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CHAPTER
FIVE THE COLLAPSE
OF THE AUGUST OFFENSIVE – M30 AT SUVLA
AND HELLES “If fortune
had favoured Ian Hamilton at Suvla Bay, the war might have
ended at the Battle of the Somme in May, 1916.” Reginald,
Viscount Esher, “The Tragedy of Lord Kitchener.” “The one fatal
error was inertia. And inertia
prevailed.” Despatch of
General Sir Ian Hamilton, GCB, 11 December,
1915. The
success of the April landings had been threatened by lax security and General
Hamilton was determined that the August enterprise should not be imperilled in
the same way. Planning, therefore was
carried out in conditions of the greatest secrecy which were carried to absurd
lengths: General Stopford, for example was not given details of the operation
he was to command until 15 days before he led his troops into action and many
of the other senior officers, who were not briefed until 30 July, “never saw a
map of the Suvla area before landing”. (1) Keyes
and his naval planners worked under the same restrictions as their Army counterparts
and were under orders not to mention dates, times and places of landings, even
at staff conferences. Given this
situation, it is quite clear that Lt.Cdr.Lockyer and his Number One knew
nothing of the offensive, and M30’s
projected part in it, before the ship arrived at Mudros on 5 August; indeed, it
is quite possible that the crucial orders were issued in Port Kephalo on the
day the offensive began. Those
who planned the great combined operation of D Day, 1944, ensured that the men
of all arms were trained in their specialised roles and were well briefed
before battle. Looking back at the
Gallipoli campaign, it is hard to believe that M30 was sent into action as soon as she arrived in the war theatre,
her guns untried, her crew unpractised in the art of ship-to-shore gunnery and
after what must have been, at best, a perfunctory briefing if, in fact, there
was a briefing at all. Yet such was the
case and there is evidence that her experience was not unusual for many men,
ashore and afloat, fought at Suvla without the detailed orders they needed and,
indeed, any clear conception of the general plan: “No unit was given any idea of what was required of it; maps were not handed out until the evening of August 6 and no one except the generals and admirals was informed of the destinations.” (2) M30 left Kaphalo
at 11 p.m on 6 August in company with the sloop Jonquil which was carrying
General Stopford and Admiral Christian, the military and naval commanders of
the Suvla operation. During the short
passage of just over an hour Stopford entertained his fellow passengers with
one more repititious account of the difficulties he had to face: it is not
recorded that Christian said much in reply – difficulties of his own lay ahead. As
the 2 ships steamed onward through the warm, dark night (the moon did not rise
until 2.30 a.m), the thunder of the guns from Helles could be heard quite
clearly, while, away to starboard, bright flashes lighting up the sky marked
Anzac where Moslem and Christian had been killing each other with the utmost
ferocity for the past 5 hours. M30 and Jonquil had joined an armada
heading north eastward – horseboats, trawlers, drifters, excursion steamers,
ferry boats, even Thames barges – while far astern steamed the troopers
carrying the men of the Xth. Division from Mudros and Mityleni. The Suvla and Anzac Areas![]() Up
ahead, an hour before M30 left port,
the destroyers and motor lighters (3) which had sailed from Port Kephalo at
sundown, had separated as Suvla Bay opened before them, 7 ships leaving
Nibrunesi Point to Port as they headed for the shore and 3 destroyers steaming
into the heart of the Bay itself. At
B beach everything went well. The ships
crept to the shore in total silence then, as 7 anchors plunged into the sea: “Seven motor launches shot out and landed 3,500 men at one rush, the returned to their destroyers and landed another 3,710 men with equal celerity. Thus 7,210 men were landed dryshod in half and hour without a single casualty.” (4) The
lighters then made for the bulged cruisers Theseus
and Endymion which had followed the
destroyers in from sea carrying 1,000 men apiece. Soon the sloop Astor,
and 7 trawlers with their tows, appeared off the Point to make their
contribution to the expanding force ashore.
