Some 105 years ago, 18 July 1921, off the Virginia Capes
Successive leisurely flights of land-based Army and Navy bombers dropped an assortment of bombs over the moored and abandoned 6,600-ton German Wiesbaden-class scout cruiser SMS Frankfurt, formerly of the Kaiser’s High Seas Fleet, and (eventually) sank same.
To help with aimpoints, she even conveniently had two round targets painted on her deck, fore and aft.
From the Alfred A. Cunningham Collection (COLL/3034) at the Archives Branch, Marine Corps History Division
Frankfurt, commissioned in October 1915, survived Jutland specifically, the Great War as a whole, and even scuttling at Scapa Flow.
She was hard to kill.
The German Wiesbaden-class scout cruiser SMS Frankfurt, late 1918, Scapa Flow. IWM (Q 64195)
Ceded to the U.S. as a war prize on 11 March 1920 in England, commissioned there on 4 June as USS Frankfurt, she was towed to the East Coast and disposed of via SINKEX.
Capable of over 27 knots on a 31,000shp plant, she was built for speed, not to take punishment. Her armor scheme only included a 2.4-inch belt and deck coverage over her vitals (magazines and fire/engine rooms), and 3.9 inches on the conning tower.
Moored about 50 miles, 83 degrees true, off the Virginia Capes, the bombing took place from 0912 that morning until 1651 that afternoon.
A total of 74 bombs, a mix of 250, 500, 520, and 600-pounders, were dropped in sticks by the Navy and singly by the Army, with only two direct hits and 10 very near misses (counted as hits). She settled on the bottom 28 minutes after the final drop. The average passing speed for the lumbering bombers was about 85 knots.
The tests of the Frankfurt began with an attack by Navy planes carrying 250-pound bombs. Twenty-four of them were dropped, scoring five direct hits. This was followed by an attack by Army planes which dropped twenty-nine 500-pound bombs, registering two hits. Navy planes then dropped seven 520-pound bombs, of which three were hits. The final attack, with fourteen 600-pound Army bombs, scoring two hits, resulted in sinking the vessel.
It would be fair to conclude, then, that attacks upon light cruisers should be with bombs of 500 pounds or heavier. Of the Navy bombs scoring hits, none of the 250-pound bombs detonated, and one of the 550-pound bombs failed. All Army bombs detonated.
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NH 44015
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The final dive. NH 44016
Frankfurt now rests in about 400 feet of water in the Southern Drill Grounds. 70 miles off the Virginia Capes, and has been extensively surveyed by NOAA.
Check out this recent test by the Swedish Navy of the BAE Bofors 57mm Mk3 naval gun system (the Mk 110 in the U.S. Navy), engaging aerial and surface drone targets during live-fire counter-drone exercises aboard the Göteborg-class corvette HMSwS Sundsvall (K24), based at Berga naval base and part of the 4th Naval Warfare Flotilla.
The mount is using Bofors’ 6-mode programmable 3P (Pre-fragmented, Programmable, Proximity- fused) ammunition, of which both the Swedish and Finnish fleets agreed to purchase $171 million worth of shells.
Of interest, the USN currently fields at least 50 of these mounts with more on the way, used on both classes of LCS, the new FFG, the planned FF, and the most modern blue water USCG cutters. Word came from all the counter-drone stuff off the Bab
The USN uses the mount with the Bofors 6-mode 3P (type classified as the 57mm Mk 295 Mod 0) and spent $28 million in 2019-20 for 1,000 of the “golden bullet” L3 High Explosive-4 Bolt Guided (HE-4G) Cartridge (type classified as the Mk 332), which does all sorts of gee-whiz stuff.
Plus, the Navy just dropped another $21 million to Nammo for more HE-PD rounds for the Mk 110 as well.
Contract awarded 25 June 2026:
Nammo Perry Inc., Perry, Florida, is awarded a $21,500,000 modification to a previously awarded, indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract (N0017423D0005) to increase the ceiling for 57-mm high explosive- point detonating cartridges, used in the MK110 Gun Weapon System. Work will be performed in Perry, Florida, and is expected to be completed by September 2028. No funding will be obligated at the time of award. The Navy Surface Warfare Center Indian Head Division, Indian Head, Maryland, is the contracting activity.
With the Navy being patrol-craft-poor during OIF in the summer of 2002, Big Blue asked its poor uncle, the USCG, to temporarily shift a few 110-foot Island-class patrol boats to CENTCOM control in Bahrain.
Soon after, four East Coast-based Islands, USCGC  Adak, Aquidneck, Baranof, and Wrangell, were carried via heavy lift vessel to the Persian Gulf and eventually became Patrol Forces Southwest Asia (PATFORSWA) while four others, USCGC Bainbridge Island, Grand Isle, Knight Island, and Pea Island, were shifted to the Mediterranean as PATFORMED.
While the Med mission evaporated by 2004 due to Turkey not wanting to help support OIF and was stood down, those four cutters sent TDY to PATFORSWA never saw the U.S. again and were decommissioned there decades later, the force augmented to a full six-pack with the addition of Island-class sisters, USCGC Maui and Monomoy.
