:SMS Scharnhorst

{{Use shortened footnotes|date=October 2022}}

{{Short description|Armored cruiser of the German Imperial Navy}}

{{for|other ships of the same name|Scharnhorst (disambiguation){{!}}Scharnhorst}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2019}}

{{Infobox ship begin}}

|+ SMS {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}}

{{Infobox ship image

| Ship image = SMS Scharnhorst by Arthur Renard.jpg

| Ship image size = 300px

| Ship caption = {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} steaming at high speed, {{circa}} 1907–1908

}}

{{Infobox ship career

| Hide header =

| Ship country = German Empire

| Ship flag = {{shipboxflag|German Empire|naval}}

| Ship name = {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}}

| Ship namesake = Gerhard von Scharnhorst{{sfn|Rüger|p=160}}

| Ship laid down = 22 March 1905

| Ship launched = 23 March 1906

| Ship commissioned = 24 October 1907

| Ship fate = Sunk in action, Battle of the Falkland Islands, 8 December 1914

}}

{{Infobox ship characteristics

| Hide header =

| Header caption =

| Ship class = {{sclass|Scharnhorst|cruiser|0}} armored cruiser

| Ship displacement = {{convert|12985|t|LT|abbr=on|lk=on}}

| Ship length = {{convert|144.6|m|ftin|abbr=on}}

| Ship beam = {{convert|21.6|m|ftin|abbr=on}}

| Ship draft = {{convert|8.37|m|ftin|abbr=on}}

| Ship propulsion =

|Ship power=

| Ship speed = {{convert|22.5|kn|0|lk=in}}

| Ship range = {{convert|4800|nmi|abbr=on|lk=in}} at {{convert|14|kn|abbr=on}}

| Ship crew =

  • 52 officers
  • 788 enlisted men

| Ship armament =

| Ship armor =

| Ship notes =

}}

SMS {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}}{{efn|name=SMS|}} was an armored cruiser of the Imperial German Navy, built at the Blohm & Voss shipyard in Hamburg, Germany. She was the lead ship of her class, which included {{SMS|Gneisenau}}. {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and her sister were enlarged versions of the preceding {{sclass|Roon|cruiser|4}}; they were equipped with a greater number of main guns and were capable of a higher top speed. The ship was named after the Prussian military reformer General Gerhard von Scharnhorst and commissioned into service on 24 October 1907.

{{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} served briefly with the High Seas Fleet in Germany in 1908, though most of this time was spent conducting sea trials. She was assigned to the East Asia Squadron based in Qingdao, China, in 1909. After arriving, she replaced the cruiser {{SMS|Fürst Bismarck|1897|2}} as the squadron flagship, a position she would hold for the rest of her career. Over the next five years, she went on several tours of various Asian ports to show the flag for Germany. She frequently carried the squadron commanders to meet Asian heads of state and was present in Japan for the coronation of the Taishō Emperor in 1912.

After the outbreak of World War I in August 1914, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and {{lang|de|Gneisenau}}, accompanied by three light cruisers and several colliers, sailed across the Pacific Ocean to the southern coast of South America. On 1 November 1914, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and the rest of the East Asia Squadron encountered and overpowered a British squadron at the Battle of Coronel. The defeat prompted the British Admiralty to dispatch two battlecruisers to hunt down and destroy the German squadron, which they accomplished at the Battle of the Falkland Islands on 8 December 1914. The discovery of the wreck was announced in December 2019 by Mensun Bound.

Design

{{Main|Scharnhorst-class cruiser}}

File:Scharnhorst class Brassey's.jpg

The two {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}}-class cruisers were ordered as part of the naval construction program laid out in the Second Naval Law of 1900, which called for a force of fourteen armored cruisers. The ships marked a significant increase in combat power over the predecessors, the {{sclass|Roon|cruiser|4}}, being more heavily armed and armored. These improvements were made to allow for {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and {{SMS|Gneisenau||2}} to fight in the line of battle should the need arise, a capability requested by the General Department.{{sfn|Dodson|pp=58–59, 67}}

