There goes the neighborhood

During the 1960s, the Royal Norwegian military, with the backing of some $500 million in NATO funds (about $3.5 billion in today’s cash), built a huge and very secretive (at the time) base that would make a Bond super villain squeal like a little girl.

It doesn't look like much on the outside...

It doesn’t look like much on the outside…

But its big enough to store all of Uncle Olaf's submarine fleet and then some

But its big enough to store all of Uncle Olaf’s submarine fleet and then some

This place was made back when tunneling into mountains was the "in" thing baby, yeah.

This place was made back when tunneling into mountains was the “in” thing baby, yeah.

The Olavsvern Naval Base, with some 145,000-square feet of above-ground buildings and nearly 270,000-square feet of bombproof interior mountain space shields a submarine dry dock, a tunnel system, an emergency power system and enough storerooms for an infantry brigade in its protective rock.

The thing is, the Cold War ended officially in about 1990-ish and by 2009, the Norwegians pulled the plug on the base located near Tromso, putting it up for lease.

And now the Russians have moved in after assuming a $17 million lease.

Cue the rimshot.

Combat Gallery Sunday: The Martial Art of Alphonse Mucha

Much as once a week I like to take time off to cover warships (Wednesdays), on Sunday, I like to cover military art and the painters, illustrators, sculptors, and the like that produced them.

Combat Gallery Sunday: The Martial Art of Alphonse Mucha

Born 24 July 1860 in the small Moravian mountain town of Ivančice–a neighbor to the current and historic CZ arms concern in Brno– in what was then the Austro-Hungarian Empire, was one Alfons Maria Mucha. Taking up painting as a youth more or less as a hobby, by his twenties, he grew more serious and attended the Munich Academy of Fine Arts and later schools in Paris.

The artist

The artist

Some of Mucha’s first paid international work, when he was just 33, was in creating a series of uniform plates for the Royal Brazilian Army.

Brazilian uniforms, c. 1894 Mucha, Alphonse (artist) 1st in pair of chromolith. pl. after Mucha; uniform figures of veteran, cadet of Colegio Militar, and horse artillery officer. Via the Anne S.K.Brown Military Collection at Brown University.

Brazilian uniforms, c. 1894 Mucha, Alphonse (artist) 1st in pair of chromolith. pl. after Mucha; uniform figures of veteran, cadet of Colegio Militar, and horse artillery officer. Via the Anne S.K.Brown Military Collection at Brown University.

Brazilian uniforms, c. 1894 Mucha, Alphonse (artist) 2nd in pair of chromolith. pl. after Mucha; 2 uniform figures of general staff officer, cavalry officer. Via the Anne S.K.Brown Military Collection at Brown University.

Brazilian uniforms, c. 1894 Mucha, Alphonse (artist) 2nd in pair of chromolith. pl. after Mucha; 2 uniform figures of general staff officer, cavalry officer. Via the Anne S.K.Brown Military Collection at Brown University.

By 1895, he had become a professional poster illustrator and had even begun his own unique style of artistic impression in his depiction of the female form, taking otherwise imperfect reference models dressed in contemporary clothes and creating the highly-stylized soft featured, long-haired beauties garbed in neo-classical robes that became his hallmark.

With the coming of Spring, and today being Easter, I find these below images to be very refreshing.

 

Alphonse Mucha The Seasons, 1896, Spring and Summer .

Alphonse Mucha The Seasons, 1896, Spring and Summer .

Fall and winter

…followed by Fall and winter. Note how the flowers create a halo effect, commonly seen in Mucha’s female portrayals.

This one reminds me of someone special

Inset of “Madonna of the Lilies,” 1905…This one reminds me of someone special

Luna

Luna

1T8yK

The application of the artist's eye.

The application of the artist’s eye.

The model and final artwork for a 1903 illustration

The model and final artwork for a 1903 illustration

Zodiac 1896

Zodiac 1896

job cigarettes ad Alphonse Mucha

job cigarettes ad Alphonse Mucha

rHoD8

Soldiers Dream

Soldier’s Dream

By the 1900 Exposition Universelle where was an esteemed exhibitor, he had become acclaimed and his style soon known as Art Nouveau.

However lovely his style for commercial art was, he preferred more serious historical art depicting great battles and events– but that didn’t pay the bills. By 1910, he had found a benefactor in Chicago millionaire Charles Richard Crane, who brought luminaries such as Czech independence advocate Thomas Masaryk, Russian constitutional monarchy (Kadet) proponent Pavel Milyukov, and peacenik Maksim Kovalevsky to the U.S. to speak on Eastern European revolutionary ideals against the Tsar and Kaisers.