Persian Gulf (April 27, 2005) – Coast Guardsmen aboard U.S Coast Guard Cutter Monomoy (WPB 1326) wave good-bye to the guided missile cruiser USS Antietam (CG 74) after the first underway fuel replenishment (UNREP) between a U.S. Navy cruiser and a U.S. Coast Guard Cutter. Antietam completed fuel replenishment with the Monomoy in about two hours and saved the 110-foot patrol boat a four-hour trip to the nearest refueling station. Antietam and Monomoy are conducting maritime security operations (MSO) in the Persian Gulf as part of Commander, Task Force Five Eight CTF-58). U.S. Navy photo by Journalist Seaman Joseph Ebalo (RELEASED)
The force was recently refreshed with six brand-new 154-foot Sentinel-class cutters: USCGC Charles Moulthrope, Robert Goldman, Glen Harris, Emlen Tunnell, John Scheuerman, and Clarence Sutphin Jr arriving, and the old Islands disposed of in-theatre.
220822-A-KS490-1182 STRAIT OF HORMUZ (Aug. 22, 2022) From the left, U.S. Coast Guard fast response cutters USCGC Glen Harris (WPC 1144), USCGC John Scheuerman (WPC 1146), USCGC Emlen Tunnell (WPC 1145) and USCGC Clarence Sutphin Jr. (WPC 1147) transit the Strait of Hormuz, Aug. 22. The cutters are forward-deployed to U.S. 5th Fleet to help ensure maritime security and stability across the Middle East. (U.S. Army photo by Spc. Noah Martin)
Now, with the NWU-camo wearing 300-member force (six cutters, an extra crew, and 150 shoreside personnel) pulled out of the Gulf ever since February, as the 154s aren’t really built to operate against non-stop drone attacks, it seems the Navy finally threw in the towel on PATFORSWA’s mission and is shifting them to where they can win more hearts and minds, the Western Pacific.
The United States Coast Guard transitioned its Expeditionary Cutter Squadron (ECS), historically called Patrol Forces Southwest Asia (PATFORSWA), to operate in the Western Pacific conducting maritime security operations and cooperative maritime activities with allies and partner nations in the region, in response to national security requirements.
The Expeditionary Cutter Squadron will be capable of performing missions as part of the U.S. Joint Force. The squadron is currently operating in the U.S. Pacific Command area of operations to protect the homeland and maritime approaches, including Guam and the Pacific Islands.
For more than 20 years, the Coast Guard has provided forward-deployed capabilities to support U.S. Central Command and U.S. Naval Forces Central Command from Bahrain. The unit has successfully executed maritime security, maritime interdiction, and maritime domain awareness missions throughout the Middle East.
“Coast Guard forces have always adapted to meet urgent national needs,” said Adm. Kevin Lunday, Commandant of the Coast Guard. “The Expeditionary Cutter Squadron enhances the Coast Guard’s ability to deploy our forces in support of Combatant Commanders and national security objectives. Our expeditionary cutter forces provide Combatant Commands with uniquely capable maritime assets, leveraging the Coast Guard’s military and law enforcement authorities to advance U.S. national security objectives in the Western Pacific and Western Hemisphere.”
Expeditionary Cutter Squadron forces will integrate with U.S. Combatant Commands to conduct exercises and maritime cooperative activities that enhance interoperability, strengthen strategic partnerships, and advance shared security objectives throughout the region.  The transition of the Expeditionary Cutter Squadron reflects the Coast Guard’s intent to provide agile, capable, and responsive maritime forces. These forces will rapidly support national security objectives across a range of operational theaters while leveraging the Service’s unique authorities.
This explains open-source images of the entire PATFORSWA force seen shipping past Singapore in March.
WarshipCam -Official, March 29 at 4:49 PM. All six Bahrain-based USCG Sentinel-class cutters eastbound in the Singapore Straits – USCGC Charles Moulthrope (WPC-1141), USCGC Robert Goldman (WPC-1142), USCGC Glen Harris (WPC-1144), USCGC Emlen Tunnell (WPC-1145), USCGC John Scheuerman (WPC-1146) & USCGC Clarence Sutphin Jr. (WPC-1147) – March 2026 SRC: X-@StraitsSights
As well as Tunnnell and Moulthrope popping up in the Philippines a couple of weeks ago exercising with the locals in the South China Sea and during Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training (CARAT) in Thailand last week.
Philippine Coast Guard Teresa Magbanua-class multi-role response vessel BRP Melchora Aquino (MMRV 9702) and U.S. Coast Guard Sentinel-class Fast Response Cutter USCGC Charles Moulthrope (WPC 1141) sail in formation during part of the Maritime Cooperative Activity (MCA) in the Philippines’ Exclusive Economic Zone, June 27, 2026. The U.S. Navy routinely operates with the Armed Forces of the Philippines and partners and allies through MCAs to continually develop, exercise, and enhance multi-domain tactical interoperability to uphold peace and security in the region. (Courtesy photo by U.S. Coast Guard)
Of note, the service already has three 154s currently based in Guam, replacing two aging Island-class WPBs. They have been conducting some seriously long-legged (like 5,380nm) patrols as of late.
So does this mean there will be nine 154s in Guam?
Likely not, but you could see these new-to-the-WestPac boats soon spread out across allied Operation Blue Pacific nation partners that have little-to-no maritime forces, such as the Cook Islands, the Federated States of Micronesia, Fiji, Kiribati, Nauru, Palau, Papua New Guinea, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, Samoa, Tonga, Tuvalu, and Vanuatu– most of which have very real problems with incroachng Chinese influence, smuggling and illegal fising.
Winning hearts and minds in the WestPac littoral via white hulls with racing stripes.