{{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} was {{convert|144.6|m|ftin|sp=us}} long overall and had a beam of {{convert|21.6|m|ftin|abbr=on}} and a draft of {{convert|8.37|m|ftin|abbr=on}}. The ship displaced {{convert|11,616|MT|LT|lk=on}} as designed and {{convert|12,985|MT|LT|abbr=on}} at full load. She was powered by three triple-expansion steam engines with steam provided by eighteen coal-fired water-tube boilers. Her propulsion system was rated to produce {{convert|26000|PS|lk=on}} for a top speed of {{convert|22.5|kn|lk=in|0}}. She had a cruising radius of {{convert|4800|nmi|lk=in}} at a speed of {{convert|14|kn}}. {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}}{{'}}s crew consisted of 52 officers and 788 enlisted men; of these, 14 officers and 62 enlisted men were assigned to the squadron commander's staff and were additional to the standard complement.{{sfn|Gröner|p=52}}

{{lang|de|Scharnhorst}}{{'}}s primary armament consisted of eight 21 cm SK L/40,{{efn| In Imperial German Navy gun nomenclature, "SK" (Schnelladekanone) denotes that the gun is quick loading, while the L/40 denotes the length of the gun. In this case, the L/40 gun is 40 calibers, meaning that the bore of the gun is 40 times as long as it is in bore diameter.{{sfn|Grießmer|p=177}}}} four in twin gun turrets, one fore and one aft of the main superstructure on the centerline, and the remaining four mounted in single casemates. The secondary armament included six 15 cm SK L/40 naval gun, also in individual casemates that were placed a deck below the main battery casemates. Defense against torpedo boats was provided by a battery of eighteen 8.8 cm SK L/35 naval gun mounted in casemates. She was also equipped with four {{convert|45|cm|in|abbr=on|1}} submerged torpedo tubes. One was mounted in the bow, one on each broadside, and the fourth was placed in the stern.{{sfn|Gröner|p=52}}{{sfn|Campbell & Sieche|p=142}}

The ship was protected by a 15 cm belt of {{convert|15|cm|abbr=on}} of Krupp armor, decreased to {{convert|8|cm|abbr=on}} forward and aft of the central citadel. She had an armored deck that was {{convert|3.5|to|6|cm|abbr=on}} thick, with the heavier armor protecting the ship's engine and boiler rooms and ammunition magazines. The centerline gun turrets had {{convert|18|cm|abbr=on}} thick sides, while the wing turrets received 15 cm of armor protection. The casemate secondary battery was protected by a strake of armor that was {{convert|13|cm|abbr=on}} thick.{{sfn|Gröner|p=52}}{{sfn|Dodson|p=206}}

Service history

File:Scharnhorst2.jpg

Named for {{lang|de|Generalleutnant}} (Lieutenant General) Gerhard von Scharnhorst, a Prussian military reformer during the Napoleonic Wars, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} was laid down at the Blohm & Voss shipyard in Hamburg, Germany on 22 March 1905,{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=105}} with the construction number 175.{{sfn|Gröner|p=52}} She was launched on 23 March 1906, and {{lang|de|Generalfeldmarschall}} (Field Marshal) Gottlieb Graf von Haeseler gave a speech and christened the ship at her launching ceremony.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=106}} She was commissioned into the fleet a year and a half later on 24 October 1907. She then began sea trials; while conducting speed tests she exceeded her design speed by one knot, reaching {{convert|23.5|kn}}.{{sfn|Gröner|p=52}}{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=106}}

From 6 to 11 November, her trials were interrupted by a voyage to Vlissingen in the Netherlands and Portsmouth in Britain in company with Kaiser Wilhelm II's yacht {{lang|de|Hohenzollern}} and the light cruiser {{SMS|Königsberg|1905|2}}. On 14 January 1908, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} ran aground off the Bülk Lighthouse and suffered serious underwater damage. Repairs were made at Blohm & Voss, and lasted until 22 February. She then resumed her trials, which continued until the end of April. On 1 May, she replaced {{SMS|Yorck||2}} as the flagship of the reconnaissance forces of the High Seas Fleet, under the command of {{lang|de|Konteradmiral}} (Rear Admiral) August von Heeringen. During the rest of the year, she participated in the normal peacetime routine of training exercises and fleet maneuvers.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=106}}

= East Asia Squadron =

File:Contemporary map of Tsingtau and the Shandong Peninsula.png showing the Jiaozhou Bay Leased Territory|alt=The Jiaozhou Bay Leased Territory was located in the natural harbor at Qingdao on the southern coast of the Shandong Peninsula]]