He toiled away on his Slav Epic for more than a decade, often working 10 hours or more everyday.

He toiled away on his Slav Epic for more than a decade, often working 10 hours or more everyday.

Crane financed Mucha’s dream work, a series of 20 immense panels that became known as the Slovanská Epopej (Slav Epic) that told the history of the Slavic peoples. Funded by Crane, Mucha rented part of the old historic 13th century Zborov Castle (which according to legend is built on the site of a gate into hell), near the Russian border and worked on his saga for several years until the advance of the Tsar’s Army into the region in 1915 sent him away from the castle, which became a battlefield of Slav-on-Slav violence for the next several years.

Nevertheless, before the Epic was complete, in 1919, his country had become Czechoslovakia and Mucha the Slavic patriot drew up the first currency, stamps, Army recruiting posters, and government insignias (even using a model of Crane’s wife for the 100 crown note!)

The 50 Crown note designed by Muncha

The 50 Crown note designed by Muncha

100 C note-- with Crane's old lady on it

100 C note– with Crane’s old lady on it

By 1928, his Slav Epic was complete and the now-68 year old patriot donated it to the city of Prague for public display– then went on to design a stained glass window for St. Vitus Cathedral, a national landmark.

Petr Chelcicky at Vodnany: Do not repay evil with evil - 1918.Vodnany was a small town caught in the crossfire between the Hussites and the Germanic forces. They chose to flee to Petr Chelcicky, a religious peasant philospher. When they arrived, they lay down exhausted and dieing, consumed by anger and grief, their homes burning in the background. Chelcicky moves amongst them with a Bible, offering comfort and support, asking that they do not seek vengeance.

Petr Chelcicky at Vodnany: Do not repay evil with evil – 1918.Vodnany was a small town caught in the crossfire between the Hussites and the Germanic forces. They chose to flee to Petr Chelcicky, a religious peasant philosopher. When they arrived, they lay down exhausted and dieing, consumed by anger and grief, their homes burning in the background. Chelcicky moves amongst them with a Bible, offering comfort and support, asking that they do not seek vengeance.

After the Battle of Grunwald (1st Tannenberg) 1410 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Grunwald during the Polish–Lithuanian–Teutonic War. The early fourteenth century was marked by military incursions by the German Order of Teutonic Knights into the land of the Northern Slavs. In response, The Polish King Wladyslaw Jagiello and the Czech King Vaclav IV signed a defensive treaty which was first acted upon at the battle of Grunwaldu in 1410 when the Slavs won an important victory. Mucha elects to illustrate not the fighting but the aftermath, with the Polish King holding his face in sorrow as he views the cost to both enemy and ally.

After the Battle of Grunwald (1st Tannenberg) 1410 during the Polish–Lithuanian–Teutonic War. The early fourteenth century was marked by military incursions by the German Order of Teutonic Knights into the land of the Northern Slavs. In response, The Polish King Wladyslaw Jagiello and the Czech King Vaclav IV signed a defensive treaty which was first acted upon at the battle of Grunwaldu in 1410 when the Slavs won an important victory. Mucha elects to illustrate not the fighting but the aftermath, with the Polish King holding his face in sorrow as he views the cost to both enemy and ally.

Defense of Sziget against the Turks by Nicholas Zrinsky. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Szigetv%C3%A1r during the the Ottoman–Habsburg wars, 1566 In 1566 The Turks began advancing along the Danube into the Hungarian plains. Their advance was eventually halted at the city of Sziget by a citizens' army let by Croatian nobleman, Nicholas Zrinsky. With the town under siege, he was obliged to fire the Old Town to deter advances. After a further nineteen days and with Zrinsky dead, the women of the city took refuge a watchtower; Zrinsky's widow, realising the inevitability of defeat, threw a touch into a gunpowder store, destroying the city but inflicting damage on the Turkish army which halted their progress.

Defense of Sziget against the Turks by Nicholas Zrinsky, during the the Ottoman–Habsburg wars, 1566 In 1566 The Turks began advancing along the Danube into the Hungarian plains. Their advance was eventually halted at the city of Sziget by a citizens’ army let by Croatian nobleman, Nicholas Zrinsky. With the town under siege, he was obliged to fire the Old Town to deter advances. After a further nineteen days and with Zrinsky dead, the women of the city took refuge a watchtower; Zrinsky’s widow, realizing the inevitability of defeat, threw a touch into a gunpowder store, destroying the city but inflicting damage on the Turkish army which halted their progress.