By midnight 10,000 men and 16 guns had been landed without loss of life. At A beach there was
disaster. The destroyers, confused in
the darkness or misled by their one written order which was “so vague as to be
incomprehensible” (5), anchored in the wrong order south of The Cut some 1,000
yards from the intended position. Worse
was to follow for the lighters went hard aground on their first trip 50 to 100
yds. from the shore, forcing the heavily laden men to wade ashore up to their
necks in water, harried by bullets and shrapnel, the white armlets they used
for indentification making them easy marks for the expert Turkish snipers. Each
motor lighter was accompanied by a picket boat, commanded by a midshipman, from
one of the immobilised capital ships whose function was to keep the clumsy
landing craft at rightangles to the beach while the soldiers scrambled
ashore. Midshipman Denham, of Agamemnon, wrote: “We got a grass line from our stern to the lighter’s stern and, by occasionally going ahead, kept her bows on to the beach. In doing this we got our bows on to the rifle fire, which went on for a couple of hours as strong as ever. - - - and so by the time the lighter was cleared it must have been well past midnight.” (6) Soon
the initial landing at A beach was falling well behind schedule and, although
strenous efforts were made to refloat the lighters or replace them with reserve
craft, the last men of the 34th. Brigade did not get ashore until 5
a.m. Meanwhile the Bay was filling with
troopers and storeship bringing men and supplies for the dawn attack. The
men of the 32nd. and 33rd. Brigades at B beach started
well, taking Lala Baba at bayonet point and at heavy cost, but they had been on
their feet for 17 hours and without effective leadership from General
Hammersley, who was nursing his phlebitis, the attack lost momentum. The
34th. Brigarde, at A beach, had been told that their first
objective, Hill 10, lay 700 yds. straight inland from their landing point but,
having been put ashore at the wrong place, they found it impossible to locate
the small hillock in the impenetrable darkness: “General
Sitwell when he landed seized a sand dune in front of him, and believing it to
be Hill 10, seems to have waited for the 32nd. Brigade from
Nibrunesi to join up.” (7) Nevertheless,
despite the confusion and Sitwell’s lack of initiative, one dauntless battalion
of the Manchester Regiment, without waiting for further orders, set off
diagonally across the Plain and established themselves on a high point of the
frearsome Kiretch Tepe ridge. Sergeant
Hargreave, RAMC, of the Mudros contingent of the Xth. Division, remembered the
astounding dawn of 7 August all his life, writing: “The clouds changed in colour second by second from shell pink, strawberry and blush rose to rippling streamers of cochineal, azalea, champagne – rhubarb, and fuschia until the whole sky – diarama melted into a cerulean blue overhead.” (8) However
Admiral de Robeck and Commodore Keyes, who arrived in Suvla Bay at dawn in the
cruiser Chatham, spent little time
admiring the beauties of nature. They
could see that there were enough landing craft gathered together to carry the
Mityleni contingent ashore in one lift, but that they were lying idle alongside
the transports. The exasperated CinC
asked Christian in Jonquil why there
was a delay and was told that A beach was now considered “impracticable” and
that orders were being given for the men from Mityleni to be landed at B and C
beaches instead. Keyes
realised immediately that the new orders would condemn the troops concerned to a
3 mile march under fire along the sea shore before they could reach their
objective, the Kiretch Tepe, and he set off immediately, in his usual energetic
way, to find an alternative landing point within the Bay – a task that
Christian should have taken in hand long since. Almost at once Keyes found 2 suitable, if constricted, coves
(afterwards known as A East and West) near Suvla Point at the foot of the
Kiretch Tepe and came racing back with the news to Jonquil. Stopford and
Christian then conferred, finally deciding that it was too late to countermand
the orders given to the troops from Mityleni to land at B and C beaches, but
agreeing that the force from Mudros should land at the coves discovered by
Keyes. Thus the Xth. Division was split
in two, “its organisation was broken up and confusion set in”. (9) At
day break, or soon afterwards, the ships of the 3rd.Squadron
stationed in Suvla Bay opened fire on Chocolate and W Hills in support of the
troops who, without firm leadership or clear orders, were spread out across the
Plain. But relief was to come for the
heroic Manchesters, still isolated on their hilltop, for, as the sun rose, the
4” gun of Foxhound and the 2 6” guns
of M30 spoke in their defence. There is difficulty in following M30’s exact movements on this day for
her log merely states that she was on her “Cruising Station off the
Dardanelles”, a statement which suggests a mobile rather than a static role,
and, gathering together scraps of evidence from other sources, it is possible
to propose, with some confidence, that she was standing well out into the Gulf
of Saros, to obtain the necessary elevation for her guns (the Kiretch Tepe
rises from 400’ to 660’ at the highest point), firing on a diagonal line at
groups of Turkish soldiers as they appeared and disappeared on the skyline, the
usual range being given as 12,000 yds. (6 sea miles). As the morning wore on the Manchesters were replaced by men of
the Munster Regiment, who had landed on A West and East, led by an aggrieved
General Mahon who had seen the major part of the division he had trained split
up and assigned to other commanders. Foxhound and M30 kept up a spasmodic cannonade throughout the day so that the
Official History, “Naval Operations”, was able to record that, with these 2
ships “searching the ground ahead - - - General Mahon was able to push along
the ridge until the beach was practically safe.” (10) What this statement conceals, of course, is that the original
plan for 7 August envisaged that, by the end of the day, not only would the
Suvla beacheads be secure but that the whole of the Anafarta and Kiretch Tepe
ridges would be in Allied hands.