==1909–1911==

On 11 March 1909, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} was assigned to the {{lang|de|Ostasiengeschwader}} (East Asia Squadron); {{lang|de|Yorck}} replaced her as the reconnaissance squadron flagship. After completing preparations for the voyage, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} left Kiel on 1 April; aboard was {{lang|de|Konteradmiral}} Friedrich von Ingenohl, who was to take command of the East Asia Squadron upon his arrival.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|pp=106–107}} On 29 April, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} rendezvoused with {{SMS|Fürst Bismarck|1897|2}}, the flagship of the East Asia Squadron, in Colombo. There, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} took over the role of squadron flagship. At the time, the squadron also included the light cruisers {{SMS|Leipzig|1905|2}} and {{SMS|Arcona|1902|2}} and several gunboats and torpedo boats. In July and August, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} went on a cruise in the Yellow Sea and in August surveyed ports in the area. She spent December and early January 1910 in Hong Kong for the Christmas and New Year's festivities, in company with {{lang|de|Leipzig}} and the gunboat {{SMS|Luchs||2}}.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=107}}

In January 1910 {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}}, {{lang|de|Leipzig}}, and {{lang|de|Luchs}} went on a tour of East Asian ports, including Bangkok, Manila, and stops in Sumatra and North Borneo. By 22 March, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and {{lang|de|Leipzig}} had returned to the German port at Qingdao. In the meantime, {{lang|de|Arcona}} had left the East Asia Squadron in February; her replacement, {{SMS|Nürnberg|1906|2}}, arrived on 9 April. Ingenohl, by now promoted to {{lang|de|Vizeadmiral}} (Vice Admiral), departed on 6 June and was replaced by {{lang|de|Konteradmiral}} Erich Gühler. The new squadron commander took {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and {{lang|de|Nürnberg}} on a tour of Germany's Pacific colonies, starting on 20 June. Stops included the Mariana Islands, Truk, and Apia in German Samoa. In the last port, the cruisers met the unprotected cruisers {{SMS|Cormoran|1892|2}} and {{SMS|Condor||2}}, the station ships for the South Seas Station. While there, the new light cruiser {{SMS|Emden|1908|2}} arrived on 22 July to further strengthen the East Asia Squadron.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=107}}

File:SMS Scharnhorst (1).jpg

In 1910, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} won the Kaiser's {{lang|de|Schießpreis}} (Shooting Prize) for excellent gunnery in the East Asia Squadron. On 25 November, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and the rest of the squadron went on a trip to Hong Kong and Nanjing; while in Hong Kong, an outbreak of typhus struck. Among those who were infected was Gühler, who succumbed to the disease on 21 January 1911. In the meantime, unrest had broken out in Ponape, which required the presence of {{lang|de|Emden}} and {{lang|de|Nürnberg}}. {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} instead went on a tour of Southeast Asian ports, including Saigon, Singapore, and Batavia. She then returned to Qingdao by way of Hong Kong and Amoy, arriving on 1 March. There, {{lang|de|Konteradmiral}} Günther von Krosigk was waiting to take command of the squadron. Two weeks later, the squadron was reinforced by the arrival of {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}}{{'}}s sister ship {{lang|de|Gneisenau}} on 14 March.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=107}}

From 30 March to 12 May, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} went on a cruise in Japanese waters with Krosigk aboard. She thereafter steamed to the northern area of the German protectorate in early July; at the time tensions were high in Europe due to the Agadir Crisis. Krosigk attempted to keep the situation calm in East Asia and he took his flagship on a tour of harbors in the Yellow Sea. By 15 September, the cruiser was back in Qingdao. After arriving in Qingdao, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} went into dock for her annual repair; Krosigk accordingly shifted his flag to {{lang|de|Gneisenau}} temporarily. On 10 October, the Xinhai Revolution against the Qing Dynasty broke out, causing a great deal of tension amongst the Europeans, who recalled the attacks on foreigners during the Boxer Uprising of 1900–1901. The rest of the East Asia Squadron was placed on alert to protect German interests and additional troops were sent to protect the German consulate. But the feared attacks on Europeans did not materialize and so the East Asia Squadron was not needed.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=108}}

==1912–1914==

File:Vonspee1.JPG}} Maximilian von Spee, who would command {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} during World War I|alt=An older man in a double-breasted naval uniform]]

By late November, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} was back in service and Krosigk returned to the ship. She cruised to Shanghai by way of Tianjin and Yantai, arriving on 12 December. From 14 to 24 January 1912, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} toured the ports of the central China coast and returned to Qingdao on 9 March, where the rest of the squadron had assembled.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|pp=108–109}} On 13 April, the ships went on a month-long cruise to Japanese waters, returning to Qingdao on 13 May. From 17 July to 4 September, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} went on another tour of Japanese ports and during this period she also visited Vladivostok in Russia and several ports in the Yellow Sea.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=109}}