With the recent visit to Baltimore, New York, and Boston, and victory in the Five Sisters Race off Cape Cod by the German training barque SSS Gorch Fock, repeating the windjammer’s Bicentennial Op Sail ’76 win, we would be remiss not to mention another German training ship that came by to bask in the 4th of July events back in ’86.
Here we see the training cruiser Deutschland (A 59) of the then-West German Navy passing during the International Naval Review celebrating the centennial of the Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor on 4 July 1986.
Note the myriad of small boat traffic! The USCG would never allow that today. CWO3 Montie Talbert III, DN-ST-87-02482, National Archives Identifier 6421663.
And another shot from the same day.
Crew members man the rail aboard the training cruiser (Ausbildungskreuzer) Deutschland (A 59) during the International Naval Review in New York. Photographed by Emmet Francois, DN-ST-87-01180. National Archives Identifier 6421149
The schulschiff, or schoolship, Deutschland (A59) was commonly referred to by West Germany’s Bundesmarine as a “training cruiser” throughout her 24-year Cold War-era career.
Just 5,700 tons at the max, she wasn’t much of a “cruiser” when compared to contemporary Atomic-era designs (she was ordered in 1958). The 453-foot vessel had no armor, was capable of just 22 knots at maximum speed, and her main battery consisted of four 4″/55 guns, making her more of a very slow gun-armed destroyer.
Deutschland (A59). Via 1967 Jane’s
Nonetheless, FGS Deutschland was the fifth “Deutschland” in 80 years of German naval history, following in the footsteps of a London-built central battery ironclad of the 1870s, a pre-dreadnought-era battlewagon, and the well-known WWII “pocket battleship.”
Unlike her forerunners, FGS Deutschland was a happy ship, carrying out three-month training cruises each summer for up to 250 naval cadets and chief petty officers, never seeing combat.
Check out this great 10-minute Cold War German film, covering a summer “School at Sea” during her 1984 cruise.
Some 85 years ago, official period caption: “An air infantry mortar squadron loads a Navy Consolidated PBY-5 Catalina patrol bombing plane, 18 March 1941.”
Via the National Museum of the U.S. Navy, 80-G-2156
Now, fast forward to this week, and news comes that a Hong Kong company intends to operate the turboprop-powered Catalina IIs with Pan American World Airways’ “Winged Globe” logo.
Catalina Aircraft Trust, the Florida holder of the original Catalina amphibious flying boat’s type certificate, has taken another step toward bringing a modernised turboprop-powered variant of the aircraft to market.
The company has secured a letter of intent from Hong Kong-based Pan American Airways System covering purchases of up to 46 of the planned NGAA “Next Generation Amphibious Aircraft” Catalina II.
Catalina Aircraft is now evaluating engines, avionics and other systems needed to develop the aircraft, which founder and president Lawrence Reece notes will be the only Western-certificated transport-category flying boat.
He envisions demand for up to 600 Catalina IIs of several configurations.
Of course, with Hong Kong officially part of Red China, whether they want to be or not, the prospect that these 46 shiny new flying boats could be used to shuttle around small detachments of PLAN naval infantry around the Nine-Dash Line is real.
If you enjoy my always ad-free Warship Wednesday content, you can support it by buying me a cup of joe at https://buymeacoffee.com/lsozi As Henk says: “Warship Coffee – no sugar, just a pinch of salt!”
Warship Wednesday 15 July 2026: El Abuelo
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Above we see the Spanish battleship (acorazado) España underway late in her career, circa 1931, firing a salute. Commissioned under a different name, she was the site of a naval mutiny and dockyard siege some 90 years ago this week that would lead to her eventual demise and throw her country into a very dark half-century.
Spanish 20th Century Battleship Needs
The Real Armada had its heart torn out during the war (el Desastre) with America in 1898, with 11 of its fairly modern cruisers (eight protected and three armored) sunk, captured, or otherwise lost in combat operations between Manila and Santiago. The fact was that Madrid had deployed the bulk of its first-class warships overseas to protect its colonies, and both the territories and the vessels were lost.
By 1900, the main line of the Spanish Navy consisted of just five steel-hulled vessels they rated as “battleships.” Of those five, the largest and most formidable was the circa 1887 French-built Pelayo (9,900 tons/330 feet oal, 2×12.6″, 2×11″, 16 knots), which was the only vessel in the Spanish fleet with 12-inch guns, albeit stubby low-angle 12″/35 M1880 Canet models.
German U-boat coming alongside Spanish battleship Pelayo after surrender on Dec 20 1918
The newest of the five were the sisters Cardennal Cisneros,Cataluña, and Princesa de Asturias, which had been built slowly in Spain (too slow to take part in the war of 1898) and, while some 7,000 tons and capable of 20 knots on a 14,800 hp plant, their two-gun 9.4-inch main battery and 5.5-inch secondary made them more underpowered armored cruisers than battleships.
The same can be said of the one-off 9,000-ton Emperador Carlos V, which, while she could make 19 knots and carried a pair of 11-inch guns balanced by eight 5.5-inchers, only had a two-inch armor belt, which again left her as more an armored cruiser, and a slow one at that.
The state of the once proud fleet had become something of a joke by 1904.
By 1906, with HMS Dreadnought changing the battleship game forever, Spain knew it needed something more, both to display enough muscle to keep its African colonies (Guinea, Rio de Oro, Spanish Morocco, etc.), and contribute something to the growing web of European military alliances. Speaking to the latter, the Pact of Cartagena in May 1907, co-signed with Britain and France, set the stage for Madrid to join its newfound partners in a future theoretical conflict with Germany, Italy, and Austro-Hungary.