After the Battle of Vitkov Hill. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_V%C3%ADtkov_Hill during the Hussite wars 1420. In the early stages of the Hussite wars, the German King occupied the castle at Prague and was crowned king. A peasant army of Hus's followers arrived from Southern Bohemia to oppose the Germans, led by a brilliant military leader, Jan Zizka of Troenov. Their position at the hill of Vitkov was under siege until relieved by a group of Czech soldiers from Prague arrived, led by a priest bearing a monstrance. The mural shows the priest at a field bearing the monstrance and surrounded by supplicating clergy, with Prague's Hradcany Castle visible to the right.

After the Battle of Vitkov Hill during the Hussite wars 1420. In the early stages of the Hussite wars, the German King occupied the castle at Prague and was crowned king. A peasant army of Hus’s followers arrived from Southern Bohemia to oppose the Germans, led by a brilliant military leader, Jan Zizka of Troenov. Their position at the hill of Vitkov was under siege until relieved by a group of Czech soldiers from Prague arrived, led by a priest bearing a monstrance. The mural shows the priest at a field bearing the monstrance and surrounded by supplicating clergy, with Prague’s Hradcany Castle visible to the right.

Stained glass by Mucha at St. Vitus, 1931

Stained glass by Mucha at St. Vitus, 1931

Czechoslovakia became one of Hitler’s first targets and by early 1939, in violation of the Sudeten Agreements, the Germans had taken over the country (in a curious twist of fate, Crane, who funded the first U.S. oil investments in Saudi Arabia, was a big fan of Hitler’s).

Non a smile in the bunch on either side. German troops enter Prague,March 1939. Mucha would be dead within four months and his very funeral a spark of resistance in occupied Europe-- one of the first.

Non a smile in the bunch on either side. German troops enter Prague,March 1939. Mucha would be dead within four months and his very funeral a spark of resistance in occupied Europe– one of the first.

Eager to stamp out anti-German (or pro-Czech/Slav) dissent, the Geheime Staatspolizei soon rounded up the usual suspects to include the 78-year old Mucha who was interrogated and imprisoned for several weeks under horrible conditions. This led to the artist contracting pneumonia and dying in July of that year from lung infection.

The Nazis had banned all public demonstrations during the occupation, nevertheless the people of Prague turned out by the thousands for his funeral. He is interred at the famous Vysehrad cemetery near Anton Dvorak and remembered in a huge monument there.

Fearing the Nazis would seize or destroy the Epic, the paintings were stripped from their frames, rolled up, and spirited away to be hidden in a tomb in the countryside.

After the war, the newly Communist Czech government found Mucha’s works petit bourgeois and even the Epic was kept rolled up, only finally returning to public display in 1963 in a dilapidated chateau in Moravsky Krumlov, just outside of Brno– although Prague really wants them back.

The Epic on display. Keep in mind its 20 panels

The Epic on display. Keep in mind its 20 panels

He is remembered today as one of the most well known masters of, and perhaps the inventor of Art Nouveau besides being viewed as a national hero in the Czech Republic.

As such there are many of his works online in addition to several societies, foundations, galleries  and museums.

There are even hundreds who walk around with Mucha-inspired personal illustrations and a steady business in art nouveau Much ink.

Mucha-Inspired-Tattoo-4

Thank you for your work, sir.

The million-mile Iron Nickle

During the 1950s and 60s, the amphibs of the gator navy, tasked with hauling Marines from place to place, were either ships that crashed their open front bows on the beach ala WWII style (LSTs), mini-carriers that were crammed full of choppers (LPHs) or dock landing ships that served as mother ships for small boats (LPD, LSDs). None of these, even the largest, were over 16,000~ tons.

So how about take a flattop chopper carrier like a LPH, double the size of it, and add a well deck like a LSD/LPH and give it the cargo capacity of an LST to make one motherbig assault ship that could double as a harrier carrier/ASW base for sea control or as a mine sweeper mother-ship if needed.

With that the Tarawa class of amphibious assault ships (LHA) were ordered from Ingalls Shipbuilding in Pascagoula during the Nixon era. These 44,000-ton ships, the size of the WWII era Essex class fleet carriers they in some roles replaced, were designed to shlep up to 1700 Marines in style while carrying 25-30 helicopters, a battalion’s worth of vehicles, and a small flotilla of landing craft.