On 30 July, the Japanese Emperor Meiji died; {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} escorted {{lang|de|Leipzig}}, which carried Prince Heinrich, Wilhelm II's brother, to the Meiji Emperor's funeral and the coronation ceremony for the Emperor Taishō. The ships remained in Japan from 5 to 26 September. After returning to Qingdao, Prince Heinrich conducted an inspection of the entire East Asia Squadron. On 4 December, Krosigk handed over command of the squadron to {{lang|de|Konteradmiral}} Maximilian von Spee. On 27 December, Spee took {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and {{lang|de|Gneisenau}} on a tour of the southwest Pacific, including stops in Amoy, Singapore, and Batavia. The two cruisers reached Qingdao on 2 March 1913. From 1 April to 7 May, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} took Spee to Japan to meet the Taishō Emperor.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=109}} Starting on 22 June, Spee began a tour of Germany's Pacific colonies aboard his flagship. The ship stopped in the Marianas, the Admiralty Islands, the Hermit Islands, Rabaul in Neupommern, and Friedrich-Wilhelmshafen in German New Guinea.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|pp=109–110}}

While in Rabaul on 21 July, Spee received word of further unrest in China, which prompted his return to the Wusong roadstead outside Shanghai by 30 July. After the situation calmed, Spee was able to take his ships on a short cruise to Japan, which began on 11 November. {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and the rest of the squadron returned to Shanghai on 29 November, before she departed for another trip to Southeast Asia. Spee met with Vajiravudh, the King of Siam, and also visited Sumatra, North Borneo, and Manila. {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} returned to Qingdao on 19 March 1914. In early May, Spee, by now promoted to {{lang|de|Vizeadmiral}}, took {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and the torpedo boat {{SMS|S90}} on a visit to Port Arthur and then to Tianjin; Spee continued on to Beijing, where he met with Yuan Shikai, the first President of the Republic of China. He came back aboard {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} on 11 May and the ship returned to Qingdao. Spee thereafter began preparations for a cruise to German New Guinea; {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} departed on 20 June, leaving only {{lang|de|Emden}} behind in Qingdao.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=110}}

{{lang|de|Gneisenau}} rendezvoused with {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} in Nagasaki, Japan, where they received a full supply of coal. They then sailed south, arriving in Truk in early July where they would restock their coal supplies. While en route, they received news of the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the throne of Austria-Hungary.{{sfn|Hough|pp=11–12}} On 17 July, the East Asia Squadron arrived in Ponape in the Caroline Islands. Spee now had access to the German radio network and he learned of the Austro-Hungarian declaration of war on Serbia on 28 July and the Russian mobilization against Austria-Hungary and possibly Germany on 30 July. On 31 July, word came that the German ultimatum that Russia demobilize its armies was set to expire. Spee ordered his ships be stripped for war.{{efn|name=stripped for war}} On 2 August, Wilhelm II ordered German mobilization against Russia and its ally, France.{{sfn|Hough|pp=17–18}}{{clear left}}

File:East Asia Squadron in Kiaochow Bay.png in Qingdao; {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and {{lang|de|Gneisenau}} are at center]]

= World War I =

File:The German East Asia Squadron 1914 1915-en.svg

When the First World War broke out, the East Asia Squadron consisted of {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}}, {{lang|de|Gneisenau}}, {{lang|de|Emden}}, {{lang|de|Nürnberg}}, and {{lang|de|Leipzig}}.{{sfn|Halpern|p=66}} At the time, {{lang|de|Nürnberg}} was returning from the west coast of the United States, where {{lang|de|Leipzig}} had just replaced her, and {{lang|de|Emden}} was still in Qingdao.{{sfn|Staff|p=29}} On 6 August 1914, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}}, {{lang|de|Gneisenau}}, the supply ship {{lang|de|Titania}}, and the Japanese collier {{lang|ja|Fukoku Maru}} were still in Ponape.{{sfn|Halpern|p=71}} Spee had issued orders to recall the light cruisers, which had been dispersed on cruises around the Pacific.{{sfn|Hough|pp=1–2}} {{lang|de|Nürnberg}} joined Spee that day,{{sfn|Halpern|p=71}} after which Spee moved his ships to Pagan Island in the Northern Mariana Islands, a German possession in the central Pacific. Spee left for Pagan in the night, without {{lang|ja|Fukoku Maru}}, to avoid having the Japanese crew betray his movements.{{sfn|Halpern|p=71}}{{sfn|Staff|p=29}}{{efn|Japan, though still neutral, was allied with Britain and would soon enter the war against Germany.{{sfn|Halpern|pp=71–74}}}}

