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#1 |
Fleet Admiral
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Interesting looking 2 part WWI doco on Australian TV tonight and next thursday night at 20:30 AEST:
http://www.abc.net.au/tv/guide/netw/...008T203000.htm http://www.abc.net.au/tv/guide/netw/...008T203000.htm For anyone who knows a bit about the story, it was quite a feat of endurance that the crews went through and the quality of the doco looks pretty good from the promo's I've seen so far. |
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#2 |
Weps
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So Germany gets to claim another story featuring their ships, running AWAY from the allies? Germany has never had paticularly good luck with its navy.
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#3 |
Eternal Patrol
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Poor Craddocks Fate, Sealed by an inevitible commitment to duty.
He knew very well his squadron couldnt hope to match Von Spee. thats why he tried to independently order Defense to join him. |
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#4 | |
Fleet Admiral
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#5 |
Eternal Patrol
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"I trust I shall not suffer the fate of poor Troubridge."
-Sir Christopher Craddock Craddock's fate was sealed earlier in the year when Admirals Milne and Troubridge were court-martialed for letting Goeben escape to Turkey. He knew that he had to stop Spee, and he knew he would probably fail. The best book I have read on the subject was Graf Spee's Raiders, by Keith Yates. http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_ss_gw...ee%27s+raiders In 2004 I did a series of articles on the naval and air war in 1914 for another forum. Lots of interesting stories there.
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#6 |
Eternal Patrol
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Von Spee's squadron certainly posed a legitimate and serious security threat
in the Pacific and the Indian Oceans. Its interesting to observe that He had succesfully executed the signal ruse at valparaiso. And could have escaped cleanly back to Germany if he had bypassed the falklands. That in and of itself wouldve been a tremendous victory, and wouldve further changed the balance in the north sea. it was nearer run than that of course, had all his ships arrived in formation he may have taken the british cruisers while they were still coaling and the advantage wouldve been his, his misfortune to misinterperet what the rising smoke actually meant, further, had he recognized Canopus for what it was his men might even have sailed home victors of sorts. just a speculation. M |
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#7 |
Eternal Patrol
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Von Spee represents a whole bunch of scenarios I've always wanted to game on the tabletop; and you mention several of the reasons why.
1) I wanted to game Coronel with Canopus present, just to find out if the speculations were true (and they probably were). Of course it would have to be realistic: For Spee the conditions are daylight, while for Craddock it's a night fight. 2) I wanted to game Coronel in broad daylight and calm seas, with and without Canopus. 3) What indeed if Spee had had the prescience to attack Beatty's battlecruisers while they were coaling. Of course if Spee had resisted the temptation to raid the Falklands he would have been sailing home safely to Germany while the British hunted fruitlessly in the Pacific. As for the "rising smoke", Spee also had the disadvantage of not being there himself - he only had the panicked report of his second-in-command after the latter had been shelled by Canopus. "Tripod masts! Heavy shells!"
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#8 | |
Eternal Patrol
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thats uhm Sturdee steve.:rotfl: |
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#9 |
Eternal Patrol
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Dang! Posting off the top of my head! Of course it was Doveton Sturdee. I'm not going to change it now, because that would be cheating.
Let's see if anybody else reads that far and corrects me without looking to see you've already done so. :rotfl:
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#11 |
CINC Pacific Fleet
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VCR set TarJak!
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#12 |
Eternal Patrol
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Well, when I take time to look things up it takes me forever and a day to actually write something. When I just jump in and start typing I'm just like the next...well, no, actually I'm much worse than the next guy.
:rotfl:
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#13 |
Stowaway
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I think that Doveton Sturdee has been badly treated by history and when I watched this doc (it showed here in Canada earlier this year), it did nothing to address that. Many of the perceptions and initial source material for Coronel and the Falklands comes from Churchill and he was in full CYA damage control mode to disguise how his micromanagement of Admiralty operations (as during the hunt for Goeben) contributed to the disaster. He then took full credit for the Falklands victory though and his antipathy to Sturdee is solidly in the public record.
One could argue that Sir Doveton gave the RN one of it's finest victories ever, destroying 80% of von Spee's force and his supply tail with trifling losses. He expended ammunition rather than lives, fought the battle exactly the way that Jacky Fisher envisioned Battlecruisers to be most effective and left his subordinates unrestricted by excessive signalling. Considering the adoration of David Beatty for the Dogger Bank and the opening phases of Jutland, Sturdee's victory is a model of machine age surface combat, one that he gets very little credit for in my opinion. Good Hunting |
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#14 |
Fleet Admiral
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So having seen this doco is it any good?
I've seen a few WWI docos screened recently and some have been very lacking in factual information and have either skimmed over or completely ignored some of the salient facts relating to the subject. Does this doco do that or are there clear biases in the commentary? |
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#15 |
Grey Wolf
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Actually its german made and was shown here about a year ago.
The acted scenes were shot on the Cruiser Aurora in St.Petersburg. Pretty average if you ask me, but nice that somebody covered that topic.
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