And that meant at least a few new battleships.
Which brings us to…
The World’s Tiniest Dreadnoughts
ADM Ferrándiz’s Naval Plan of 1907 sought to build a thoroughly modern fleet that the country could afford, centered on a squadron of new battleships, supported by three new destroyers, 22 torpedo boats, four gunboats, and several auxiliary vessels
It was decided early on that the three new battleships would be constructed domestically by the newly-formed Sociedad Española de Construcción Naval (SECN) in Ferrol, which was in turn majority-owned by the British shipbuilding firms of Vickers, Armstrong Whitworth, and John Brown & Company, with a Garantia Tecnica Comite made up of British executives drawn from said companies.
This led to a very, well, English design, only abbreviated for cost.
Line drawing of Spanish battleship España from her launching book
The overall length was but 459 feet with a 78-foot beam and 26-foot draft. Normal standard displacement was 15,452 tons (16,400 full). While the smallest on record for completed dreadnoughts, not counting such creatures as the WWII-era German “pocket battleships,” they still weren’t as small as one would think.
Their dimensions put the new Spanish ships only about 70 feet shorter and 3,000 tons lighter than HMS Dreadnought herself (18,410 tons std, 527 feet oal), while the American South Carolina-class battleships were on a slightly shorter hull than the Spanish (452 feet oal), just with heavier armor and guns putting them in the 17,900 ton class when fully loaded.
The Spanish ships also compared decently to the period German Nassau-class dreadnoughts (18.700 tons, 479 feet oal) and the Austrian Tegetthoff-class (20,000 tons, 498 feet oal). All ships mentioned in this paragraph carried 11- or 12-inch main guns.
12″/50 Spanish naval gun at Vickers Eskmeals Gun Range
Spanish Vickers 12inch 50 España Twin Mounting Layout. Sketch Courtesy of Javier Villarroya del Real, via NNavweaps
Espana’s guns installed
305mm guns Spanish battleship España crew
Espana gunnery tests, June 1914
Espana gunnery tests, June 1914
Espana gunnery tests, June 1914
While decent in performance (they could fire an 850-pound AP shell to 20,000 yards with a rate of fire of 1.5 rounds per minute, per gun), the arrangement allowed six guns firing forward and over the stern (in certain narrow angles) but effectively also limited the broadside to six guns due to likely damage from cross-decked turrets. Magazines were shallow, and while most battleships of the era packed at least 100 shells per gun in the main battery, the Spanish ships could carry only 80.
Their secondary armament consisted of 20 4″/50 Vickers E series guns with a firing angle of 120 degrees, carried ten per broadside. However, they were protected in casemate positions that were too close to the waterline to be useful in even a moderate sea state.
Defense against torpedoes and torpedo boats came from Bullivant series metal nets carried on 20 40-foot outrigger booms. Boats coming close enough would have to face four Vickers 47mm 3-pounder QF mounts, while two 7mm Maxim machine guns were mounted on the bridge wings. For a landing party, she could send a company-sized force of light infantry ashore armed with rifles, pistols, and two light guns.
Their Vickers and Armstrong-supplied Krupp Cemented steel armor plan ranged from an 8-inch belt amidships (thinning to just 3 inches at the bow) with 8 inches over the gun houses (6 inches at the barbettes), 6 inches over the casemates, and a 10-inch conning tower.
It doesn’t take a naval scholar to see this is more akin to what you would see on a big cruiser than a dreadnought, and was closer to that seen on the lightly armored British Invincible-class battlecruisers, which carried a 6-inch belt, 7 over the turrets, and 10 in the conning tower. However, while Invincible at least had 2.5-inch torpedo bulkheads under the waterline, the Spanish vessels had no such underwater protection, making do with just 1.5 inches of HT screens over 12 of her 16 sections.
Spanish Espana class battleships, Janes 1921
When it comes to manning, during peacetime, the ships could make do with a 650-700 man crew, growing to 854 on mobilization. This is a bit larger than on HMS Dreadnought (810 wartime) and on par with USS South Carolina (869), with the Spanish ships universally noted as being cramped, especially so in the enlisted berthing as space had been carved out for carried sumptuous (often unoccupied) suites for admirals.
The engineering plant consisted of a dozen coal-fired Yarrow pattern boilers built domestically under license by Maquinista Terrestre y MarĂtima (MTM) in Barcelona, which had made the boilers and machinery for the cruiser Extremadura in 1902 as well as for the cruiser Lepanto before that and the engines for the Infanta MarĂa Teresa class armored cruisers in the 1890s. Each ship would use four Parsons turbines built at Ferrol by SECN to generate 15,500shp for 19.5 knots. Using forced draft and oil-sprayed coal to reach full power of 21,582 shp, ships on trials bested 20 knots.
The construction of Parsons turbines for the Espana-class battleships by SECN at Ferrol under the supervision of Parsons’ Mr. Dixon. The turbine house went on to craft engines for Hamburg-America liners post-war and today is still around as Navantia Seanergies’ Fábrica de Turbinas facility, still located in Ferrol:
The class used four, three-bladed screws
They were modern ships, with hydraulically operated main turrets whose guns could be loaded at any angle, electric lifts and lights, forced ventilation, and six independent electric bilge pump systems. Six large 30-inch searchlights dotted the superstructure and her two masts. A Telefunken TSH wireless station, only first installed in Spanish service on the battleship Pelayo in 1904, was standard on each ship.