All available colliers, supply ships, and passenger liners were ordered to meet the East Asia Squadron in Pagan{{sfn|Hough|pp=3–4}} and {{lang|de|Emden}} joined the squadron there on 12 August.{{sfn|Staff|p=29}} The auxiliary cruiser {{SS|Prinz Eitel Friedrich|1904|2}} joined Spee's ships there as well.{{sfn|Hough|p=5}} On 13 August, Commodore Karl von Müller, captain of the {{lang|de|Emden}}, persuaded Spee to detach his ship as a commerce raider. The four cruisers, accompanied by {{lang|de|Prinz Eitel Friedrich}} and several colliers, then departed Pagan on 15 August, bound for Chile. While en route to Enewetak Atoll in the Marshall Islands the next morning, {{lang|de|Emden}} left the formation with one of the colliers. The remaining ships again coaled after their arrival in Enewetak on 20 August.{{sfn|Hough|pp=23, 33}}

To keep the German high command informed, on 8 September Spee detached {{lang|de|Nürnberg}} to Honolulu to send word through neutral countries. {{lang|de|Nürnberg}} returned with news of the Allied capture of German Samoa, which had taken place on 29 August. {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and {{lang|de|Gneisenau}} sailed to Apia to investigate the situation.{{sfn|Strachan|p=471}} Spee had hoped to catch a British or Australian warship by surprise, but upon his arrival on 14 September, he found no warships in the harbor.{{sfn|Staff|pp=29–30}} On 22 September, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and the rest of the East Asia Squadron arrived at the French colony of Papeete. The Germans attacked the colony, and in the ensuing Battle of Papeete, they sank the French gunboat {{lang|fr|Zélée}}. The ships came under fire from French shore batteries but were undamaged.{{sfn|Staff|p=30}} Fear of mines in the harbor prevented Spee from entering the harbor to seize the coal, which the French had set on fire.{{sfn|Halpern|p=89}}

By 12 October, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and the rest of the squadron had reached Easter Island. There they were joined by {{lang|de|Dresden}} and {{lang|de|Leipzig}}, which had sailed from American waters, on 12 and 14 October, respectively. {{lang|de|Leipzig}} also brought three more colliers with her.{{sfn|Staff|p=30}} After a week in the area, the ships departed for mainland Chile.{{sfn|Hawkins|p=34}} On the evening of 26 October, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and the rest of the squadron steamed out of Mas a Fuera, Chile and headed eastward, arriving in Valparaíso on 30 October. On 1 November, Spee learned from {{lang|de|Prinz Eitel Friedrich}} that the British light cruiser {{HMS|Glasgow|1909|6}} had been anchored in Coronel the previous day, so he turned towards the port to try to catch her alone.{{sfn|Halpern|p=92}}{{sfn|Staff|pp=30–31}}

== Battle of Coronel ==

File:Battle of Coronel map.svg

{{Main|Battle of Coronel}}

The British had scant resources to oppose the German squadron off the coast of South America. Rear Admiral Christopher Cradock commanded the armored cruisers {{HMS|Good Hope|1901|6}} and {{HMS|Monmouth|1901|2}}, Glasgow, and the converted armed merchant cruiser {{HMS|Otranto||2}}. The flotilla was reinforced by the elderly pre-dreadnought battleship {{HMS|Canopus|1897|2}} and the armored cruiser {{HMS|Defence|1907|2}}. The latter, however, did not arrive until after the Battle of Coronel.{{sfn|Herwig|p=156}} Canopus was left behind by Cradock, who probably felt her slow speed would prevent him from bringing the German ships to battle.{{sfn|Halpern|p=92}}

The East Asia Squadron arrived off Coronel on the afternoon of 1 November; to Spee's surprise, he encountered Good Hope, Monmouth, and Otranto in addition to Glasgow. Canopus was still some {{convert|300|nmi|abbr=on}} behind, with the British colliers.{{sfn|Halpern|pp=92–93}} At 16:17, Glasgow spotted the German ships. Cradock formed a line of battle with Good Hope in the lead, followed by Monmouth, Glasgow, and Otranto in the rear. Spee decided to hold off engaging until the sun had set more, at which point the British ships would be silhouetted by the sun, while his own ships would be obscured against the coast behind them. Cradock realized the uselessness of Otranto in the line of battle and detached her.{{sfn|Halpern|p=93}}{{sfn|Staff|p=32}}