Unfortunately, by the time the sun went down, no British soldier had set
foot on the Anafarta and our troopson the Kiretch Tepe, fighting with bravery
in fierce heat against well trained opponents occupying ideal defensive
positions, had been able to advance only 2 miles along the ridge. During
her first day in action M30 fired 108
6” shells (53 of them filled with the new Lyddite explosive) but her officers
and men found that they were handicapped in providing accurate support for the
infantrymen fighting on the hilltops by the inbuilt characteristics of the
guns, determined by pre-war naval policy, with which their ship was equipped. Ignoring
the lessons of the Napoleonic and Crimean Wars, the Royal Navy, as it moved
into 20th. Century, decided to concentrate all available resources
on developing the accuracy of “direct fire” (at targets visible from the firing
position) leaving the intricacies of controlling “indirect fire” (at targets out of sight from the firing
point) to the Royal Artillery.
Naturally, the targets which the Navy intended to overwhelm with
accurate direct fire were to be enemy ships, probably moving at high speed, so
that the guns supplied to the Fleet of 1914 all shared a common quality in that
they fired a shell at a high velocity on a flat trajectory. Unhappily, the guns best suited for shore bombardment
and indirect fire needed exactly the opposite qualities to those used by the
Navy, for what was required was a weapon which fired a shell of low velocity on
a high trajectory, i.e. a howitzer.
Winston Churchill, with his usual military prescience, had suggested
that the monitors should be equipped with such guns but, unusually, his idea
was ignored, either because of the technical difficulties involved (11) or
because of the general shortage of guns of all calibres in 1915. M30’s
guns had been despatched to Harland and Wolff from the Navy’s reserve stock and
were brought into action for the first time in circumstances which suited them
not at all, firing at targets high above them moving in the “broken ground” of
the spiky Kiretch Tepe – a situation which cried out for the plunging fire of
the howitzer. M30’s gun crews, like those of other ships of the Eastern
Mediterranean Squadron, cut the muzzle velocity of their weapons by reducing
the power of the cordite propellant charge, but this was a tactic which
produced difficulties of its own and which in any case, was only a partial
solution to what was, basically, an insoluble problem. A Royal Naval Air Service observer summed up
the situation in simple words: “The target was very often behind a range of hills and the Navy aren’t very good at that. You see you don’t have hills in the sea. You see your target, there’s nothing in the way, you just fire at it. With us sometimes you would report that the shell was a few yards short and then the next shell was a few miles over because it just cleared the top of the hill and it was a long time before the shell came down. They hadn’t anything like a howitzer. All the naval guns had much too flat a trajectory for that sort of work.” (12) Although
Chief Gunner Martin had drilled his gun crews assiduously during the outward
voyage in the best gunnery school manner, the guns themselves had not been
fired since the trials in Belfast Lough when proof shells had tested the
reliability of the breech mechanisms and little else. Out in the Gulf of Saros M30
rolled and yawned in her usual way and, also, as Lt.Cdr.Lockyer complained,
drifted rapidly down to leeward, away from the firing position, in the lightest
of breezes, rarely providing the stable platform which allowed the gun aimers
and layers to keep their sights firmly fixed on the point of aim. Experience, and the adoption of various
ploys to counteract the waywardness of the ship, brought M30’s gunnery to a high standard later but on her first outing it
is doubtful whether her fire was accurate, but this is not to say that it
wasn’t effective. It was the great
Napoleon who believed that the importance of the “moral to the material” stood
in the ration of 3 to 1, and the sight and sound of M30’s 6” shells falling in the enemy territory ahead of them
encouraged the infantrymen fighting their way along the Kiretch Tepe, while the
Turks, believing their right flank to be anchored impregnably on the steep
cliffs which swept precipitously down to the Gulf, found their positions
enfiladed from the sea. The road taken by Turkish reinforcements for Suvla![]() As
darkness fell on 7 August, M30
returned to her allotted station and the dawn of a new day found her “Cruising
slowly in Ejelmer Bay”. Soon the 6 pdr.
was engaging targets on the shoreline at 500 to 1,000 yds. range (it was
believed that the enemy had an ammunition dump hidden somewhere on the beach)
firing 22 rounds in all. The 6” guns
fired for 33 minutes in the morning, commencing at 10.27 a.m, and for 80
minutes in the afternoon from 5.15 p.m onwards, the target for 41 shells,
“spotted by SS Manica”, being given in the log as the village of Turshun Keui
some 4 miles inland down a river valley.