At the end of the day, three Spanish dreadnoughts were ordered and built: Espana, Alfonso XIII (also seen as Alfonso Trece), and Jaime I, with the first two built nearly side-by-side.
Construction was all done at Ferrol, with Espana laid down in December 1909 and the last hull, Jaime I, delayed by the Great War, completed only in December 1921.
Cost per hull, with machinery and armament, was 43 million Spanish pesetas, leaving the program total at about 150 million pesetas. Adjusted for inflation in 2026 USD is $281 million per ship and about $1B for the program as a whole.
They would be the largest warships built in Spain until the only slightly bigger 16,700-ton light carrier SPS PrĂncipe de Asturias (R-11) was delivered by Bazan, Ferrol, in 1988.
Spanish battleship España at the Ferrol shipyard
Spanish battleship España, lead ship of her class, receiving the finishing touches at the Victoria Eugenia dock in the port of Ferrol before being launched in May 1913.
Spanish battleship España launching at the Ferrol shipyard
Spanish battleship España launched at the Ferrol shipyard
Acazadoro España christening cover
But that’s not all. The Spanish admiralty planned a follow-on class of three 21,000-ton Reina Victoria Eugenia-class ships, carrying 13.5-inch guns and capable of 21-knots, laid out as sort of a more compact HMS Queen Elizabeth-class battleship.
The official plan, set to come to fruition around 1918-20, would be that the six completed dreadnoughts would be joined by the three existing 7,000-ton Princesa de Asturias-class armored cruisers, three new 5,000-ton/25-knot protected cruisers based on HMS Birmingham, and up to a dozen new Bustamante-class destroyers under a grand strike force dubbed 1.er EscuadrĂłn.
Well, anyway…
Meet Alfonso XIII
Our subject was the second Spanish warship named in honor of King Alfonso XIII de España, “el Africano,” who had been born to the country’s queen regent in May 1886, six months after his father, Alfonso XII, passed away. This made him the infant king at birth, and he held the throne for 44 years until April 1931.
The previous warship to carry his name was a Reina Regente-class protected cruiser built at Ferrol for a cost of 9 million pesetas and, overloaded and with cranky engines, was immediately relegated to training when completed in 1896, then was decommissioned four years later and scrapped in 1907. The class leader sank during a storm at sea in 1895, taking all 420 men to the bottom, while the third member of the class, Lepanto, was removed and scrapped just 12 years after she was completed, closing the book on the experimental and ineffectual class.
The Reina Regente-class protected cruiser Alfonso XIII anchored in MahĂłn circa 1898. Naming a battleship after the king had much better optics than this humble and unsuccessful vessel, which was largely restricted to daytime sailing within sight of shore.
Announced on 17 November 1909 with the other two members of her class, the keel of the future battleship Alfonso XIII was laid at the SECN shipyard in Ferrol on 23 February 1910.
The keel of the battleship Alfonso XIII is being laid at the Ferrol arsenal. The battleship Espana is under construction on the left.
Great War service
In August 1914, Spain had the Espana fully complete and only completed gunnery trials two months prior, the old Pelayo, the four previously mentioned Princesa de Asturias and Emperador Carlos V-class armored cruisers, the protected cruiser Reina Regente (5781 t, 10×6″ guns, 19 knots), the small cruiser RĂo de La Plata (1875 t, 2×5.9″, 4×4″, 2xtt, 20 kts), the scout cruiser Extremadura which was deployed as a station ship to Mexico, and about 30 destroyers, gunboats, and minelayers. None of the new planned light cruisers and only one of the new Bustamante-class destroyers had been completed. Reina Victoria Eugenia, the planned 21,000-ton battlewagon, was soon canceled along with her two never-named sisters.
All in all, not a commanding fleet to take on any other European power, and certainly not the planned 1.er EscuadrĂłn.
Spanish dreadnought battleship España during WWI IWM Q 68264
As Spain’s entry to the war on the side of France and Britain centered on Italy entering on the side of Germany and Austria, once Italy declared neutrality on 3 August 1914, the conservative Spanish government of Eduardo Dato announced on 7 August it was sitting out the war as well, at least for now. Plus, some 80 percent of the 220,000-strong Spanish Army (13 of 16 divisions) had been deployed to Morocco since 1911 to fight the rebellious Rif.
Launched on 7 May 1913, while fitting out, Alfonso XIII’s completion was delayed by the outbreak of the Great War, as much of her equipment, including her fire-control systems, was on hold in Britain pending developments. She was only commissioned into service, joining España in the 1.er EscuadrĂłn, in August 1915, using an improvised fire-control system secured via Sweden, another neutral.
España and Alfonso XIII’s Great War consisted primarily of training exercises, frequently conducted off Galicia, and a naval review off Santander during the namesake king’s usual summer holidays there. Alfonso even stood by in home waters while España sailed across the Atlantic to Panama along with a Portuguese cruiser to mark the opening ceremonies of the Panama Canal.
The Spanish fleet was responsible for the continued watch on 70 German and 25 Austrian merchant vessels that spent the war immobilized in the country’s harbors.
Further, Alfonso assisted the tug Antelo after the latter ran aground off Cape Prior in April 1917 and searched for the missing destroyer Terror (one of the fleet’s few survivors of the 1898 war) when the latter went missing in a storm.
She was also called upon to send a landing force ashore at Bilbao in August 1917 to put down a rebellion by armed miners and railway workers that required a “whiff of gunpowder” to put down, resulting in the death of one of the battleship’s sailors and the arrest of 22 Reds who were dutifully hauled back to the ship for detention.
