: Antone
Fascinating article about little-known events! I thought the Pallada and her sisters were designed to be fast scout cruisers -- or was that the earlier Pallada that was sunk at Port Arthur?
ReplyDelete