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#1 |
Frogman
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I'm sure our British cousins can answer this easily enough...
During WWII The British Navy lost a lot of various types of warships, but they just kept plugging along & got stronger with more ships showing up regularly. I know that they picked up a lot of used DD's from all over the place at the beginning, but how about the large warships. Where did they build those larger ships. Where did they get all of the steel that went into building them? How did they keep them hidden from prying eyes? I should know this, but until now most of my History reading has been mainly of the ground forces nature.. |
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#2 |
Eternal Patrol
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All capital ship building was suspended at the outbreak of the war.
The Nelsons were finised; the KGVs were all laid down in 1937, and well on the way to completion when the war began. Vanguard was the only one started during the war. A lot of carriers were built, and as you said a huge amount of destroyers. The steel? Most of it came via those convoys you're tasked to sink.
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#3 |
Sea Lord
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If you ever come to the UK, a quick wander around the suburban areas of any town will provide you with the answer as to where all the steel came from.
A typical house in a UK street has a low brick wall at the front of the garden topped off by large sandstone coping stones, this is about the height that you could comfortably sit down on. Prior to WW2, most of those coping stones would have had wrought iron railings set in them up to about five feet in height, and if you look at most of them these days, you can see little stubs of metal at regular intervals inset along the top of them where the railings were sawn off or cut off with a torch. My house (A large Victorian one) has evidence of this for example. Most iron gates went too, and you rarely see an original pre-war iron gate on a residential property in the UK. If you add that all up, all over the UK, thats a hell of a lot of metal, and this was supplemented by 'drives' for metal at regular intervals throughout the war, with people handing over cutlery, pans and all kinds of bits and pieces. So steel was not really an issue, of far more strategic value was the bauxite in France, which was a major component in lighter aircraft alloys. With regard to shipbuilding, most of the UK's shipbuilding industry was on Tyneside and in the ports up near Scotland, although it did have other industrial bases, a lot in Ireland for example and some near Liverpool, but the vast majority was in the north of the main island, which meant that it was largely out of range for aircraft with heavy bombloads, regardless of whether they came from the European mainland or across the North Sea from occupied Norway or wherever. The bases at Portsmouth and Devonport did have some building facilities, although they were more about servicing things than building them, so pretty much anything could be built safely out of range from major bomb raids if necessary (keep in mind that German bombers at night did not fly in formation, they each navigated to the target individually, the navigator being the ranking guy in the plane as opposed to the pilot in most cases, so they lacked the advantage of blanket damage from tight formation bombing along the lines of the USAAF), and even if bombers made it to Scotland, bear in mind that they usually had to navigate at night, which meant that only really recognisable inlets of water offered practical targets, which is why Liverpool, Manchester and London copped many more raids than the heavily industrialised midlands, as the bombers could not fly up a river to find their way to targets in the Midlands, which they could with the readily recognisable (at night) Mersey and Thames Estuaries (although the Luftwaffe did have pretty good maps of the UK, as it was photomapped by Lufthansa prior to the war). The Luftwaffe did use some radio navigation aids to assist in night navigation for bombing (such as knickbein - where two widely-spaced radio beams would be aimed to intersect over a target) but it was not suitable for the kind of pinpoint accuracy you'd need to knock out a ship on a slipway. On top of all that, most of the big RN Battleships were already built before the war, and the RN had a very big fleet in those days. ![]()
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![]() Last edited by Chock; 10-25-07 at 06:33 PM. |
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#4 |
Commodore
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Actually, they didn't keep most building in the UK off prying eyes any more then the germans did of their ship yards. UK shipyards were frequently bombed, and like the germans, they dug out afterwards and just went back to work. One source I have mentions that the shipyards along the Clyde produced 1,526,000 tons of merchant shipping during 1940-1944. Other figures I do have for the Royal Navy
Aircraft carriers in commission 1939 - 7, by 1945 - 58 Destroyers in commission in 1939 - 184, by 1945 - 277 by class, the cruisers saw the largest proportionate losses, from 66 in commission in 1939 to only 35 in 1945 (although some of those represent ships transferred to service with other commonwealth nations). read more at http://www.naval-history.net/WW2CampaignRoyalNavy.htm The allies did have the advantage of foreign shibbuilding. A lot of corvettes and frigates were built in Canada. They also had access to the worlds largest iron ore mines, including the massive one at Bell Island, NewFoundLand.
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#5 | |
Subsim Aviator
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#6 |
Frogman
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Thank you for this very informative bit of historical background.
I spent a couple of months roving throughout England and just a bit into Scotland back in 1959, but at that time (19) my mind wasn't on checking out the things you just described...I did have a grand time. The English country side is quite beautiful. These games can help to bring an awareness of what went on in WWII, but we will never really know just what our fathers really went through... |
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#7 |
Ace of the Deep
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I think most of the railings ended up being secretly dumped in the sea after the war finished. As they would have been made of cast iron, I'm not sure if they would have been usefull in shipbuilding. But metaleurgy isn't really my field.
As far as I am aware it was a moral boosting exercise for the British public. Like the pots and pans for the 'spitfire fund'. A lot was dumped in the Thames estuary, not sre about the rest.
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#8 |
Let's Sink Sumptin' !
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Here's a wikipedia entry about the HMS Vanguard which Sailor Steve mentioned, Britain's largest and last battleship. She was a 40,000 ton warship with 15" naval rifles. But due to the priority given other construction she was not completed until 1946 and missed the war.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Vanguard_%2823%29 She was scrapped in 1960, having never seen combat. Some feel her guns would have quite handy for shore bombardment purposes had she still been about during the Falklands conflict of 1982.