By 18:07, the distance between the two squadrons had fallen to {{convert|13500|m|abbr=on}} and Spee ordered his ships to open fire thirty minutes later; each ship engaged their opposite in the British line.{{sfn|Staff|p=33}} {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} engaged Good Hope and hit her on the third salvo, striking between her forward gun turret and her conning tower and starting a major fire. Once the German gunners found the range, they began firing rapidly, with one salvo of high-explosive shells every fifteen seconds.{{sfn|Staff|pp=33–34}} {{lang|de|Oberleutnant zur See}} (Lieutenant at Sea) Knoop, the spotting officer aboard {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}}, reported that "Continual hits could be observed ... in the midships Good Hope was hit repeatedly, with much fire resulting ... the interior of this part of the ship was on fire, which could be seen through the portholes, shining brightly."{{sfn|Staff|p=34}}

In the meantime, Glasgow began to shoot at both {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and {{lang|de|Gneisenau}}, since she could no longer engage the German light cruisers. One of her {{convert|4|in|adj=on|0}} shells struck {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} in the forecastle but failed to explode. By 18:50, Monmouth had been badly damaged by {{lang|de|Gneisenau}} and fell out of line; {{lang|de|Gneisenau}} therefore joined {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} in battling Good Hope.{{sfn|Staff|p=35}} At the same time, {{lang|de|Nürnberg}} closed to point-blank range of Monmouth and poured shells into her.{{sfn|Herwig|p=157}} At 19:23, Good Hope{{'}}s guns fell silent following two large explosions; the German gunners ceased fire shortly thereafter. Good Hope disappeared into the darkness. Spee ordered his light cruisers to close with his battered opponents and finish them off with torpedoes, while he took {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and {{lang|de|Gneisenau}} further south to get out of the way.{{sfn|Staff|p=36}}

Glasgow was forced to abandon Monmouth after 19:20 when the German light cruisers approached, before fleeing south and meeting with Canopus. A squall prevented the Germans from discovering Monmouth, but she eventually capsized and sank at 20:18.{{sfn|Staff|p=36}}{{sfn|Strachan|p=36}} More than 1,600 men were killed in the sinking of the two armored cruisers, including Cradock. German losses were negligible. However, the German ships had expended over 40 percent of their ammunition supply.{{sfn|Halpern|p=93}} {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} was hit twice during the engagement, but both shells failed to explode.{{sfn|Strachan|p=36}} The second hit passed through her third funnel and did not explode; she was struck by shell splinters that damaged her wireless antenna array. She suffered no casualties and the only German injuries were two slightly wounded men aboard {{lang|de|Gneisenau}}.{{sfn|Staff|p=39}}

==Voyage to the Falklands==

File:Ostasiengeschwader Graf Spee in Chile.jpg on 3 November after the battle, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and {{lang|de|Gneisenau}} in the lead and {{lang|de|Nürnberg}} following. In the middle distance are a group of Chilean warships|alt=A group of large warships steaming slowly away from the city.]]

After the battle, Spee took his ships north to Valparaiso. Since Chile was neutral, only three ships could enter the port at a time; Spee took {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}}, {{lang|de|Gneisenau}}, and {{lang|de|Nürnberg}} in first on the morning of 3 November, leaving {{lang|de|Dresden}} and {{lang|de|Leipzig}} with the colliers at Mas a Fuera. In Valparaiso, Spee's ships could take on coal while he conferred with the Admiralty Staff in Germany to determine the strength of remaining British forces in the region. The ships remained in the port for only 24 hours, in accordance with the neutrality restrictions, and arrived at Mas a Fuera on 6 November, where they took on more coal from captured British and French steamers. On 10 November, {{lang|de|Dresden}} and {{lang|de|Leipzig}} were detached for a stop in Valparaiso, and five days later, Spee took the rest of the squadron south to St. Quentin Bay in the Gulf of Penas. On 18 November, {{lang|de|Dresden}} and {{lang|de|Leipzig}} met Spee while en route and the squadron reached St. Quentin Bay three days later. There, they took on more coal, since the voyage around Cape Horn would be a long one and it was unclear when they would have another opportunity to coal.{{sfn|Staff|pp=58–59}}

