XXXII
GERMANY'S OBJECT
LESSON TO THE UNITED STATES.
During the first two years of
the war many Americans, especially those in the West, observed the great events
which were happening with great interest, no doubt, but with a feeling of
detachment. The war was a long way off. The Atlantic Ocean separated Europe
from America, and it seemed almost absurd to think that the Great War could
ever affect us.
In the year 1916, however, two
events happened which seemed to bring the war to our door. The first was the
arrival at Baltimore, on July 9th, of the Deutschland, a German submarine of
great size, built entirely for commercial purposes, and the second was the
appearance, on the 7th of October, of a German war submarine in the harbor at
Newport, Rhode Island, and its exploit on the following day when it sunk a
number of British and neutral vessels just outside the three-mile line on the
Atlantic coast.
The performances of these two
vessels were equally suggestive, but the popular feeling with regard to what
they had done was very divergent. The voyage of the Deutschland roused the
widest admiration but the action of the U-53 stirred up the deepest indignation.
Yet the voyages of each showed with equal clearness that, however much America
might consider herself separated from the Great War, the new scientific
invention, the submarine, had annihilated space, and America, too, was now but
a neighbor of the nations at war.
The voyage of the Deutschland
was a romance in itself. It was commanded by Captain Paul Koenig, a German
officer of the old school. He had been captain of the Schleswig of the North
German Lloyd, and of other big liners. When the power of the British fleet
drove German commerce from the seas, he had found himself without a job, and,
as he phrased it, "was drifting about the country like a derelict."
One day, in September, 1915, he was asked to meet Herr Alfred Lohmann, an agent
of the North German Lloyd Line, and surprised by an offer to navigate a
submarine cargo ship from Germany to America. Captain Koenig, who seems to have
been in every way an admirable personage, at once consented. He has told us the
story of his trip in his interesting book called "The Voyage of the
Deutschland."
The Deutschland itself was
three hundred feet long, thirty feet wide, and carried one thousand tons of
cargo and a crew of twenty-nine men. It cost a half a million dollars, but paid
for itself in the first trip. According to Captain Koenig the voyage on the
whole seems to have been most enjoyable. He understood his boat well and had
watched its construction. Before setting out on his voyage he carefully trained
his crew, and experimented with the Deutschland until he was thoroughly familiar
with all its peculiarities. The cargo was composed of dye stuffs, and the ship
was well supplied with provisions and comforts. In his description of the trip
he lays most emphasis upon the discomfort resulting from heavy weather and from
storms. He was able to avoid all danger from hostile ships by the very simple
process of diving. No English ship approached him closely as he was always able
to see them from a distance, usually observing their course by means of their
smoke.
One of his liveliest adventures,
however, occurred when attempting to submerge suddenly during a heavy sea on
the appearance of a destroyer. The destroyer apparently never observed the
Deutschland, but in the endeavor to dive quickly the submarine practically
stood on its head, and dived down into the mud, where it found itself held
fast. Captain Koenig however was equal to the emergency, and by balancing and
trimming the tanks he finally restored the center of gravity and released his
boat.
A considerable portion of his
trip was passed upon the surface as he only submerged when there was suspicion
of danger. According to his story his men kept always in the highest spirits.
They had plenty of music, and doubtless appreciated the extraordinary nature of
their voyage.
An amusing incident during the
trip was the attempt to camouflage his ship by a frame work, made of canvas
and so constructed as to give the outline of a steamer. One day a hostile
steamer appeared in the distance and Captain Koenig proceeded to test his
disguise.
After great difficulties,
especially in connection with the production of smoke, he finally had the whole
construction fairly at work. The steamer, which had been peacefully going its
way, on seeing the new ship suddenly changed her course and steered directly
toward the Deutschland. It evidently took the Deutschland for some kind of a
wreck and was hurrying to give it assistance. Captain Koenig at once pulled
off his super-structure and revealed himself as a submarine, and the strange
vessel veered about and hurried off as fast as it could.
On the arrival of the
Deutschland in America Captain Koenig and his crew found their difficulties
over. All arrangements had been made by representatives of the North German
Lloyd for their safety and comfort. As they ran up Chesapeake Bay they were
greeted by the whistles of the neutral steamers that they passed. The
moving-picture companies immortalized the crew and they were treated with the
utmost hospitality.
The Allied governments
protested that the Deutschland was really a war vessel and on the 12th of July
a commission of three American naval officers was sent down from Washington to
make an investigation. The investigation showed the Deutschland was absolutely
unarmed and the American Government decided not to interfere.