The follow-on Figueroa, Prieto, and Maura governments would keep up the wobbly neutrality through the end of the brutal conflict. That didn’t stop Spanish factories from making arms for the allies and shipping them millions of tons of raw materials (for the first time in its modern history, Spain did not have a trade deficit), 2,000 Spanish/Catalan volunteers crossing the Pyrenees to join the French Foreign Legion, or German U-boats from sinking 80 Spanish merchantmen during the war– a full quarter of the country’s merchant marine.
Likewise, the country became a hot-bed for spies from both sides, and the Spanish African colony of Guinea had to accommodate 47,000 German refugee colonists and soldiers from nearby Kamerun after it was captured by the British and French in February 1916.
Following the end of hostilities, the Spanish were finally able to complete the third España-class battlewagon, and Alfonso XIII received her originally intended fire control equipment. Further, all three were modernized by removing the four 1900s vintage 47mm Hotchkiss guns in favor of a pair of new 3″/34 Vickers FF model AAA mounts.
Battleship Alfonso XIII in Cartagena in the early 1920s
Alfonso was busy.
She landed troops to guard Barcelona’s railway system for 44 days during riots in early 1919.
In June 1920, Alfonso set out on an American goodwill tour with naval cadets aboard, stopping at the Canary Islands on the 22nd, becoming the first Spanish warship to visit Cuba since 1898 (calling at Havana on July 9) and Puerto Rico.
Battleship Alfonso Xlll visiting La Habana newspaper 1920 first Spanish warship since 1898
Battleship Alfonso XIII visits Havana in 1920
Battleship Alfonso XIII visits San Juan, PR, July 9, 1920
Battleship (Acorazado) Alfonso XIII visits San Juan, PR, July 9, 1920
Calling at Annapolis, the academy’s training hulk, the former Spanish cruiser USS Reina Mercedes, captured in 1898, raised the old flag in honor.
She then called at New York City, the first Spanish warship to do so since Vizcaya in early 1898. There, she picked up parts and material for the Spanish submarine Isaac Peral (A 01), which had been built at Fore River in 1916, as well as the Spanish B-class submarines which were being built back home in Cartagena based on designs from Electric Boat, then called on Norfolk for another goodwill visit before heading back home in October.
In 1921, she started off the year by visiting Portugal in April, then by July was off the coast of Spanish Morocco to bombard the Rif, who were busy winning their war. Alfonso would spend the next four years deployed off and on to the colony, exchanging artillery duels with Rif field guns, landing troops and marines for campaigns ashore, and delivering naval gunfire support.
It was during the conflict that class leader España ran aground off Cape Tres Forcas in August 1923 while providing NGFS ashore and was lost.
Spanish battleship España during Rif war 1923
Salvage vessel Kanguro during the rescue of the 305mm guns from battleship España
The campaign culminated with the Alhucemas landings in September 1925, which saw 13,000 Spanish and French troops kick in the door to take the Rif stronghold head-on.
Alhucemas Landing, 8 September 1925, Moro Nuevo Beach
It was the largest amphibious operation since Gallipoli, and proved far more successful, keeping the tactic alive in the mind of strategists for another generation.
Besides her experience fighting the Rif, Alfonso carried out several additional goodwill cruises, including one to Italy in 1923, carried her namesake and his wife on a cruise of the Galician coast in the summer of 1927, and led the international naval parade for the 1929 Barcelona International Exposition.
Spanish battleships Alfonso XIII and Jaime I in 1929.
Nothing Civil About War
The national economic crisis that hit Spain as part of the Great Depression in 1931 led the King to abdicate his throne in April and head to Rome in exile, leaving the new socialist government to order the battleship named after him to be renamed to España, recycling the name left vacant after her sister sank in 1923.
As part of austerity measures, both España(ex-Alfonso) and Jaime I were placed in reserve at Ferrol on 15 June 1931.
1931 Janes Spanish battleships Espana Jaime Primero Alfonso XIII
While a series of proposed modernizations for the obsolete battlewagons were mulled over the next four years, the government’s grip on the country grew tenuous. Jaimie was reactivated in 1934 to help put down the anarchist Asturian Revolution, firing her guns into the Cimadevilla neighborhood of GijĂłn and bringing reliable Spanish Legion and the Regulares colonial troops up from Morocco to fight the 30,000-strong Red Army.
Spanish North African troops (the Grupos de Regulares de Melilla) parade down Corrida Street in GijĂłn after crushing the Asturian revolution. The troops had been carried to the city by Jaimie I and the cruiser Almirante Cervera, which also bombarded several rebel-held towns.
Spanish battleship Jaime I circa 1933 note double white id flash on funnels
Spanish battleship in Barcelona, Jaime I, 1930s
When the coup that kicked off what is now known as the Spanish Civil War kicked off in July 1936, Jaime was in Santander, with her cannons pointed at the military barracks which had been ready to go over to the rebels of Franco’s right-aligned Nationalists.
Meanwhile, still in dry dock in Ferrol, the skeleton crew of España (ex-Alfonso) joined with that of the cruiser Almirante Cervera to resist the pro-Franco coup which carried the Naval Arsenal there on 20 July 1936.
Spanish battleship España (formerly Alfonso XIII) photographed in Ferrol in 1936
After a two-day siege of the dry yard and dry dock by the Nationalist forces and out of bullets for their rifles (they had no shells for the ship’s guns), the loyalist crew of España laid down their arms. In the immediate aftermath, 72 sailors from the battleship were put on trial by the new government, with 28 duly shot by firing squad and 34 hauled off to the brig.
