SMS Bismarck
SMS Bismarck was a built for the German Imperial Navy in the late 1870s. She was the lead ship of her class, which included five other vessels. The Bismarck-class corvettes were ordered as part of a major naval construction program in the early 1870s, and she was designed to serve as a fleet scout and on extended tours in Germany's colonial empire. Bismarck was laid down in November 1875, launched in July 1877, and was commissioned into the fleet in August 1878. She was armed with a battery of sixteen guns and had sails, a full ship rig to supplement her steam engine on long cruises abroad.
Bismarck went on two major overseas cruises, the first in late 1878 to late 1880, visiting South American ports and patrolling the Central Pacific, where Germany had economic interests but no formal colonies at that time. During this cruise, she interfered with Samoan internal affairs and protected German interests in South America during the War of the Pacific. After returning to Germany, she was overhauled and received a new gun battery. Bismarck was reactivated in 1883 as Germany prepared to embark on the scramble for Africa.
The second deployment lasted from 1884 to 1888, when Germany began to seize colonies in Africa and the Pacific; Bismarck was closely involved in the acquisition of Kamerun in 1884, the settlement of borders for German East Africa in 1885 and 1886, and German intervention in the Samoan Civil War in 1887. For the entirety of this tour abroad, Bismarck served as the flagship of the German overseas cruiser squadron commanded by Eduard von Knorr and later Karl Eduard Heusner. After returning to Germany in 1888, the ship was decommissioned and stricken from the naval register in 1891, thereafter seeing use as a barracks ship until 1920, when she was broken up.
Design
After the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–1871, the newly formed Kaiserliche Marine began an expansion program to strengthen the fleet. The naval command determined that modern steam corvettes were necessary for scouting purposes, as well as overseas cruising duties to protect German interests abroad. The six ships of the Bismarck class were ordered in the early 1870s to supplement Germany's fleet of cruising warships, which at that time relied on several ships that were twenty years old.Bismarck was long overall, with a beam of and a draft of forward. She displaced at full load. The ship's crew consisted of 18 officers and 386 enlisted men. She was powered by a single marine steam engine that drove one 2-bladed screw propeller, with steam provided by four coal-fired fire-tube boilers, which gave her a top speed of at. She had a cruising radius of at a speed of. As built, Bismarck was equipped with a full ship rig, but this was later reduced.
Bismarck was armed with a battery of sixteen 22-caliber breech-loading guns and two 30-cal. guns. She also carried six Hotchkiss revolver cannon and had two torpedo tubes in her bow, above the waterline.
Service history
The keel for Bismarck was laid down at the Friedrich Krupp Germaniawerft in Kiel in November 1875 under the contract name "B", which denoted that she was a new addition to the fleet, rather than a replacement for a vessel then in service. Her completed hull was launched on 25 July 1877; she was christened by Admiral Albrecht von Stosch, the head of the German Imperial Admiralty. The ship was commissioned on 27 August 1878 and thereafter began sea trials. These were completed by 1 October, when she was activated for an overseas deployment. Bismarck was transferred to Wilhelmshaven to be equipped for the voyage.First overseas deployment
Bismarck left Wilhelmshaven on 22 November under the command of Kapitän zur See Karl August Deinhard and proceeded through the Atlantic Ocean, visiting Montevideo, Uruguay from 12 to 20 January 1879, then proceeding through the Strait of Magellan into the Pacific Ocean and stopping in Valparaiso, Chile. Bismarck conducted hydrographic surveys while sailing from Germany to the Pacific. She then proceeded to the Society Islands, visiting Raiatea, Bora Bora, and Huahine, where the ship's commander concluded a friendship treaty with the local ruler, which was signed in the German consulate in Papeete on the island of Tahiti. Bismarck thereafter joined the gunboat and relieved the corvette, which returned to Germany.Bismarck began a trip around the islands of the central Pacific on 22 May to familiarize the crew with the conditions in the region. Albatross arrived in the central Pacific on 30 July, allowing Bismarck to sail on 8 August to Sydney, Australia, for an overhaul. The ship was urgently recalled to Samoa after the repair work was completed, owing to unrest in the islands that threatened German traders. Bismarck later carried the recently appointed consul-general from Tongatapu to Apia in Samoa on 1 November. She then sailed to Levuka on the island of Ovalau to replenish her stock of coal, before returning to Samoa to try to negotiate a settlement to the conflict on the islands. There, she was joined by the gunboat, which was sent to increase the leverage the Germans had to pressure the competing factions to recognize the Malietoa Talavou Tonumaipeʻa as the ruler of all Samoans.