141022-N-NZ935-083 PHILIPPINE SEA (Oct. 22, 2014) The amphibious assault ship USS Peleliu (LHA 5) is underway as part of the Peleliu Amphibious Ready Group and is conducting joint forces exercises in the U.S. 7th Fleet area of responsibility. (U.S. Navy Photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Joshua Hammond/Released)

141022-N-NZ935-083 PHILIPPINE SEA (Oct. 22, 2014) The amphibious assault ship USS Peleliu (LHA 5) (U.S. Navy Photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Joshua Hammond/Released) Click to big up. *Note the two dimples in the flight deck were for 5-inch guns that were removed in the 90s.

Five of these hardy greenside flattops were built with the last, USS Peleliu (LHA-5) commissioning in 1980. I was six when I watched that ship leave ‘Goula as a kid, standing at the old Coast Guard station with a fishing pole in the water.

She was named after the 1944 Battle of Peleliu, where US Marines had to fght for every inch of real estate. Note the BAR and M1919 dropping it like its hot.

She was named after the 1944 Battle of Peleliu, where US Marines had to fight for every inch of real estate. Note the BAR and M1919 dropping it like its hot.

Now, as I myself have grown into an old man, the “Iron Nickle” is being put out to pasture, replaced by the new USS America (LHA-6) which I saw leave Pascagoula just a couple months ago.

Peleliu has been in the thick of it for the past 35 years.

As noted by Navy Times,

During the ship’s three decade run, it set many firsts for the blue/green team, which conducted 178,051 flight operations, steamed approximately 1,011,946 nautical miles and counted 57,983 crewmembers.

They include the first:

Fleet firing of the RIM 116 Rolling Airframe Missile, in October 1995.
MH-60S Knighthawk landing on a Pacific Fleet ship, in April 2003.
Expeditionary Strike Group to deploy (led by Peleliu), in August 2003.
LHA-class ship to receive the expeditionary fighting vehicle in its welldeck, in January 2009.

She also helped evac Subic and Clark following Mt. Pinatubo, responded to San Fransisco after the great World Series Earthquake, and deployed with her Marines 17 times, many of which turned hot and spicy in the Persian Gulf and Indian Ocean.

140813-N-LQ926-186 PACIFIC OCEAN (Aug. 13, 2014) Sailors participate in a swim call aboard the amphibious assault ship USS Peleliu (LHA 5). Peleliu is underway conducting a scheduled deployment to the western Pacific region after successfully completing Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) Exercise 2014. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Alex Van'tLeven/Released)

140813-N-LQ926-186 PACIFIC OCEAN (Aug. 13, 2014) Sailors participate in a swim call aboard the amphibious assault ship USS Peleliu (LHA 5). (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Alex Van’tLeven/Released)

140903-N-HU377-024 EAST CHINA SEA (Sept. 3, 2014) AV-8B Harriers assigned to Marine Attack Squadron (VMA) 542, 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit, taxi into position during flight operations aboard the amphibious assault ship USS Peleliu (LHA 5). Peleliu is on its final scheduled western Pacific deployment in the U.S. 7th Fleet area of responsibility supporting security and stability in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region before decommissioning early next year. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Dustin Knight/Released)

140903-N-HU377-024 EAST CHINA SEA (Sept. 3, 2014) AV-8B Harriers assigned to Marine Attack Squadron (VMA) 542, 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit, taxi into position during flight operations aboard the amphibious assault ship USS Peleliu (LHA 5). (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Dustin Knight/Released)

She will now be placed into strategic reserve at Pearl Harbor where she will be reunited with her long decommissioned sisters Tarawa (LHA-1) and Nassau (LHA-4) in mothballs. Two other class members, Saipan (LHA-2) and Belleau Wood (LHA-3) have been scrapped and expended as targets respectively, fates that are likely to be options for the remaining sisters.

“Pax per Potens”

Another Mark 7 finds a home.

The U.S. Navy in World War II commissioned just under 100 16″/50 (40.6 cm) Mark 7 guns for their Iowa-class battleships. Possibly the finest naval big gun of its era (although yes, the Yamato‘s 18.1-inch Type 94’s were bigger– but the Mark 7s had more diverse ammunition selections and better fire control), these guns were the last super large caliber naval rifles in service.

Luckily the entire quartet of Iowas were preserved as museum ships, making 36 of these big sticks open for viewing across the country. The thing is, those guns, although on WWII era ships, weren’t fired during that war. You see in the 1950s the Navy swapped out the well used combat tested guns for fresh brand new ones that had been acquired as spares and to equip the never-completed USS Illinois (BB-65) and USS Kentucky (BB-66).