With the whole yard ordered to bring España(ex-Alfonso) into fighting trim, she was placed back into commission on 12 August 1936, although only half of her 12-inch Vickers H guns (turrets Nos 1 and 4) were operable, along with 12 of 20 4″/50 casemate guns, plus she had a much-reduced and very green crew.
By this stage of the Civil War, the Republican (loyalist government) side had the battleship Jaime Primereo, the light cruisers Libertad (Galicia), Miguel de Cervantes, Mendez Nunez, 12 destroyers, six torpedo boats, five subs and several smaller craft.
Marino: un heroe, a Republican Navy recruiting poster based on Jaime Primereo made by Arturo Ballester. UC San Diego Library.
Casting their lot with the Nationalist (insurgent) forces under Franco besides España(ex-Alfonso) were the heavy cruisers Canarias, Baleares, and Almirante Cervera, and the old light cruiser Navarra (ex- Republica, ex-Reina Victoria Eugenia), the destroyer Velasco, TRs 2, 7, 9, 16, and 19, the submarines C3, C 5, C 6, and B 5, all six of the country’s minelayers, the gunboats Canoaros del Castillo and Dato, along with a myriad of smaller craft.
Escorted by the destroyer Velasco, España (ex-Alfonso), dubbed Abuelo (grandfather) by the forces she supported, carried out blockade missions on the Republican-held coastline for the next six weeks until the end of September. These included bombarding vital fuel depots at Santurce, hitting troop concentrations at Gipuzkoa, San Sebastián, IrĂşn, and FuenterrabĂa, helping break the siege of Simancas, and in the capture of several ships transporting supplies to the Republicans.
Improvements to España (ex-Alfonso) and subsequent yard periods saw the battleship by October 1936 return a third turret (No 3) to operation, her fourth turret used as a source of spare parts for the other three. She saw eight of her 4-inch casemate guns removed for service ashore. To counter possible Nationalist air attacks, she was fitted with four German 88mm SK L/45 C/13s and two 20mm C/30 flak cannons.
Returning to service, she shrugged off a series of torpedo and air attacks over the next six months but, while chasing the British steamer Knitsley, struck a mine near Santander on 30 April 1937, likely laid by the Nationalists as they controlled the country’s entire minelayer fleet. Suffering from a combination of poor underwater protection and an inexperienced crew, she was lost, sinking slowly over the course of three hours. Her escorting destroyer Velasco managed to save all but five of her crew.
It was claimed at the time that she was sunk by air attack.
Airmen Who Sank The Espana. — All Loyalist Spain is feting the Government airmen who made history by sinking the rebel battleship, “Espana”, the first battleship ever to be destroyed in an air attack. The feat was accomplished by the airmen while the “Espana” was trying to stop the British steamer “Knitsley” (4,261 tons) from entering Santander with a cargo of iron ore. Six hundred men of the “Espana” went down with their ship four miles off Cape Mayor, near Santander. The officers were rescued by the rebel destroyer “Velasco”. Photo shows the airmen who sank the “Espana” photographed at Santander on their return. Via UC San Diego Library
Her final sister, the Republican-controlled Jaime, ran aground at Punta Sabinar on 15 April, managed to refloat herself, and took refuge first in AlmerĂa, where she was hit first by a wave of Italian S-79 bombers then by German Condor Legion Heinkel He 59s of Aufklärungsstaffel See/88. Limping to Cartagena for repairs, a magazine explosion there (oft attributed to sabotage) sent the aging and weary battleship to the seabed, causing some 300 deaths in the process.
Spanish battleship Jaime Primero, listed as sunk in Jane’s 1938
Jaime’s 12-inch guns were salvaged and placed in the Strait of Gibraltar in coastal batteries D9 and D10 at El VigĂa and Casquebel near Tarifa, while her smaller 4-inchers were placed in single mounts in the coastal batteries at Rafalbetx and Cabo Blanco in Mallorca, kept in service through the 1980s.
Likewise, the original España’s 12-inch and 4-inch guns, salvaged in 1924 from her wreck, were emplaced in numerous coastal defense batteries, the last of which, the La Marquina Battery in Cádiz, was still in operation until 1999.
BaterĂa D9 El VigĂa en Tarifa, Vickers 305 50 Spanish battleship acorazado Jaime I, foto cortesĂa de Alejandro Chaves.
Epilogue
Our subject’s wreck was discovered and charted by the Spanish Navy in 2016 by the salvage ship Neptuno.
She rests largely intact at a depth of 242 feet, making her a deep but not impossible dive.
She is also remembered in maritime art.
Battleship Alfonso XIII with Spanish Torpedero no 3
Spanish battleship Alfonso XIII, painting by Oscar Parkes
Thanks for reading!
Meminisse est ad Vivificandum – To Remember is to Keep Alive
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How about this fantastic Cold War color image of “NAWC-47” (Bloodhound 47), a red-trimmed QF-4N drone (BuNo 152253) with an on-board crew assigned to the Naval Air Warfare Center (NAWC) Weapons Division, Point Magu.
The curious ordnance seen underwing is a Beechcraft AQM-37 Jayhawk, a zippy (Mach 4) little (14-foot, 600-pound) supersonic target drone of which some 5,000 were expended between 1963 and 2022.