“Spotting” – the observation of the fall of shot so that corrections can
be made to range or deflection – was not an easy matter for M30 without assistance from the shore or
from the air, as her spotting position on the bridge was only 20’ above the
level of the guns. On this day,
however, the ship’s gunners had assistance from an experienced observer (Manica had been involved in the
Gallipoli campaign since 9 April ), perched high above them in the balloon’s
basket, passing telephone messages down to the deck of his parent ship from
when they were transmitted to M30 by
flag or light – a process slow but sure in good weather. As
has been mentioned, the Official History, “Naval Operations”, does not say why M30, Manica
and Foxhound were ordered to Ejelmer
Bay (as it happened the destroyer remained in the Gulf of Saros, stationed off
Suvla Point) nor does it describe or explain the monitor’s bombardment of
Turshun Keui, a village far from the fighting front. However, evidence from other sources suggests that M30 and Manica, operating in isolation, could potentially, have played an
important part in the struggle for the dominating Anafarta ridge and hence, for
the possession of the whole Suvla region. General
Liman von Sanders, the German commander of the Turkish Vth. Army, knew that a
fresh Allied offensive was to be launched in August, 1915, but, like the
competent soldier he was, he kept his reserves well back until his enemy’s
intentions were clearly revealed. On
learning of the landings in Suvla Bay, von Sanders sent reinforcements marching
hotfoot from Bulair, some 35 miles to the north, along a road which crosses the
head of the peninsula to reach the Sea of Marmora at the town of Gallipoli
where it follows the shoreline for a short distance before snaking back to
Turshun Keui where it ends. Tracks from
the village lead up the reverse slopes of the Anafarta ridge to the summit at
Tekke Tepe which, unoccupied when the Allied landings were made, should have
been the primary objective, as General Hamilton observed in his diary. The
advance party of the Turkish reinforcing detachment arrived in Turshun Keui in
the morning of 8 August (did their presence provoke M30’s first bombardment ?)
to be met by von Sanders who, enquiring anxiously about the progress of the
main force, was told that it was still marching, footsore and weary, many miles
to the north. The greater part of the
relieving army approached Turshun Keui in the afternoon (M30’s 2nd.
bombardment was delivered at about this time) but camped outside the village,
passing through in the dark of the night to climb the Anafarta and reach the
summit a short time before the arrival of a small party of the East Yorkshires,
which was annihilated. The subsequent
devastating Turkish dawn attack swept British troops back down to the Plain,
thus extinguishing any hope of a successful conclusion to the Suvla operations. Vice
Admiral de Robeck’s forceful Chief of Staff, Commodore Keyes, obviously knew
something of the route the Turkish reinforcements would take for he arranged
for 2 submarines, E11 (1 12pdr.) and E14 (1 6pdr.) to rendezvous off the town
of Gallipoli to shell the enemy soldiers as they marched down the shoreside
road. The submarines, submerging and
re-surfacing repeatedly, caused temporary confusion in the Turkish ranks until
they were driven off by a concentration of field pieces. Keyes writes that he stationed 2 vessels in
the Gulf of Saros in case the enemy reinforcements “used the old road” (13) but
he does not name the ships nor give any other details about their
deployment. Keyes and other
commentators praise the courageous efforts of the submarines but ignore the
potentially more damaging, if unsuccessful, attempts at interception made by M30 and her attendant balloon ship. Manica’s log cannot
be found, but it seems that she stayed in Ejelmer Bay for another 2 days
although her balloon remained on deck,
probably because of the attentions of a German aircraft which made repeated
visits, dropping bombs on each occasion despite being engaged by M30’s 6pdr. HA weapon. The monitor’s
main armament spoke again on 10 August, the forward gun being fired for an hour
in the morning and the after gun for a similiar period in the afternoon. The log does not specify a target but, as
the range is given as 4 ½ miles, it is likely that Turshun Keui was bombarded
once again in an attempt to close the stable door after the horse had bolted. By
11 August M30 was short of fuel and
had consumed over half of her outfit of 6” shells so that she returned to
Kephalo to top up supplies. But this
was only a fleeting visit for 24 hours later she was at sea again, having been
ordered to stand off the left flank of the troops fighting on the Helles front. It
was intended that the attack delivered at the southern tip of the Gallipoli
peninsula, which opened the August offensive, should be purely diversionary but
the local commanders at Helles, as at Suvla, were given a dangerous freedom to
develop their own ideas and the most influential man at VIII Corps HQ, the
absurdly optimistic Chief of Staff, Brigadier General Street, believed that he
had been presented with an opportunity to capture Krithia and, indeed, to
overrun Achi Baba itself, that lowering hill which had already claimed so many
lives. Street’s optimism was fed by the
quiescence of the Turks on his front at this time although, in fact, they were
conserving ammunition to meet the assault that they were sure was soon to
come. Thus, when the soldiers of the 88th.