New Jersey firing 16 inch guns

New Jersey firing 16 inch guns

Other spares went to Dr. Gerald Bull’s Harp project (where at least one still used  to fire a shell 112-miles high still sits rusting away in Barbados) and to the 1950s Gunfighter tests in Nevada using 11-inch saboted shells.

By 2011, with the Iowas all disposed of to museum status, the Navy decided it no longer needed its 22 remaining 16-inch barrels, most of which were WWII guns left over from the 1950s swap out. 14 located in Nevada were cut up for scrap and 8, left at the St Juliens Creek Naval Annex in Chesapeake, Virginia, were given a brief reprieve to see if anyone wanted them or they would suffer the same fate.

Over the past two years three were placed in museums ranging from Delaware to Arizona, and the USAF is taking three on for a fuse testing project, but the last two remaining barrels at St Juliens are only being held on a month to month basis.

Well one 120-ton gun, appropriately used by the USS New Jersey during WWII and Korea before being offloaded in 1953 for a new tube, was delivered to Hartshorne Woods Park, part of the Monmouth County Park System in Middleton, New Jersey this week where it will be on public display moving forward.

One of the NJs tubes being delivered to a park in...New Jersey this week

One of the NJs tubes being delivered to a park in…New Jersey this week

“We’ve had quite a crowd out there the last two days,” said Gail Hunton, supervising historic preservation specialist for the Monmouth County Park System. “What’s very gratifying is how many people have gotten so enthusiastic about this who didn’t know about Harshorne Woods Park.”

A chip off the old block…

B-24 of the 90th BG Moby Dick (possibly 41-24047) along with its slighly smaller sidekick

click to big up

Here we see a Consolidated B-24D Liberator, “Moby Dick” (possibly #41-24047) of the 320th Bombardment Squadron (Heavy) , 90th Bomb Group– along with its slighly smaller sidekick.

Make that the 90th Bombardment Group Heavy “Jolly Rogers” of the 5th army Air corp in the Southwest Pacific 1942-1945. Thanks for the correction Jim!

 

Profile of a 70s Domestic Terrorist

Back in the Nixon years, a real threat to National Security was the Weather Underground Organization (WUO). Made up of hippies, yippies and neo-anarchists, they were for the most part just bored middle class white kids who read just enough Proudhon and Kropotkin to be dangerous. With Vietnam and Watergate going on, they declared war on the federal and state governments and made a few high profile bombings to include the Pentagon, U.S. Capitol, and NYPD Headquarters.

The Capitol, after WUO renovations.

The Capitol, after WUO renovations.

Well their chief bomb maker managed to stay underground until the heat was off, outlive the statute of limitations (although the WUO did chalk up a few victims, his bombs at least didn’t kill anyone), and retire as a public school teacher in New York.

Now, he looks like Santa Claus and rides around in a Subaru Forrester on his pension but has no regrets.

ronald-fliegelman-feature

There is an interesting story on him in the Post

Fire in the hole

(Click to big up) U.S. Army Soldiers assigned to 1st Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 2nd SBCT, 25th Infantry Division, fire rounds on Rodriguez Live Fire Complex, South Korea, March 22, 2015. U.S. Army Solders run a live-fire exercise during joint training exercise Foal Eagle 2015. (U.S. Army photo by Pfc. Samantha Van Winkle)

(Click to big up) U.S. Army Soldiers assigned to 1st Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 2nd SBCT, 25th Infantry Division, fire rounds on Rodriguez Live Fire Complex, South Korea, March 22, 2015. U.S. Army Solders run a live-fire exercise during joint training exercise Foal Eagle 2015. (U.S. Army photo by Pfc. Samantha Van Winkle)

The weapon in action is the rarely seen M1128 Mobile Gun System (MGS), a wheeled 8×8 version Stryker vehicle that  mounts the M68A1E4 105-mm rifled tank gun, thus making the 18-ton MGS something of a modern day tank destroyer. Of course its too lightly armored (only resistant to small arms rounds) to get in a real armor v. armor engagement unless its with a Panzer I that has time warped from 1939 which means the Stryker would need to slay the offending evil doer’s tank and then rapidly displace.