Once word of the defeat reached London, the Royal Navy set to organizing a force to hunt down and destroy the East Asia Squadron. To this end, the powerful battlecruisers {{HMS|Invincible|1907|2}} and {{HMS|Inflexible|1907|2}} were detached from the Grand Fleet and placed under the command of Vice Admiral Doveton Sturdee.{{sfn|Strachan|p=41}} The two ships left Devonport on 10 November and while en route to the Falkland Islands, they were joined by the armored cruisers {{HMS|Carnarvon||2}}, {{HMS|Kent|1901|2}}, and {{HMS|Cornwall|1902|2}}, the light cruisers {{HMS|Bristol|1910|2}} and Glasgow, and the armed merchant cruiser {{HMS|Macedonia||2}}. The force of eight ships reached the Falklands by 7 December, where they immediately coaled.{{sfn|Strachan|p=47}}

In the meantime, Spee's ships departed St. Quentin Bay on 26 November and rounded Cape Horn on 2 December. They captured the Canadian barque Drummuir, which had a cargo of {{convert|2500|MT|LT|abbr=on|sp=us}} of good-quality Cardiff coal. {{lang|de|Leipzig}} took the ship under tow and the following day the ships stopped off Picton Island. The crews transferred the coal from Drummuir to the squadron's colliers. On the morning of 6 December, Spee held a conference with the ship commanders aboard {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} to determine their next course of action. The Germans had received numerous fragmentary and contradictory reports of British reinforcements in the region; Spee and two other captains favored an attack on the Falklands, while three other commanders argued that it would be better to bypass the islands and attack British shipping off Argentina. Spee's opinion carried the day and the squadron departed for the Falklands at 12:00.{{sfn|Staff|pp=61–62}}

== Battle of the Falkland Islands ==

File:Thomas Jacques Somerscales, Sinking of 'The Scharnhorst' at the Battle of the Falkland Islands, 8 December 1914.jpg

File:Battle of the Falkland Islands, 1914 (retouched).jpg

{{Main|Battle of the Falkland Islands}}

{{lang|de|Gneisenau}} and {{lang|de|Nürnberg}} were delegated for the attack; they approached the Falklands the following morning (8 December), with the intention of destroying the wireless transmitter there. Observers aboard {{lang|de|Gneisenau}} spotted smoke rising from Port Stanley, but assumed it was the British burning their coal stocks to prevent the Germans from seizing them.{{sfn|Staff|p=62}} As they closed on the harbor, {{convert|30.5|cm|in|abbr=on|0}} shells from Canopus, which had been beached as a guard ship, began to fall around the German ships, which prompted Spee to break off the attack.{{sfn|Strachan|p=47}} The Germans took a southeasterly course at {{convert|22|kn|abbr=on}} after having reformed by 10:45.{{sfn|Staff|p=64}} {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} was the center ship, with {{lang|de|Gneisenau}} and {{lang|de|Nürnberg}} ahead and {{lang|de|Dresden}} and {{lang|de|Leipzig}} astern.{{sfn|Bennett|p=115}}{{sfn|Staff|p=63}} The fast battlecruisers quickly got up steam and sailed out of the harbor to pursue the slower East Asia Squadron.{{sfn|Strachan|p=47}}

By 13:20, the British ships had caught up with {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and the other cruisers and began firing at a range of {{convert|14|km|abbr=on}}.{{sfn|Herwig|p=158}} Spee realized his armored cruisers could not escape the much faster battlecruisers and ordered the three light cruisers to attempt to break away while he turned about and allowed the British battlecruisers to engage the outgunned {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and {{lang|de|Gneisenau}}. Meanwhile, Sturdee detached his cruisers to pursue the German light cruisers.{{sfn|Bennett|p=117}} Invincible opened fire at {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} while Inflexible attacked {{lang|de|Gneisenau}} and Spee ordered his two armored cruisers to similarly engage their opposites. Spee had taken the lee position; the wind kept his ships swept of smoke, which improved visibility for his gunners. This forced Sturdee into the windward position and its corresponding worse visibility. {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} straddled Invincible with her third salvo and quickly scored two hits on the British battlecruiser. The German flagship was not hit during this phase of the battle.{{sfn|Staff|p=66}}