Brigade of the 29th Division leapt from their trenches on 6 August they
met shattering fire from enemy artillery, and by nightfall 2,000 of the 3,000
men who had set out so bravely were casualties. Despite this setback another attack was mounted on the following
morning with equally dismal results.
Within 2 days Street’s grandiose scheme had been overthrown and had
failed, even as a holding operation, for the Turkish reserves held at Helles
were quickly transferred to meet the real threat at Anzac. When
M30 arrived on the scene on 12
August, the battle had been lost but fighting continued and the Turkish guns
mounted on the commanding slopes of Achi Baba still posed a threat to the
Allied positions. The monitor’s targets
were “S and D” (?) batteries, accordingly to the log, and if these were the
mobile howitzers which were the bane of the Army and the Navy then they were
elusive: while weapons like these
dominated the Straits the defending minefields could not be swept and passage
upstream was denied to our ships – the story of the Gallipoli crusade in a
nutshell. M30 continued her
shelling of Achi Baba for another day, possibly in company with Abercrombie (2 14”guns), but her hull
was affected by the recurring blast and recoil of her 6” guns and she had to
head for port, first for Kephalo and then to Mudros where she awaited her turn
to go alongside the grossly overworked repair ship Reliance for the decks to be
strengthened. There was a cheerful
reunion with chummy ship M31, which
was also being modified by the skilled artificers of Reliance at this time in
order to counter a weakness which afflicted all the monitors of the M29 class and which Rear Admiral
Nicholson, of the 2nd Squadron, attributed to the speed with which
the ships had been built, although even a layman, if gifted with hindsight,
might suspect that, rushed construction or not, difficulties would arise when
such powerful guns were merely bolted to so frail a hull. While under repair M30 took onboard a few members of the Royal Marine Light Infantry
from the cruiser Europa who would help to man the 6pdr. and the Maxims. (14). The
repairs took a month to complete so that it was not until the 16 September that
M30 left Mudros and the Gallipoli peninsula behind her to sail for the Greek
island of Mityleni and join the force blockading part of the coast of Asia
Minor which was known as “The Smyrna Patrol.”
The monitor’s intervention in an ill starred campaign had been of short
duration and of neglible influence upon the outcome but her guns had been
bloodied while she was learning her trade and she was a representative of a
class of vessel which had arrived in the Dardanelles at “our moment of greatest need”, as an officer of one of the immobilised battleships commented. (15) Notes 1.
Rhodes James. “Gallipoli” 2.
Fuller. “The Decisive Battles of the Western World.” 3.
These motor lighters, known as “beetles”, were built by
Fisher for his Baltic operation. Amazingly some of them turned up in WW2 during
Wavell’s desert offensive. 4.
Keyes. “Naval
Memoirs.” 5.
Rhodes James. “Gallipoli.” 6.
Denham. “Dardanelles – A Midshipman’s Diary.” 7.
Corbett. “Naval Operations”, Vol.3 8.
Hargrave. “The Suvla
Bay Landing.” 9.
Fuller. “The
Decisive Battles of the Western World.” 10.
Corbett. “Naval Operations”, Vol.3 11.
The armament of the 3 monitors built by Vickers for Brazil
included howitzers and Humber used hers to some effect in the Gallipoli
campaign. 12.
King. “Royal Naval Air Service, 1912 – 1918.” 13.
Keyes. “Naval Memoirs.” 14.
From 1862 until 1923 the Royal Marines were divided into 2
distinctive corps – the Royal Marine Light Infantry (known as “Red Marines” from
the colour of their uniforms) who manned light guns and formed landing parties,
and the Royal Marine Artillery (“Blue Marines”) who fought heavy guns in
capital ships. It was not unusual for
detachments of the RMLI to be drafted from underworked capital ships to smaller
vessels during the Gallipoli campaign. 15.
Denham. “Dardanelles
– A Midshipman’s Diary.” |
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