Plus, they only carry 18 rounds for the main gun and don’t have air conditioning. Nonetheless, these big-gunned armored cars are popular with the ground pounders as they can dish out very effective canister rounds (think a shotgun times 1000) as well as HEAT and HESH shells in a pinch should the bad guy’s surplus T-55 come poking over the hill.

The Army only has 139 of these unicorns.

The Mighty Eure

Much is made of how strong, heavily armored, and revolutionary the German Army’s blitzkrieg attack on France and the Lowlands was in May 1940, able to knock four Western European countries out of the war within six weeks and very nearly trap the British forces on the continent.

The thing is, ut should be remembered that most of the German armor of 1940 were very light 6-ton Panzer I (machine gun armed) 9-ton Panzer II (20mm gun armed) and 20-ton Panzer III (37mm gun) tanks. Further, the French and British actually had more tanks than the Germans. It was the better Teutonic tactics that won the day for the boys in grey, not their vehicles.

But there were some exceptions to that rule. The French had a very good tank for the time, the 29-ton Char B1 Bis.

char-b1bis-france
The B1 Bis, with its 75 mm ABS SA 35 howitzer in the main hull, a 47mm gun in a single-man turret, and two 8mm Reibel machine guns, was slow (just 15mh on  a good day) but very well armored for the time with 60mm steel plate– allowing it to shrug off all but a direct hit from a German Pak 40 or larger.

Therefore, although German tanks could outrun a B1, they couldn’t outfight it in an area where speed and maneuverability wasn’t a factor. Eure proved that.

French Char B1 heavy tank EURE

(Hattip, Tales of War)

The crew of the B1 Bis “Eure” Serial 337, the tank of the Captain Billotte, leading the B1 Assault on Stonne on the 16 May 1940. The Eure was responsible for knocking oout 13 German Panzers in a row while maneuvering around the city, using the local streets to its advantage. In all the French tank was hit 140 times by small caliber rounds but not knocked out.
Chef de char : Capitaine Billotte
Pilot : Sergent Durupt
Radio : Chasseur Francis Henault

The Germans liked these tough French panzers so much they used more than 160 inherited B1’s in their own army, designating them as the Panzerkampfwagen B-2 740 (f) and keeping them in service as late as 1944.

My what an impressive ball you have there

Cannonball or shot-put?

Cannonball or shot-put?

In digging around your yard, especially if you are East of the Mississippi and around anywhere that Revolutionary War or Civil War battles took place or armies crossed nearby, you may find yourself with random solid shot balls. The thing is, more often than not, these are decorative pieces. roller mill balls for industrial applications, or shot put field and track equipment that got away from their former owner. There is a pretty neat guide to telling them apart here if you are interested.

Also, don’t pick up one that looks as if it may have a fuse in it, ok?

Warship Wednesday April 1, 2015: Lucky Georgios, the last man standing

Here at LSOZI, we are going to take off every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1859-1946 time period and will profile a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all of their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places. – Christopher Eger.

Warship Wednesday, April 1, 2015: Lucky Georgios, the last man standing

RHS Azeroff 1913. Click to big up

Click to big up

Here we see the Italian-made Pisa-class armored cruiser Georgios Averof of the Royal Hellenic Navy as she appeared in 1913, shortly after almost single-handedly routing the entire Ottoman fleet the year before.

In the early 20th Century, Southeastern Europe, popularly known as the Balkans, was a powder keg of a number of upstart countries living in the shadow of the “sick man of Europe”– the Ottoman Empire. With more than a century of low-key warfare between the Greeks, Romanians, Serbs, Bulgars, Croats and so on to try to break free from the Sultan and his court, by about 1900 the lines had been drawn between the Turks and the Greco-Slavic nations. Combined, the Balkan countries could cough up nearly a million men under arms– more the enough to take on the Turks. However, they could not match the Turkish Navy in either the ancient Adriatic, Aegean, Ionian, Med, and Black Seas.

That’s where Greece, who had a small army but an excellent naval tradition, stood alone against the Turks.

Between 1879 and 1914, the Royal Hellenic Navy was transformed into a modern force, picking up battleships and destroyers from Italy, France, the UK, and the U.S.

However, their French-built pre-dreadnoughts: Hydra, Spetsai, and Psara, were exceptionally small at just 5,300-tons and were lightly armed (3x 10-inch guns) and slow (16 knots). After winning the Greco-Turkish War of 1897, the Greeks went shopping for a new mega-ship with a 2.5 million gold franc donation from Greek philanthropist George M. Averoff.