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#9 | |
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#10 |
Rear Admiral
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Capital ships were on there way to becoming a thing of the past when war broke out
Didnt take them long to realise carriers would rule the waves Would have been nice to see a Jutland style battle in WW2 The Kreigsmarine heavies were greatly outnumbered BUT modern compared to a lot of the RN heavies "There's something wrong with our bloody ships today!" |
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#11 | |
Ace of the Deep
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Nemo
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#12 | |
Sea Lord
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I turned this up after a bit of a search on the 'net with regard to metal collecting from the populace, although it is mostly in reference to the US, it does show that it wasn't all purely for morale: 'In 1942, when the first scrap drives were organized, the war was far from won, and frightened civilians at all levels were anxious to do something, anything, to help. So campaigns were organized to collect not just metal and rubber but kitchen fat, newspapers, rags, and so on. These drives were extremely successful--millions of tons of material were collected. It was only afterward, contemplating the assembled mounds of junk, that those in charge of the war effort asked themselves: What are we going to do with all this crap? World War II shortages weren't just home-front propaganda. Japanese conquests in Malaya and the Dutch East Indies cut off access to natural rubber supplies. President Roosevelt urged Americans to turn in "old tires, old rubber raincoats, old garden hose, rubber shoes, bathing caps, gloves," and so on at their local service stations. Just one problem: there wasn't (and still isn't) an efficient way of recycling rubber products. Rubber's complex chemistry and the variety of formulations in use made recycling slow and expensive and the resultant material inferior to virgin rubber. Although the rubber recycling industry did produce a fair amount of material throughout the war, the rubber scrap drive didn't significantly boost its output. The real solution to the rubber shortage was development of synthetic rubber and conservation--gas rationing was primarily meant to save tires, not gas. Many of the other materials collected couldn't readily be recycled either. Many who lived through the war remember collecting old newspapers, but apart from using them as packing material and such there was little to be done with them. A 1941 aluminum-scrap drive to help the plucky Brits pulled in 70,000 tons of aluminum pots and pans, but only virgin aluminum could be used to manufacture aircraft. Iron and steel were a different story. These metals could be easily melted down and used for munitions. It's not as if the U.S. lacked domestic sources of iron ore, though. The real challenge was gearing up American industry for war production. That meant everything from increasing steel-making capacity to building more factories and designing better weapons. Recycling of steel and iron unquestionably helped. One campaign netted five million tons of steel in just three weeks, and scrap-metal drives continued for most of the war. Useful though recycled steel and iron were, some scrap drives went overboard. In addition to old streetcar tracks, wrought iron fences, church bells, and the like, people carted off relics of previous wars, including cannons, park statues, and other memorials. When the memorials were being rebuilt after the war, many wished they hadn't been so hasty. There's no denying scrap drives and other World War II home-defense efforts were meant in part as morale builders. Some seem pretty loopy in retrospect--air-raid blackouts in Nebraska, for example. But a few were surprisingly effective. In 1943 victory gardens produced 40 percent of the country's fresh vegetables. Salvaged kitchen fat was used to produce glycerin, an ingredient in drugs and explosives. Then there's the Civil Air Patrol, organized in 1941 to watch the coasts and assist in search and rescue operations. Less help than hindrance, right? Not so. In the 18 months before the navy took over patrol duty, the CAP spotted 173 U-boats, located 363 survivors of sunken ships and downed aircraft, and reported 91 ships in distress. Lest you think all home-front volunteers were paunchy air-raid wardens in tin hats.' So if all, or any, of that is true, I wonder if I can phone Gordon Brown up and ask him to put the railings back on my garden wall? If not, I'll settle for a free Spitfire:rotfl: Oddly enough, the theft of metal in the UK has risen massively in recent months, and it is reckoned that China's expansion, and the worldwide demand for metal is at the heart of this trend. ![]()
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![]() Last edited by Chock; 10-26-07 at 09:02 AM. |
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#13 | |
Ace of the Deep
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Nemo
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#14 |
Navy Dude
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Apparently favourite items to steal are: cast iron man-hole covers and the odd bronze 'work of art' (if handy). Mind you, some of the newer art needs scrapping!
I read somewhere that in America nickels and cents are now worth more as scrap than as money! Supposedly they are passing laws to prevent them being melted down. I can also confirm the removals of iron railings, Liverpool was full of walls with stumps of iron popping out (my childhood home) |
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#15 |
Frogman
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What it seems to look like then as I read through this vast storehouse of knowledge poring in from my British cousins, is that during the war the DD's and aircraft carriers became the most in demand.
I know that the US had carriers galore...big ones, small ones & just about anything that would hold a barn door on top would launch something... Then they had a dozen DD's running around protecting each and every one. A very telling statement came out in that old movie "D-day" where the german in the bunker screeming at his superior over the phone during the initial bombardment... "THOSE 5000 SHIPS U SAY THEY DON'T HAVE, WELL THEY HAVE THEM!" I can't believe that the average U-boat Kaptian didn't see the hand writing on the wall. As time marched on and he could see more and larger convoys that just kept coming...No matter how many he sank, they just kept coming...more and more, and endless array of ships full of supplies. My uncle Al joined the merchants in 1936. He was sunk first in the channel and then again just in sight of New York harbor. He told me that the Mermansk run was the worst. They were so heavly loaded and he watched while one iced up ship just went into a wave and never came back up. I think of some of those "sea war stories" that he told me about sometimes while I am playing this game.. Especially after I have torpedoed a merchant in very rough seas.... |
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