Photo via NAWC, Pt. Magu
The above aircraft was built in 1964 as an F4H-1 (redesignated F-4B), MSN 934, and later converted to F-4J and F-4N standards. She is known to have flown operationally with VMFA-531, VF-14, VF-151, VF-84, VF-151, and VF-21.
Converted to a QF-4N after 1983, she was eventually expended in missile testing over the Pacific on 13 December 1994.
The Damen LST 100 design, which was picked last December to be the Navy LSM– coming to a shipyard near you
TOTE Services in Jacksonville yesterday picked up a $2.6 billion contract from Naval Sea Systems Command’s PAE Maritime to serve as Vessel Construction Manager (VCM) for the McClung-class Medium Landing Ship (LSM) program, with the first hull to be delivered by 2029.
You know, the mini-LSTs that the Navy is building for the Marines to shuttle NMESIS missile batteries and light armor around the Western Pacific in a sea-denial-from-the-shore kind of philosophy, setting up what are now termed as a “Marine Corps fires expeditionary advanced base.”
A Navy Marine Expeditionary Ship Interdiction System launcher, a command and control vehicle, and a Joint Light Tactical Vehicle are transported by a U.S. Navy Landing Craft Air Cushion from Pacific Missile Range Facility Barking Sands, Hawaii, out to U.S.S. San Diego, Aug. 16, 2021. The movement demonstrated the mobility of a Marine Corps fires expeditionary advanced base, a core concept in the Marine Corps’ Force Design 2030 efforts. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Luke Cohen, released)
The contract will cover management of constructing the first eight LSMs, with a program of record for up to (hold your breath) 35 of the baby phibs built to the Damen LST 100 double-ended Ro/Ro design.
The LST100 is 100.68 metres (330 feet) long with a beam of 16 metres (52 feet) and a draught of 3.58 metres (12 feet). It is suited to a diverse range of operations. With its ability to transport personnel, vehicles, equipment and cargo, the vessel can be used in patrol, landing, survey and reconnaissance operations, as well as for the delivery of humanitarian aid & disaster relief.
In its standard design, it features bunks for 282 personnel. Cargo can be transported on the RoRo deck (500m2), vehicle deck (400m2) and on the helicopter deck. The vessel is able to sail at speeds of up to 14 knots, with an endurance of 3,890 nautical miles. At an endurance speed of 10 knots, it can reach up to 7,530 nautical miles.
The LST100 features extensive flexibility. Its modular design enables straightforward adaptation and upgrade without compromising the benefits of standardization. For example, with the addition of a standard, 20-metre modular block, the vessel can be enlarged to the LST120 design during construction.
Besides the intended purpose and general use as a ‘phib, the LSMs have an obvious use in Over The Horizon – Special Forces (OTH-SF) operations, stand-off Mine Counter Measures (MCM) operations support, and as a general helicopter/UAV “lilipad.”
Now, to be clear, TOTE is not actually going to build the LSMs, simply award and manage shipbuilder contracts- you know, something NAVSEA should be capable of doing, but in program after program has proven absolutely incapable of doing so. Looking at you, FFG and LCS programs.
The Damen LST 100 McClung-class landing ship (LSM)
Anyway, the award announcement, for the record:
TOTE Services LLC, Jacksonville, Florida, is awarded a $2,206,000,000 firm-fixed-price contract for vessel construction management services to award and manage shipbuilder subcontracts for the new construction of up to eight Medium Landing Ships. This contract includes options which, if exercised, would bring the cumulative value of this contract to $2,605,075,850. Work will be performed in Marinette, Wisconsin (65%); Houma, Louisiana (16%); Jacksonville, Florida (9%); and other locations (10%), and is expected to be completed by June 2030. If all options are exercised, work will continue through September 2031. Fiscal 2025 shipbuilding and conversion (Navy) funds in the amount of $1,933,941,000 (88%); and fiscal 2026 shipbuilding and conversion (Navy) funds in the amount of $272,059,000 (12%), will be obligated at time of award and will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year. This contract is awarded with funding from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (Public Law 119-21) and directly supports the national effort to revitalize and rebuild American shipbuilding. This contract was competitively procured via the System for Award Management website (sam.gov), with one offer received. Naval Sea Systems Command, Washington, D.C., is the contracting activity (N00024-26-C-2421).
Unless you are under a rock, you have no doubt heard of the passing of Irish-born Kiwi actor Sir Nigel John Dermot “Sam” Neill.
While everyone else is talking Jurassic Park, we, of course, remember Mr. Neill as the fictional though composite Australian commando Sergeant Dan Costello in Attack Force Z (his first movie) and as the very real Sidney George Reilly in the BBC’s Reilly, Ace of Spies, before moving on to Capt. Vasily Borodin in The Hunt for Red October.
Even as a lad, the extensive use on-screen of a suppressed M3 Grease Gun was nothing short of magic, while Reilly was even more Bond than Bond.
While Mr. Neill never served in the military, his pop was a Sandhurst-minted career officer in the Royal Irish Fusiliers (Princess Victoria’s) for over 20 years, including WWII, and the actor was born near and grew up in the regimental depot in Gough Barracks, Armagh.
In 2013, he purchased a Bannockburn vineyard and renamed it ‘‘The Fusilier” in honor of his father and the regiment itself, which had been amalgamated out of existence in 1968.
So, be it a New Zealand pinot or a nice Irish whisky, raise one to Sam, lads.
Here’s hoping he found his “round American woman, rabbits, pickup truck, and recreational vehicle.”