The position of the Allies was
that a submarine, even though without guns or torpedoes, was practically a
vessel of war from its very nature, and for it to pretend to be a merchant
vessel was as if some great German man-of-war should dismount its guns and pass
them over to some tender and then undertake to visit an American port. They
argued that if the submarine would come out from harbor it might be easily
fitted with detachable torpedo tubes, and become as dangerous as any U-boat.
Even without arms it might easily sink an unarmed merchant vessel by ramming.
But the United States was not convinced, and American citizens rather admired
the genial captain.
His return was almost as
uneventful as his voyage out. At the very beginning he had trouble in not being
able to rise after an experimental dive. This misadventure was caused by a plug
of mud which had stopped up the opening of the manometer. But the difficulty
was overcome, and he was able to pass under water between the British ships
which were on the lookout. His return home was a triumph. Hundreds of thousands
of people gathered along the banks of the Weser, filled with the greatest
enthusiasm.
Poems were written in his
honor and his appearance was everywhere greeted with enthusiastic applause. The
Germans felt sure that through the Deutschland and similar boats they had
broken the British blockade.
Captain Koenig made a second
voyage, landing at New London, Connecticut, on November 1st, where he took on a
cargo of rubber, nickel and other valuable commodities. On November 16th, in
attempting to get away to sea, he met with a collision with the tug T. A.
Scott, Jr., and had to return to New London for repairs. He concluded his
voyage, however, without difficulty. In spite of his success the Germans did
not make any very great attempt to develop a fleet of submarine cargo boats.
The other German act which
brought home to Americans the possibilities of the submarine, the visit of the
U-53, was a very different sort of matter. U-53 was a German submarine of the
largest type. On October 7, 1916, it made a sudden appearance at Newport, and
its captain, Lieutenant-Captain Hans Rose, was entertained as if he were a
welcome guest. He sent a letter to the German Ambassador at Washington and
received visitors in his beautiful boat. The U-53 was a war submarine, two
hundred and thirteen feet long, with two deck guns and four torpedo tubes. It
had been engaged in the war against Allied commerce in the Mediterranean.
Captain Rose paid formal visits to Rear-Admiral Austin Knight, Commander of the
United States Second Naval District, stationed at Newport, and Rear-Admiral
Albert Gleaves, Commander of the American destroyer flotilla at that place, and
then set out secretly to his destination.
On the next day the news came
in that the U-53 had sunk five merchant vessels. These were the Strathdene,
which was torpedoed; the West Point, a British freighter, also torpedoed; the
Stephano, a passenger liner between New York and Halifax, which the submarine
attempted to sink by opening its sea valves but was finally torpedoed; the
Blommersdijk, a Dutch freighter, and the Christian Knudsen, a Norwegian boat.
The American steamer Kansan was also stopped, but allowed to proceed. When the
submarine began its work wireless signals soon told what was happening, and
Admiral Knight, with the Newport destroyer flotilla, hurried to the rescue.
These destroyers picked up two hundred and sixteen men and acted with such
promptness that not a single life was lost.
The action of the U-53
produced intense excitement in America. The newspapers were filled with
editorial denunciation, and the people were roused to indignation. The American
Government apparently took the ground that the Germans were acting according to
law and according to their promise to America. They had given warning in each
case and allowed the crews of the vessels which they sunk to take to their
boats. This was believed to be a fulfilment of their pledge "not to sink
merchant vessels without warning and without saving human lives, unless the
ship attempts to escape or offers resistance."
The general feeling, however,
of American public opinion was that it was a brutal act. In the case of the
Stephano there were ninety-four passengers. These, together with the crew, were
placed adrift in boats at eight o'clock in the evening, in a rough sea sixty
miles away from the nearest land. If the American destroyer fleet had not
rushed to the rescue it is extremely likely that a great many of these boats
would never have reached land. The German Government did not save these human
lives. It was the American navy which did that. But, technicalities aside, the
pride of the American people was wounded. They could not tolerate a situation
in which American men-of-war should stand idly by and watch a submarine in a
leisurely manner sink ships engaged in American trade whose passengers and
crews contained many American citizens.
It was another one of those
foolish things that Germans were constantly doing, which gave them no appreciable
military advantage, but stirred up against them the sentiment of the world.
The Germans perhaps were anxious to show the power of the submarines, and to
give America an object lesson in that power. They wished to make plain that
they could destroy overseas trade, and that if the United States should
endeavor to send troops across the water they would be able to sink those
troops.
The Germans probably never
seriously contemplated a blockade of the American coast. The U-53 returned to
its base and the danger was ended. American commerce went peacefully on, and
the net result of the German audacity was in the increase of bitterness in the
popular feeling toward the German methods.