George M. Averoff, the man. He left the Greek government a fortune in his will and they went warship shopping

George M. Averoff, the man. He left the Greek government a fortune in his will and they went warship shopping

Across the Adriatic, they inspected the Italian (by no less of a naval engineer than Giuseppe Orlando) Pisa-class “second-class battleship” and fell in love. These 10,000-ton ships, technically armored cruisers, could break 23-knots through the power of 22 Belleville boilers and carried a quartet of 10″/45 cal guns backed up by eight 7.5-inchers in four twin turrets on the centerline and more than a dozen smaller anti-torpedo boat pieces. Sheathed in up to 7-inches of steel plate, they could fight off ships their own size and outrun most that were larger.

The Italian cruiser Pisa or the Regina Marina, the sister of the Greek Averoff. (Click to big up)

The Italian cruiser Pisa or the Regina Marina, the sister of the Greek Averoff. (Click to big up)

Although they only needed a crew of about 700, they also could accommodate a battalion of naval infantry if needed for amphibious landings which is key in the far-flung and disputed islands that the Greeks cruised in. Not perfect when compared to British and German ships of the day, certainly, these cruisers were still better than anything the Turks had at the time. Better yet, the Italian Navy had the third Pisa that they had ordered but were going to cancel– talk about timing.

Swapping out the 10″/45 cal guns for a set of much more modern British-made 9.2″/47 (23.4 cm) Mark X breechloaders, (which had been the standard at the time of the Royal Navy’s armored cruisers), the Greek “battleship” Georgios Averof was laid down at Orlando, Livorno in 1910. With tensions between the Balkan countries and the Turks ramping up (the Italians themselves went to war with the Ottomans in 1911 over Libya), construction progressed rapidly and just 15 months later the Averof was commissioned on May 16, 1911, and was made fleet flagship.

Postcard of her

Postcard of her as completed. Note the very Italian scheme

When war came the very next year, the Averof led the older French battleships to first blockade and then engage the Turkish fleet off the Dardanelles. There, on 16 December 1912, the four Greek capital ships met four elderly Ottoman battleships and the largest battleship fight to take place not involving “Great Powers” occurred.

Elli naval battle, painting by Vasiileios Chatzis. Charging ahead to reach cut off the Ottoman line

Elli naval battle, painting by Vasiileios Chatzis. Charging ahead to cut off the Ottoman line

Borrowing a page from Admiral Togo’s 1905 Battle of the Tsushima Straits, the Averof raced ahead all alone at over 20-knots and crossed the Turkish T, taking on each of the enemy ships single file.

While the casualties were minimal, the Turks ran after Averof‘s big British 9-inchers hammered the flagship Barbaros Hayreddin (the old German SMS Kurfürst Friedrich Wilhelm) enough to where they figured that it was either shook and jive or sink. This sharp scrap is remembered in Greece as the Battle of Elli.

Just a month later, the two fleets again met with similar outcome off Lemnos Island.

Averof entering the port of Lemnos after a patrol, guns point towards the camera. April 10, 1913.

Between the two battles, the lucky Averof was hit a total of four times by Turkish shells and suffered just three casualties. It was her guns that by large part helped win the First Balkan War.

Averof 1916 during WWI

Averof 1916 during WWI

Averof color

Averof color

Although Greece eventually joined the Allies in World War I, she saw little service. However, across the Adriatic, her sistership, the Italian cruiser Amalfi, was torpedoed by the Austria-Hungarian submarine U-26 and sank in 1915.

Painting of the Greek Battleship Averof in Bosporus, Hagia Sophia in the background, in 1919

Painting of the Greek Battleship Averof in Bosporus, Hagia Sophia in the background, in 1919

After the war, she became the first Greek warship to enter Constantinople as part of the Allied victory mission to that town and– soon enough — was back in the fight against the Turks in 1919 during the Greco-Turkish War where she was used to help evacuate a defeated Greek Army.

In addition, she helped safeguard the withdrawal of the White Russian exiles after the Russian Civil War, reportedly exchanging a few rounds with the Reds.

In the 1920s, as one of the last armored cruisers around (most had been mothballed, replaced by more modern designs), she was upgraded in France where she lost her obsolete torpedo tubes and half of her low-angle 3-inch guns in exchange for a decent battery of high-angle AAA weapons. At about the same time her final sistership, the Italian cruiser Pisa, was relegated to a training status in 1921 and was eventually scrapped by the Depression.

After that, Averof was the sole remaining member of her class afloat.