Eight men aboard Bismarck had died due to tropical diseases by early 1880, and the Admiralität decided to recall the vessel. On 26 January 1880, the ship left Apia and after reaching Levuka, she was damaged in a severe storm, which forced her to go to Sydney for repairs. While she was being repaired, the Admiralität altered her original route and ordered her to proceed to the west coast of South America to support the ironclad, which was protecting German interests in the area during the War of the Pacific. Bismarck patrolled Chilean and Peruvian harbors from 26 May to 12 July; on 18 July, she left Chile and rounded Cape Horn, passing through heavy storms in the Strait of Magellan. She stopped in Port Stanley in the Falkland Islands before proceeding to Plymouth and ultimately reaching Wilhelmshaven on 30 September. There, she was decommissioned on 14 October. The ship's namesake, Chancellor Otto von Bismarck, invited the ship's commander to his manor at Friedrichsruh to inform him of the events of their voyage.
Second overseas deployment
1884–1885, West African operations
In early 1881, Bismarck went into the Kaiserliche Werft Wilhelmshaven in Wilhelmshaven for an extensive overhaul of her propulsion system. During this refit bow torpedo tubes were installed, and her original 15 cm guns were replaced by more modern quick-firing guns of the same caliber. She went through another round of sea trials from 2 to 13 August 1883, though since June 1882 she had been designated as part of the I. Reserve owing to the tensions related to the Anglo-Egyptian War. By the mid-1880s, the European powers had embarked on the scramble for Africa, and German firms, including Jantzen & Thormählen and the Woermann-Linie, began to press the German government to acquire colonies as well. To this end, the firms attempted to incite attacks from local rulers in West Africa against German traders in the region to try to force the government to place the region under German control. As a result of these incidents, Bismarck, despite his long dislike of overseas colonies, decided to send a squadron to the Bight of Biafra to protect German interests.On 17 September 1884, the Admiralität organized the West African Cruiser Squadron, under the command of Konteradmiral Eduard von Knorr, to reinforce the gunboat. Knorr raised his flag aboard Bismarck on 15 October, and in addition to Möwe, Knorr's squadron included Bismarcks sister ship and the corvettes and Ariadne. The four corvettes left Germany on 30 October. To supply the squadron in a remote region with no harbor facilities, the navy acquired the steamship as a tender and a hospital ship, though the vessel remained a civilian ship. While en route, Ariadne was detached to Cape Verde and Gneisenau was sent to East Africa, since reports indicated the situation in West Africa had calmed. Bismarck and Olga reached the Wouri River on 17 December. Shortly before their arrival, two anti-German groups burned down the village of a pro-German tribe.
Knorr decided to intervene immediately, and sent ashore a landing party of some three hundred men from Bismarck and Olga to arrest the leaders of the anti-German tribes and destroy their villages. The troops from Bismarck that went ashore on 20 December brought with them a pair of field guns, one of 8.8 cm and the other of 3.7 cm. They landed north of Hickorytown, while the men from Olga went ashore south of the village with an 8.8 cm gun of their own. The Germans fought their way into the town, forcing the local forces to retreat into the mangrove forest, where they could not easily be pursued. Then-Lieutenant Reinhard Scheer led the landing party from Bismarck during this operation. While this operation was underway, Knorr received word that other hostile locals had attacked the trading post operated by Jantzen & Thormählen in Joss Town and had captured the company's local manager, who was later murdered. Knorr sent Olga upriver to shell enemy positions, and on 22 December, the landing parties returned to their ships, having lost one man killed aboard Olga and eight men wounded between the two ships.
Bismarck and Olga remained in the area through January 1885, by which time the unrest had subsided. In March, the Germans succeeded in compelling the local rulers to hand over the murderer of Jantzen & Thormählen's manager, who they executed. Knorr detached Möwe, which had arrived in the area on 31 December 1884, to East Africa to join Gneisenau, and on 31 March 1885, the gunboat arrived to relieve Olga, which returned to Germany in company with Adler. Knorr temporarily reassigned Möwe to carry the German Commissioner for West Africa, Gustav Nachtigal, back to Germany; Nachtigal had fallen seriously ill, and he died while en route, allowing Möwe to instead proceed to East Africa as originally planned. While this went on, Bismarck continued to patrol off Cameroon until Knorr received orders to join the rest of his ships in East Africa, though he was delayed until 7 July, as he had to wait on the arrival of Julius von Soden, the first governor of the colony of Kamerun. In the meantime, Bismarck carried out surveying work in the Wouri delta and assisted in marking the official border between German Togoland and French Dahomey. At this time, the second station ship, the gunboat, also arrived in West Africa.