Sturdee attempted to widen the distance by turning two points to the north to prevent Spee from closing to within the range of his numerous secondary guns. Spee counteracted this maneuver by turning rapidly to the south, which forced Sturdee to turn south as well to keep within range. This allowed {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and {{lang|de|Gneisenau}} to turn back north and get close enough to engage with their secondary 15 cm guns. Their shooting was so accurate that it forced the British to haul away a second time.{{sfn|Bennett|p=118}} After resuming the battle, the British gunfire became more accurate;{{sfn|Staff|p=67}} {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} was hit several times and fires broke out. The pace of her gunfire started to slacken, though she continued to score hits on Invincible. Sturdee then turned to port in an attempt to take the leeward position, but Spee countered the turn to retain his favorable position; the maneuvering did, however, reverse the order of the ships, so {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} now engaged Inflexible.{{sfn|Staff|p=68}}

By this stage of the battle, {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} had a slight list to port and was about a meter lower in the water. Her third funnel had been shot away. {{lang|de|Gneisenau}} was briefly obscured by smoke, which led both battlecruisers to target {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}}. By 16:00, Spee ordered {{lang|de|Gneisenau}} to attempt to escape while he reversed course and attempted to launch torpedoes at his pursuers. The port list had increased significantly by this point and she was well down by the bow, with only {{convert|2|m|sp=us}} of freeboard. At 16:17, the ship finally capsized to port and sank; the British, their attention now focused on {{lang|de|Gneisenau}}, made no attempt to rescue the crew.{{sfn|Staff|p=69}} All 860 officers and men on board, including Spee, went down with the ship.{{sfn|Gröner|p=52}} {{lang|de|Gneisenau}}, {{lang|de|Leipzig}}, and {{lang|de|Nürnberg}} were also sunk. Only {{lang|de|Dresden}} managed to escape, but she was eventually tracked to the Juan Fernandez Islands and sunk. The complete destruction of the squadron killed about 2,200 German sailors and officers, including two of Spee's sons.{{sfn|Herwig|p=158}}

In mid-1915, a coastal steamer found the body of a German sailor off the coast of Brazil. The sailor had a watertight cartridge case from a 21 cm shell attached; inside was one of the {{lang|de|Reichskriegsflaggen}} (Imperial war flags) flown aboard {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}}. The sailor was buried in Brazil and the flag was eventually returned to Germany, where it was placed on display at the Museum für Meereskunde (Marine Science) in Berlin, though it was lost during World War II.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=112}} In the mid-1930s, the new German navy, the {{lang|de|Kriegsmarine}}, built a battleship named for {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}}. At the launching of the new {{ship|German battleship|Scharnhorst||2}} in October 1936, the widow of the earlier ship's captain was present.{{sfn|Williamson|p=8}}{{clear left}}

Wreck

An expedition led by the marine archaeologist Mensun Bound searching for the ships of Spee's squadron began in 2014, but had no success. Bound returned for another attempt in 2019 with the research vessel Seabed Constructor, and on 5 December he announced he had located the wreck of {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}}. The vessel lies upright at a depth of about {{Cvt|1610|m}}, some {{Cvt|98|nmi}} southeast of the Falklands. Most of the superstructure has been destroyed or lies around the wreck, but the greater part of the hull is still intact.{{Cite news|title=Discovery of WW1 German Battlecruiser SMS Scharnhorst in Falklands waters|work=Merco Press|url=https://en.mercopress.com/2019/12/05/discovery-of-ww1-german-battlecruiser-sms-scharnhorst-in-falklands-waters|date=5 December 2019|access-date=5 December 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191205023546/https://en.mercopress.com/2019/12/05/discovery-of-ww1-german-battlecruiser-sms-scharnhorst-in-falklands-waters|archive-date=5 December 2019|url-status=live}}{{Cite news|title=German WWI wreck Scharnhorst discovered off Falklands|publisher=BBC News|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-50670743|date=5 December 2019|access-date=5 December 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191205122602/https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-50670743|archive-date=5 December 2019|url-status=live}}

Notes

=Footnotes=

{{notes

| notes =

{{efn

| name = SMS

| "SMS" stands for "Seiner Majestät Schiff" ({{langx|de|link=no|His Majesty's Ship}}).

}}

{{efn

| name = stripped for war

| This meant the removal of all non-essential items, to include dress uniforms, tapestries, furniture, and other flammable objects. See: {{harvnb|Hough|p=17}}.

}}

}}

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{{Scharnhorst class armored cruiser}}

{{Blohm + Voss}}

{{December 1914 shipwrecks}}

{{coord|52|53|49|S|56|0|59|W|scale:3000000|name=Approximate location of the wreck of the SMS Scharnhorst|display=title}}

{{Featured article}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Scharnhorst}}

Category:1906 ships

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