Averof after her refit

Averof after her refit

By WWII, she had been downgraded to the third most powerful Greek ship, after President Wilson had sold the Greeks the battleships USS Mississippi and Idaho (who served as the Kilkis and Lemnos respectively). Those American ships, though unwanted by the U.S. Navy, at 13,000-tons and with a quartet of 12″/45 and sixteen 7 and 8-inch guns, were a good deal better armed.

Averoff with RHSKilkis (ex-USS Mississippi) and RHS Lemnos (ex-USS Idaho) pre-WWII

Averoff outside with RHS Kilkis (ex-USS Mississippi) and RHS Lemnos (ex-USS Idaho) taken pre-WWII. Note the size difference and the very 1914-ish lattice masts of the former U.S. battle wagons.

Nevertheless, when the next world war came to Greece, both the Kilkis and Limnos were sunk by Hitler’s Luftwaffe while at anchor yet the 30-year old Averof was able to beat feet across the Med with three destroyers and five submarines to the join up with the British Mediterranean Fleet at Alexandria.

Georgios Averof at anchor at Port Said, Egypt, 23rd February 1943 via IWM

Georgios Averof at anchor at Port Said, Egypt, 23rd February 1943 via IWM. Note, no camo

Averof1-1.jpg~original

Averoff in WWII under British orders, 1944 note typical RN camo scheme

Georgios Averof, Free Hellenic Navy armored cruiser, dressed up in dazzle camo, WWII

She spent the rest of the war, which if you are keeping count was at least her fifth, in Royal Navy service escorting convoys in the Indian Ocean and hiding from both Japanese and German submarines. In 1944, she carried the Greek government in exile home from London.

Armored cruiser GEORGIOS AVEROF at Piraeus Oct.1944, returning the Free Greek government after three and half year in the exile due to the occupation of the state by the Axis forces

As in the first World War, she came out of the Second unscathed and without losing a single man.

Averoff in WWII under British orders, note typical RN camo scheme

Averoff in WWII under British orders, note typical RN camo scheme

After 41 years at sea, she was the last pre-WWI era armored cruiser in active service in any fleet when she was finally decommissioned August 1, 1952. Held in mothballs for three decades, in 1984 she was overhauled, disarmed, and emplaced as a historical museum ship at Palaio Faliro where she is a popular tourist attraction.

Averof today

Averof today

Averof is her latest dry dock

Averof is her latest dry dock. Note the rearward facing 7.5-inch turret to the port side. Averof has four of these mounting a total of 8 guns, which is a significant battery all its own.

Now, still officially on the Greek Navy’s list and with an active duty (if greatly reduced) crew assigned, she will celebrate her 114th birthday under the flag of the Hellenic Navy in May.

Averof is the last armored cruiser in existence above the water. The only two comparable pre-WWI steel blue water ships to her still around, Dewey’s protected cruiser USS Olympia at Philadelphia, and Togo’s pre-dreadnought battleship Mikasa preserved at Yokosuka.

Specs

800px-Averof1Displacement: Full load 10,200 tons
Standard 9,956 tons
Length: 140.13 m (459.7 ft.)
Beam: 21 m (69 ft.)
Draft: 7.18 m (23.6 ft.)
Propulsion: Boilers: 22 Belleville water tube type, Engines: 2 four cylinder reciprocating steam engines, Shafts: 2 (twin screw ship), Power: 19,000 shp (14.2 MW)
Speed: 23.5 knots (43.5 km/h; 27.0 mph) maximum
20 knots operational
Range: 2,480 nautical miles (4,590 km) at 17.5 knots (32 km/h)
Complement: 670
Maximum capacity: 1200
Armor: Belt: 200 mm (7.9 in) midships, 80 mm (3.15 in) at ends
Deck: up to 40 mm (1.6 in)
Turrets: 200 mm (7.9 in) at 234mm turrets, 175 mm (6.9 in) at 190mm turrets
Barbettes: up to 180 mm (7.1 in)
Conning tower: up to 180 mm (7.1 in)
Armament: Original configuration:

4 × 234mm (9.2in) guns (2 × 2)
8 × 190mm (7.5in) guns (4 × 2)
16 × 76mm (3in) guns
4 × 47 mm (1.85in) guns
3 × 430mm (17in) torpedo tubes
After 1927 refit:
4 × 234mm (9.2in) guns (2 × 2)
8 × 190mm (7.5in) guns (4 × 2)
8 × 76mm (3in) guns
4 × 76 mm (3in) A/A guns
6 × 36mm (1.42in) A/A guns

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